Andy Murray
claimed the title at the China Open Sunday, taking a step toward
unseating world number one Novak Djokovic, as Agnieszka Radwanska won
her second Beijing crown.
Both romped to victory in straight sets
on a chilly night in the Chinese capital, neither of them having dropped
a set in the tournament.
Murray’s
6-4, 7-6 (7/2) win over unseeded Grigor Dimitrov is his fifth title of
the year and 40th of his career, while third-ranked Radwanska sealed her
win 6-4, 6-2 over Briton Johanna Konta with an ace.
The Scot’s victory moves him 1,000
points closer to long-reigning world number one Djokovic, with the
chance of taking the top spot by year-end and capping off a career-best
season.
Murray
broke Dimitrov’s serve in the opening game of the match, putting the
15th-ranked Bulgarian on the defensive as he made 21 unforced errors in
the opening set.
In the second, both held their serve through the first four games until Murray broke Dimitrov at 3-2.
It looked like the Scot would serve for
the championship but Dimitrov — who beat Rafael Nadal en route to the
final — won the next 11 points, breaking Murray to love.
Pushed to a tiebreak, the three-time
Grand Slam champion immediately seized back control, storming through
the decider to claim his first title in the Chinese capital.
Dimitrov had received a free pass
through the semi-finals after Canadian Milos Raonic pulled out with an
ankle injury, but was left overwhelmed by the Scot.
“I just didn’t feel that I had another gear,” Dimitrov told reporters after the match.
“Andy’s fighting pretty much every single point. You know you’re not going to get anything for free.”
With his 40th win, Murray
is the 16th player in the open era to win at least 40 titles and the
fourth active player to accomplish the feat, joining Djokovic, Nadal and
Roger Federer.
The Magician Radwanska’s victory was the 20th of her
career but there was more on the line for Konta, 25, who was making a
bid in the Chinese capital for what would have been her second and
biggest title.
Despite the loss, by reaching the
Beijing final Konta has amassed enough points to break into the top 10 —
the first British woman to do so since Jo Durie in 1984.
When the new leaderboards are released
Monday it will be the first time since computerised rankings were
introduced that a British man (Murray) and woman are ranked in the top 10 at the same time.
Konta claimed two top 10 scalps en route
to the final, sixth-ranked Karoline Pliskova and number eight Madison
Keys, but Radwanska managed to unsettle her on Sunday.
The Briton, usually a solid baseliner,
repeatedly pushed to the net as she tried to shift the match momentum in
her favour, but it was a risky strategy that cost her 29 unforced
errors.
“Against a player like Agnieszka, who is
basically a human wall, you definitely do try to look to get the upper
hand in any way possible,” Konta told reporters after the match.
After dropping her serve twice in each
set, Konta made a bid to even the scoreline in the second, pushing
Radwanska to two break points in the sixth game.
But the Pole — nicknamed “The Magician”
for her ability to conjure up shots — blasted a forehand down the line
to save her service game.
“Whenever I felt I could have got a little bit of a foothold in the match, she took it away from me,” Konta said.
The world number three served for the
title, firing her only ace of the match straight down the line for her
third Premier Mandatory title, one rung down from a Grand Slam.
“I think that was a perfect timing,” Radwanska said of the ace.
It was the second time the pair have met
after Radwanska beat the Briton in a two-hour, three-set battle in
Cincinnati in August.
They may meet again in Singapore at the end of the month for the WTA Finals.
Radwanska has already qualified for the
eight-player season finale, which follows a round-robin format, while
the Briton is still chasing points to guarantee her maiden appearance.
Konta is in eighth position but could be
nudged out by Wuhan Open finalist Dominika Cibulkova, who is just 10
points behind her in the so-called Race to Singapore.
The Briton is playing in Hong Kong next week, hoping to rack up enough qualification points.
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