Masters National Bank Open WTA
Naomi Osaka Advances to Quarterfinals with Dominant Win in Montreal
Naomi Osaka reaches WTA 1000 quarterfinal in Montreal with a swift 6-1, 6-0 win over Sevastova.

Naomi Osaka delivered a commanding performance at the Omnium Banque Nationale in Montreal, advancing to the quarterfinals of a WTA 1000 event for the first time this season. Osaka dismantled Anastasija Sevastova in just 49 minutes with a lopsided 6-1, 6-0 victory. This marks Osaka’s second career quarterfinal appearance in Canada, matching her best result at this level since 2019 when she fell to Serena Williams.
Coming back from maternity leave following the birth of her daughter in 2022, Osaka had only once before reached a WTA 1000 quarterfinal—last winter at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open in Doha. This win also extends her winning streak to 4-0 under new coach Tomasz Wiktorowski, whom she engaged after parting ways with Patrick Mouratoglou last weekend.
Osaka was nearly flawless, breaking Sevastova’s serve five times out of six opportunities and never relinquishing her own service games. Sevastova, a former world No. 11 now ranked No. 386 due to maternity leave and injury, struggled from the start. Despite earlier successes in the tournament, including an upset of the defending champion Jessica Pegula, Sevastova was unable to maintain that form. She failed to convert break points early on and didn’t record a groundstroke winner until well behind in the match.
Osaka reflected on her performance, stating, “I had a solid plan coming in here, and it just happened to work out pretty well.” This decisive win highlights her growing momentum as she pushes deeper into the tournament draw.
Canadian Open Masters WTA
Clara Tauson Seizes Control to Upset Iga Swiatek at Canadian Open
Clara Tauson claims a key victory over Iga Swiatek at the Canadian Open, showcasing resilience and skill.

Clara Tauson’s recent victory over Iga Swiatek in the fourth round of the Canadian Open marked a significant milestone for the Danish player. Overcoming the sixth seed in straight sets, 7-6(1), 6-3, Tauson exacted revenge for her defeat at Wimbledon just four weeks earlier and ended a four-match losing streak against the former world No. 1.
Tauson earned an early break in the first set but was broken back while serving at 5-4. Undeterred, she claimed the set in a decisive tiebreak. In the second set, the Dane appeared more composed, breaking twice and asserting greater control before closing out the match.
Reflecting on the contest, Tauson said, “I mean, I knew that she was going to keep fighting. Obviously, she’s a champion, and they never stop fighting. I didn’t even feel too bad about getting broken there, because I felt like I was playing the right way.” She added, “I had a little bit of the upper hand in the end of the set. I think I showed that I can keep cool under pressure.”
This run marks Tauson’s second WTA 1000 quarterfinal appearance, following her finals appearance in Dubai earlier this year. It also marks her second career win over a top-five opponent and fifth over a top-10 player. Among other notable achievements this season, she joins Madison Keys, Mirra Andreeva, Coco Gauff, and Jelena Ostapenko as one of the only players to have defeated both Aryna Sabalenka and Iga Swiatek.
With this result, Tauson will reach a career-high ranking of at least No. 17, surpassing her previous best by two positions. “It’s my second win like that in my career and second win like that this year,” she noted, reflecting on her earlier victory over world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in Dubai.
Looking ahead, Tauson will face Madison Keys in the quarterfinals, a player she defeated earlier this year in Auckland with a 6-4, 7-6(7) result. Tauson’s rising confidence and composure under pressure make her a formidable contender moving forward in the tournament.
Cincinnati Open Masters WTA
2025 WTA Cincinnati Open: Sabalenka Returns Amid Top 10 Absences; Raducanu Seeded 30th
Aryna Sabalenka returns to defend Cincinnati title; key top 10 players absent, Raducanu seeded 30th.

The 97th edition of the WTA Cincinnati Open will unfold from August 7-18 at the Lindner Family Tennis Centre in Mason, Ohio. This year marks a shift to a 12-day format, expanding the singles main draw to 96 players, including 72 direct entrants, 16 qualifiers, and eight wildcards.
Reigning champion Aryna Sabalenka, currently world No. 1, returns to compete for the first time since her Wimbledon semi-final defeat, having skipped the Canadian Open. Sabalenka will be one of three former Cincinnati champions in the field alongside Coco Gauff (2023) and Madison Keys (2019).
However, the tournament will witness notable absences among the top 10 players. Injuries have forced Mirra Andreeva, Qinwen Zheng, and Paula Badosa to withdraw. Additional withdrawals include Lois Boisson, Ons Jabeur, Alex Eala, and Petra Kvitova.
Wildcards have been partially announced and include American players Caty McNally and Venus Williams. At 45, Williams is a seven-time major singles champion and former world No. 1 who recently won her first match in over a year in Washington.
The WTA protected ranking system has allowed several players—Bianca Andreescu, Marketa Vondrousova, Sorana Cirstea, Anastasija Sevastova, Lin Zhu, and Wang Yafan—to enter Cincinnati after enforced absences exceeding six months due to injury or pregnancy.
Emma Raducanu, despite falling to 38th in the live WTA Rankings, has secured the 30th seed at Cincinnati based on the previously published rankings before recent withdrawals. The 22-year-old Brit’s seeding benefits from the withdrawals of Andreeva, Zheng, and Badosa.
Analytics & Stats ATP Masters
Taylor Fritz Writes History with Quarterfinal Run at Canadian Open
Taylor Fritz makes history as first non-European to reach quarters of all nine ATP Masters 1000 events.

Taylor Fritz has achieved a milestone no American male player has reached in the ATP Masters 1000 series since its 2009 expansion. The world No. 4 secured a hard-fought victory over Jiri Lehecka in the third round of the 2025 Canadian Open, becoming the first player from outside Europe to reach the quarterfinals of all nine ATP Masters 1000 tournaments.
Fritz, seeded second, battled through a tense, high-quality contest against Lehecka that lasted nearly three hours. The match featured no breaks of serve, with Fritz eventually prevailing 7-6 (7-4), 6-7 (5-7), 7-6 (7-5), saving nine break points to his Czech opponent’s five.
Despite the absence of several top players, including Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, and Novak Djokovic, Fritz has emerged as a standout performer in the tournament. Before this run, he had never advanced beyond the third round at this Masters event, but now he stands three wins away from the title.
His achievement places him alongside greats like Djokovic, Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer, Andy Murray, Daniil Medvedev, Alexander Zverev, and Alcaraz, all Europeans who have reached the quarterfinals of all nine events since the series was expanded. Notably, Sinner has yet to reach the Paris Masters quarterfinals.
Fritz has previously made quarterfinals multiple times at Indian Wells (2021, 2022, 2023), Miami (2023, 2025), Monte Carlo (2022, 2023), Cincinnati (2022, 2023), Madrid (2024), Rome (2024), Shanghai (2024), and Paris (2021).
“Making all the Masters quarters is really cool,” Fritz said. “It shows consistency. Today I had to accept that parts of my game were just not there. I was bailed out by a lot of first serves, but I was making too many mistakes.”
Among American players, the challenge of this feat is underscored by the fact that the addition of the Shanghai Masters post-dated players like Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi, who never reached quarterfinals in Monte Carlo, while Andy Roddick never made the Monte Carlo quarters either.
Fritz’s next test comes against sixth seed Andrey Rublev for a place in the semifinals. His win also earned him 150 ATP points, moving him closer to the third spot in the rankings behind Zverev, though overtaking him this week is mathematically impossible.
The American’s focus will soon shift to the US Open, where he must defend 1300 points after finishing runner-up in 2024.
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