Tunisia’s Jabeur Beaten in Monastir Quarter-finals

Tunisia's Ons Jabeur returns a ball as she plays against US' Claire Liu, during the final quarter of the WTA Jasmin Open, in the Tunisian coastal city of Monastir on October 7, 2022. (Photo by BECHIR TAIEB / AFP)
Tunisia's Ons Jabeur returns a ball as she plays against US' Claire Liu, during the final quarter of the WTA Jasmin Open, in the Tunisian coastal city of Monastir on October 7, 2022. (Photo by BECHIR TAIEB / AFP)
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Tunisia’s Jabeur Beaten in Monastir Quarter-finals

Tunisia's Ons Jabeur returns a ball as she plays against US' Claire Liu, during the final quarter of the WTA Jasmin Open, in the Tunisian coastal city of Monastir on October 7, 2022. (Photo by BECHIR TAIEB / AFP)
Tunisia's Ons Jabeur returns a ball as she plays against US' Claire Liu, during the final quarter of the WTA Jasmin Open, in the Tunisian coastal city of Monastir on October 7, 2022. (Photo by BECHIR TAIEB / AFP)

World number two Ons Jabeur failed in her bid to land the first ever WTA tournament to be held in her homeland Tunisia when she lost 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 to American Claire Liu in Monastir on Friday.

Top seed Jabeur went into the quarter-finals in irrepressible form having dropped just nine games in her previous two matches against the American Ann Li then the Russian Evgeniya Rodina, AFP reported.

But she was handed a surprise defeat by Liu, ranked 71 places below her, who came into the tournament in good form. The 22-year-old from California reached the quarter-finals in Tokyo in mid-September and was a finalist in Rabat in May.

Liu broke Jabeur's first service game and held on to that advantage to take the opening set.

The Tunisian favorite managed just 45 percent on her first serves but, in spite of further problems in the second, bounced back to level the match.

The errors continued in the third set - both players clocking 51 unforced errors in the match - with Liu edging the Wimbledon and US Open runner-up.

In the semi-finals, Liu will face Belgian Elise Mertens who needed two hours to wear down the 21-year-old Japanese player Moyuka Uchijima 6-0, 3-6, 6-4.

The other semi-final will pit Frenchwoman Alize Cornet against 12th ranked Russian Veronika Kudermetova.



AFC U17 Asian Cup™ Finals to Kick Off Thursday in Saudi Arabia

AFC U17 Asian Cup™ Finals to Kick Off Thursday in Saudi Arabia
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AFC U17 Asian Cup™ Finals to Kick Off Thursday in Saudi Arabia

AFC U17 Asian Cup™ Finals to Kick Off Thursday in Saudi Arabia

The AFC U17 Asian Cup™ Saudi Arabia 2025 will kick off next Thursday, bringing together 16 Asian teams competing in the cities of Jeddah and Taif.
According to SPA, the tournament’s opening match will see Uzbekistan face off against Thailand at Okaz Club Stadium in Taif at 6:00 PM.

Later that evening, the Saudi national team, which has won the championship twice in 1985 and 1988, will take on China at 8:15 PM at King Fahd Sports City Stadium in Taif.
The competition will be played across four venues: King Abdullah Sports City and Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal Sports City in Jeddah, as well as King Fahd Sports City and Okaz Club Stadium in Taif. This year’s edition introduces a new format, with the top eight teams earning a spot in the FIFA U-17 World Cup, which will be hosted by Qatar in November 2025.
The championship will feature four groups. Saudi Arabia, as the host nation, leads Group A alongside Uzbekistan, Thailand, and China. Group B consists of Japan, Australia, Vietnam, and the UAE. Group C includes Korea, Yemen, Afghanistan, and Indonesia. Group D brings together Iran, Tajikistan, Oman, and North Korea.