Azarenka, Ostapenko Advance to Quarterfinal Showdown at Brisbane International

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reacts during her women's singles match against Clara Burel of France at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane on January 4, 2024. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)
Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reacts during her women's singles match against Clara Burel of France at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane on January 4, 2024. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)
TT

Azarenka, Ostapenko Advance to Quarterfinal Showdown at Brisbane International

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reacts during her women's singles match against Clara Burel of France at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane on January 4, 2024. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)
Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reacts during her women's singles match against Clara Burel of France at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane on January 4, 2024. (Photo by William WEST / AFP)

Victoria Azarenka is in familiar territory after reaching the quarterfinals in Brisbane, where she won her first WTA title in 2009 when the tournament was staged for the first time.
The 34-year-old Azarenka beat Clara Burel of France 7-5, 6-2 on Thursday to reach the quarterfinals for the fifth time in six trips to the key Australian Open tune-up event, The Associated Press reported.
The former No. 1-ranked Azarenka and two-time Australian Open champion — in 2012 and 2013 — will next face third-seeded Jelena Ostapenko, the 2017 French Open champion who beat big-serving three-time Brisbane International winner Karolina Pliskova 6-2, 4-6, 6-3.
Pliskova went into the match on a 10-match winning streak in Brisbane and was coming off a second-round win over another former No. 1, Naomi Osaka, but was often on the back foot with Ostapenko hitting 50 winners.
Azarenka opened Day 5 on Pat Rafter Arena and quickly took a 4-1 lead before withstanding a comeback from the No. 56-ranked Burel. She took an early break in the second set and finished off in 92 minutes.
“I felt that whenever I needed, I was able to step up my game,” Azarenka said.
The top two seeds were in action later Thursday.
Azarenka's compatriot, Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka, was playing a night match against Zhu Lin. No. 2-seeded Elena Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon champion, was scheduled to meet No. 13 Elise Mertens.
In the men’s draw, 2017 champion Grigor Dimitrov needed just over an hour to beat Daniel Altmaier 6-1, 6-2. Second-seeded Dimitrov hit 20 winners, made just five unforced errors and didn't face a break point until he was serving for the match, when he rallied from 15-40 down and had to save three.
“I was moving really well early on. I was reading the ball,” he said. “So I did a lot of good things, right. Very happy with that.”
Dimitrov will next play Australian wild-card entry Rinky Hijikata, who beat Czech qualifier Tomas Machac 5-7, 6-2, 7-6 (4).
Rafael Nadal, a 22-time major winner who is playing on a wild card in Brisbane after spending 12 months on the sidelines recovering from a hip injury, was taking on local Jason Kubler in a night match.
The winner of that match will advance to a quarterfinal against Jordan Thompson, who got a walkover when fourth-seeded Ugo Humbert withdrew from their second-round match because of illness.



French Veteran Gael Monfils Becomes the Oldest Player to Win an ATP Tour Singles Title

 Gael Monfils of France holds up the trophy after defeating Zizou Bergs of Belgium to win the men's singles of the ASB Classic tennis tournament at Manuka Doctor Arena in Auckland, New Zealand, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025. (David Rowland/Photosport via AP)
Gael Monfils of France holds up the trophy after defeating Zizou Bergs of Belgium to win the men's singles of the ASB Classic tennis tournament at Manuka Doctor Arena in Auckland, New Zealand, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025. (David Rowland/Photosport via AP)
TT

French Veteran Gael Monfils Becomes the Oldest Player to Win an ATP Tour Singles Title

 Gael Monfils of France holds up the trophy after defeating Zizou Bergs of Belgium to win the men's singles of the ASB Classic tennis tournament at Manuka Doctor Arena in Auckland, New Zealand, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025. (David Rowland/Photosport via AP)
Gael Monfils of France holds up the trophy after defeating Zizou Bergs of Belgium to win the men's singles of the ASB Classic tennis tournament at Manuka Doctor Arena in Auckland, New Zealand, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025. (David Rowland/Photosport via AP)

French veteran Gael Monfils became the oldest player to win an ATP Tour title after beating Zizou Bergs 6-3, 6-4 in Auckland on Saturday.

Monfils claimed his 13th tour title 20 years after his first and at the age of 38 years, 132 days. He took over from Roger Federer, who was 38 years, 74 days old when he won the final tour title of his career, the Swiss Indoor title at Basel in 2019.

Monfils currently is ranked 52 and is the oldest player in the history of the ATP Tour to be ranked in the top 100.

Pancho Gonzalez was 44 years, 7 months and 4 days old when he won a Kingston, Jamaica singles title in 1972, prior to the formation of the ATP Tour in 1990.

The Auckland final was delayed on Saturday by a medical emergency in the crowd but Monfils showed the same mixture of aggression and tenacious defense to claim his first title since the Stockholm Open in 2023.

Prior to the start of the Auckland tournament, Monfils spoke about how his love of tennis kept him going.

“I love tennis. I love what I’m doing so of course all the sacrifices you do, they are a little bit easier. When you love something, it’s easier to keep pushing,” he said.

“I’ve been enjoying myself since the first day I played tennis and (at) 60 years old I will still have this joy. Practice, it’s easy. It’s in the DNA. Stay in shape, it’s easy. It’s more the travel.”

After collecting the Auckland trophy, Monfils headed straight to the airport for a flight to Melbourne where he will face Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in the first round of the Australian Open.