Hsieh Su-wei, Elise Mertens Win Australian Open Women's Doubles

Hsieh Su-wei (L) of Taiwan and Elise Mertens (R) of Belgium in action during the Women’s Doubles final match against Lyudmyla Kichenok of Ukraine and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia on Day 15 of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 28 January 2024.  EPA/MAST IRHAM
Hsieh Su-wei (L) of Taiwan and Elise Mertens (R) of Belgium in action during the Women’s Doubles final match against Lyudmyla Kichenok of Ukraine and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia on Day 15 of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 28 January 2024. EPA/MAST IRHAM
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Hsieh Su-wei, Elise Mertens Win Australian Open Women's Doubles

Hsieh Su-wei (L) of Taiwan and Elise Mertens (R) of Belgium in action during the Women’s Doubles final match against Lyudmyla Kichenok of Ukraine and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia on Day 15 of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 28 January 2024.  EPA/MAST IRHAM
Hsieh Su-wei (L) of Taiwan and Elise Mertens (R) of Belgium in action during the Women’s Doubles final match against Lyudmyla Kichenok of Ukraine and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia on Day 15 of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia, 28 January 2024. EPA/MAST IRHAM

Hsieh Su-wei of Taiwan has become the second-oldest woman to win a Grand Slam doubles title after teaming with Elise Mertens of Belgium Sunday to win the Australian Open women’s doubles.
The second-seeded pairing of Hsieh and Mertens beat 11th seeded Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia and Lyudmyla Kichenok of Ukraine 6-1, 7-5 in Sunday’s final. It was Hsieh’s seventh Grand Slam women’s doubles title and Mertens’ fourth, their second together.
Hsieh follows Rohan Bopanna of India who became the oldest men’s champion when he won the men’s doubles title Saturday with Matthew Ebden of Australia.
American Lisa Raymond was eight days older than Hsieh when she won the 2011 US Open women’s doubles. Martina Navratilova was 49 when she won the mixed doubles at the 2006 US Open with Bob Bryan.
Hsieh has the benefit of being coached by Australian Paul McNamee who won six Grand Slam doubles titles, including two Australian Opens and was the Australian Open chief executive until 2006. She already had taken out the mixed doubles at the current tournament with Jan Zielinski of Poland.
Mertens has two Wimbledon and two French Open women’s doubles titles, including both of those titles last year. This was her first Grand Slam title Down Under and her first on a hard-court.
Hsieh and Mertens needed only 1 hour, 33 minutes on Rod Laver Arena on Sunday to pad their already impressive Grand Slam resumes, The Associated Press reported. They took the first set in just over half and hour. The second set was much tighter as Mertens lost her serve in the opening game. She recovered to serve for the championship at 5-3 but was broken again.
Finally, Hsieh and Mertens took the match when they broke Kichenok in the 12th game. Mertens leapt into the air in delight; Hsieh was more reserved.
They make a formidable combination, Mertens with the stronger serve, Hsieh with skillful touches around the net and flat, strong ground-strokes.
“It was a tough final,” Mertens said. “The second set was really close.
“It was a really great match for us and we had to stay focused all the time.”
Ostapenko and Kichenok faced a tough road to the final, beating the US Open champions Gabriela Dabrowski and Erin Routliffe 7-5, 7-5 in the semifinals.
They lacked communication and teamwork in the first set but worked better together in the second in which Ostapenko’s serve was dependable. Kichenok lost her serve in the fourth, eight and final games.
Kichenok ended her comments at the presentation ceremony with the words ‘Slava Ukraini, Glory to Ukraine’.



Sinner Gets Past Rune at Australian Open in Match with Net, Medical Delays

Tennis - Australian Open - Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia - January 20, 2025 Italy's Jannik Sinner shakes hands with Denmark's Holger Rune after winning his fourth round match REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
Tennis - Australian Open - Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia - January 20, 2025 Italy's Jannik Sinner shakes hands with Denmark's Holger Rune after winning his fourth round match REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
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Sinner Gets Past Rune at Australian Open in Match with Net, Medical Delays

Tennis - Australian Open - Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia - January 20, 2025 Italy's Jannik Sinner shakes hands with Denmark's Holger Rune after winning his fourth round match REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
Tennis - Australian Open - Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia - January 20, 2025 Italy's Jannik Sinner shakes hands with Denmark's Holger Rune after winning his fourth round match REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas

First came the medical timeouts, one each for Jannik Sinner and Holger Rune with the temperature above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) at the Australian Open. Then came the unusual sight of a 20-minute delay because the net at Rod Laver Arena detached from the court after being hit by a big Sinner serve.
In the end, Sinner put his physical struggles aside and emerged with the victory — as he keeps doing, no matter the site or the circumstances — and the defending champion moved into the quarterfinals at Melbourne Park on Monday by eliminating the 13th-seeded Rune 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
The No. 1-ranked Sinner occasionally tried to cool off by pressing a cold towel to his face or pouring water down the back of his neck, The Associated Press reported. He was far better down the stretch, both after a 10-minute-plus delay in the third set when he went to the locker room for medical attention and after a 20-minute holdup in the fourth when the screw connecting the net to the blue playing surface came undone.
“I knew in my mind ... I would struggle today,” Sinner said during his on-court interview, without saying what was wrong. "Me and the doctor, we talked a little bit. It helped me."
He has won 18 consecutive tour-level matches, dating to late 2024. Last season, Sinner went 73-6 with eight titles, the first man with that many tournament championships in a single year since Andy Murray in 2016.
That haul included Sinner’s first two Grand Slam trophies, at the Australian Open in January and the US Open in September, the latter shortly after he was exonerated for testing positive for an anabolic steroid twice in March. His case is still unresolved, though, with a hearing scheduled for April in the World Anti-Doping Agency’s appeal of the ruling.
Rune, a 21-year-old from Denmark, was trying to get to the quarterfinals in Melbourne for the first time.
Sinner will face No. 8 Alex de Minaur of Australia or unseeded Alex Michelsen of the US for a berth in the semifinals. A second Italian joined Sinner in the quarterfinals when 55th-ranked Lorenzo Sonego got that far at a major tournament for the first time by ending the run of American qualifier Learner Tien 6-2, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1. Sonego will now face No. 21 Ben Shelton of the U.S. or Gael Monfils of France.