Sports

Sinner in quarters; Sabalenka too hot for Osaka

Ann Li (USA) hits a shot against Talia Gibson (AUS) in her first round match during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. — Imagn Images
 
Ann Li (USA) hits a shot against Talia Gibson (AUS) in her first round match during the BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden. — Imagn Images

* Sinner overcomes Fonseca challenge
* Italian to meet American Tien in quarterfinals
* Sabalenka defeats Osaka in dominant ⁠performance
* Zverev beats Tiafoe in straight sets
* Gibson achieves career-best win over Paolini
INDIAN WELLS, United States: World number two Jannik Sinner survived a stern test ​from Joao Fonseca on Tuesday to reach the ​Indian Wells quarterfinals, while women's world number one Aryna Sabalenka eased past 16th seed Naomi Osaka 6-2, 6-4 to progress to the women's last eight.
Sinner was pushed hard by the 19-year-old Brazilian, trailing 6-3 in the first set before rallying to close out the match 7-6(6), 7-6(4).
'I am very happy winning this match,' Sinner said.
'Joao is an incredible talent. He was serving really well. I was trying to be as aggressive as possible and that was the key to get through against the incredible talent.'
The Italian will now meet the ⁠home favourite Learner Tien on Friday for a place in the last four.
'I feel he is a very consistent player and I ⁠am very happy to face him again. He has improved a lot since the last time we met,' Sinner said of his American opponent.
DOMINANT WIN FOR SABALENKA
Meanwhile, in the first meeting between the two four-time Grand Slam champions since 2018 - when Osaka beat Sabalenka at the US Open en route to her maiden major title - the Belarusian's power ‌proved too much for the former world No 1 on Tuesday.
'Yeah that's crazy, ​for so many years we only ⁠played once. I'm pretty sure we are playing many more matches, she's coming back playing great tennis,' Sabalenka said ​in her on-court interview. 'I'm pretty happy for the result ‌today, much better than last time.'
Osaka began confidently with a strong opening service game, but top seed Sabalenka soon found her rhythm and capitalised on a brief dip from the Japanese, breaking for 2-1 after two double ​faults.
The Belarusian tightened her grip with a barrage of powerful backhands to lead 5-2, then served out the set comfortably with an ace.
After a series of solid holds from both players early in the second, Sabalenka again used her firepower to take control, breaking again for a 4-2 lead that proved decisive in closing out the win and continuing her run in the tournament without dropping a set.
'I'm happy that I put so much pressure on her today, that I brought ‌variety to the court,' Sabalenka said. 'My serve worked well. On the return I played really great tennis. Happy with my performance for sure.'
Last ​year's runner-up Sabalenka will continue her quest for a first title in the California desert against Canada's Victoria Mboko, who sailed past higher-ranked American Amanda ​Anisimova 6-4, ‌6-1.
It will ⁠be a rematch of an Australian Open round-of-16 between the two, which Sabalenka won in straight sets.
QUALIFIER GIBSON SEES OFF PAOLINI
Elsewhere, Australia's Talia Gibson enjoyed the biggest win of her career, beating Italy's world No 7 Jasmine Paolini 7-5, 2-6, 6-1 in her first match against a top-10 player.
The ​21-year-old, playing her first WTA 1000 main draw, also became the first qualifier in 11 years to ⁠reach the quarterfinals of ​the tournament.
'I just have a confidence in the way I'm playing,' Gibson said. 'I'm in shock.'
Czech Republic's Linda Noskova, the 14th seed, sailed past Alexandra Eala in just 55 minutes with a 6-2, 6-0 win to book a quarterfinal meeting with Gibson.
In the men's draw, Alexander Zverev saw off Frances Tiafoe 6-3, 6-4, converting two of three break points and firing 14 aces to seal his ninth win over the 21st-seeded American.
He will next face France's ​Arthur Fils as he looks to reach his first Indian Wells semifinal.
Fils earlier produced a stunning 6-3, 7-6(9) win over Canadian ​ninth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, saving five set points and rallying from 0-5 down in the second-set tie-break to book a place in the quarterfinals for the second consecutive year. — Reuters