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By Richard Pagliaro | Saturday, September 28, 2019

 
Aryna Sabalenka

Aryna Sabalenka stopped Alison Riske 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 snaring her second consecutive Wuhan title and raising her record to 12-0 at the event.

Photo credit: Wuhan Open / VCG

Aryna Sabalenka struck an exclamation point to punctuate a declarative Wuhan statement.

Sabalenka slashed her 18th ace on championship point seizing her second straight Wuhan Open championship with a 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 victory over American Alison Riske.

More: Sabalenka's Inner Tiger is Back

An assertive Sabalenka raised her Wuhan record to 12-0—including a 7-5, 6-4 semifinal conquest of world No. 1 Ash Barty yesterday. Sabalenka surrendered just two sets in six tournament victories this week making history as the first woman to complete a back-to-back Wuhan title run.




China is the explosive baseliner's comfort zone. 

The 14th-ranked Belarusian has won 29 of her last 35 matches in China powering to three of her four Tour-level titles in the nation. Today's final was a rematch of the Shenzhen final in January when Sabalenka rallied past Riske 4-6, 7-6(2), 6-3.

There's clarity in Sabalenka's game in Wuhan and she showed it scoring successive service breaks in streaking out to a 5-1 lead today.

A fluttering drop shot set up volley winner as Sabalenka converted her third set point to seal a 35-minute opening set.

Sabalenka served 75 percent and smacked 17 winners compared to six for Riske in the opening set.

Riding out the Sabalenka shot-making storm in the first set, Riske was quicker to the ball, made more first serves and kept calm in the second.

Draining errors out of the increasingly erratic Belarusian, Riske secured the first break of the second set for 4-2.

Quality exchanges popped throughout the latter stages of the second set. Stepping into the court, Riske drew successive errors snatching the second set, 6-3, to force a decider.

The defending champion left the court to regroup after a second set that saw Riske play cleaner tennis. The flat-hitting American committed just six unforced errors—11 fewer than her opponent—in the 42-minute second set.

Following a near flawless second set, Riske stumbled at the start of the third.

Failing to hit up and out on a second serve, Riske dumped a double fault into net then flipped her Wilson Blade in frustration gifting the break and a 2-0 third-set lead to Sabalenka.

Turning her hips and shoulders into her shots, Sabalenka was striking with menacing intent. Banging a backhand off the baseline helped Sabalenka score her second straight break for 4-0. Sabalenka was in full flight stretching her lead to 5-0.

Slashing her 16th ace down the middle, Sabalenka closed in one hour, 54 minutes. The ninth seed took a brief break before returning to partner Elise Mertens in the doubles final.

 

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