All posts tagged: unforced errors

Lakshya Sen wins Australian Open Super 500, first title of 2025 | Badminton News

Lakshya Sen wins Australian Open Super 500, first title of 2025 | Badminton News

Lakshya Sen ended a long drought of titles, winning the Super 500 Australian Open at Sydney, beating Japanese Yushi Tanaka 21-15, 21-11 in one of the easiest finals he has pocketed. He gestured keeping out the noise with index fingers in his earlobes and eyes closed, upon winning, after a week of hard work. This is Sen’s third Super 500 title, and he converted his second final of the year, after losing Hong Kong. It was an eventful week where Sen defeated compatriot Ayush Shetty and Chou Tien Chen in hard fought matches. The final in comparison was a breeze. He had spent 85 minutes on the court in winning semis, but Tanaka proved a more amiable opponent. Error-prone, facing massive accuracy issues, Tanaka kept spraying his smashes and botching what he reckoned were delicate strokes. His precision was poor, and the luckless Japanese who has been dubbed a domestic giant, had a strong of first and second round losses before he fetched up in the final. Sen stuck to bare basics, and for once …

Ranked outside 100 a year ago, nearly retired, now knocks Coco Gauff out of Australian Open: The Paula Badosa story | Tennis News

Ranked outside 100 a year ago, nearly retired, now knocks Coco Gauff out of Australian Open: The Paula Badosa story | Tennis News

Paula Badosa couldn’t quite believe it. Knees on the ground, head down… she took a few seconds to gather her thoughts before making a dash to the net. After heartbreaks in two previous Grand Slam quarterfinal appearances, this was one post-match handshake of dreams for the Spaniard. It came after an intense battle of 1 hour and 43 minutes, Badosa knocked World No.3 Coco Gauff out of the Australian Open and entered her maiden Grand Slam semi-finals, becoming only the fourth Spaniard to do so in the women’s singles event of a major – the first since Garbine Muguruza at Melbourne in 2020. Paula Badosa of Spain celebrates after defeating Coco Gauff of the U.S. during their quarterfinal match at the Australian Open(AP) “I’m a bit emotional,” said Badosa, who will face either two-time defending champion Aryna Sabalenka or Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, who play later, for a place in the final. “I’m a very emotional person. I wanted to play my best game. I think I did it. I’m super proud of the level I gave …