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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Katy Murrells and Rob Bleaney (for a bit earlier)

US Open tennis 2025: Alcaraz advances as Raducanu and Shelton go out – as it happened

Adrian Mannarino (left) and Ben Shelton embrace after Shelton retired at the end of the fourth set
Adrian Mannarino (left) and Ben Shelton embrace after Shelton retired at the end of the fourth set. Photograph: Sarah Stier/Getty Images

Right, that’s it from us for today, many thanks for your company. I’ll leave you with these match reports. And do join me for more of the same tomorrow. Bye!

Struff is asked how he recovered from the disappointment of those three double faults when serving for the match at 5-3. “It’s tough to serve out the match, I played a very bad game. I tried to refocus and get some energy back, so I’m very happy about that.” Up next for Struff: Novak Djokovic or Cameron Norrie, who meet in the night session. Taylor Fritz is also in action later, as he aims to end the American horror story on day six. Though at least on the women’s side, Ann Li currently leads Australia’s Priscilla Hon 5-3, after Pegula’s win earlier.

Struff shocks Tiafoe 6-4, 6-3, 7-6

So will it be match point or set point? Match point, as Tiafoe nets the return. Cue a collective New York sigh. But the crowd are on their feet when Tiafoe rams down an ace! 7-7. But Tiafoe comes off second best in the next exchange, one of the longest of the match, and Struff has a second match point. Crucially this is on the German’s serve. And he takes out Tiafoe, the 17th seed, with a huge first serve! Tiafoe follows Shelton in departing, on a disappointing day for the American men, and Struff, after all his injury problems and having to come through qualifying, has backed up his win over Rune from the second round.

Updated

… Tiafoe moves to 4-3, but two unreturned serves from Struff and it’s 5-4 to the German. Struff charges to the net on the next point .. and Tiafoe pulls off the lob! 5-5. The pair engage in a forehand face-off on the next point … and Struff eventually nets! Tiafoe has a set point on Struff’s serve … and Tiafoe’s forehand whistles wide! 6-6 as they change ends once more …

Updated

Tiafoe, his belief growing with every point, moves 2-0 ahead, before Struff gets the mini-break back for 2-1. The crowd think Tiafoe’s won the next point, but it’s out. 2-2. And then 3-2 Struff, after a brave, brave volley. They change ends at 3-3 …

Struff somehow manages to remove the lead from his racket and shoes and holds to 15. That showed some guts. And then the Struff of the first two and a half sets is back, as he pushes to 30-all on Tiafoe’s serve, perhaps two points from victory. Tiafoe, under immense pressure, fizzes a forehand pass for 40-30. Struff comes back for deuce. And Tiafoe takes the game with a cute drop shot! We’ve got ourselves a tie-break. Which is exactly what this set deserves.

But Struff, suddenly, is feeling the pressure, no doubt thinking about the magnitude of reaching the last 16 for the first time, and serves two double faults for 0-30. Make that three! He hadn’t hit a single double in the first two sets. And then at 0-40 down, he nets a forehand! He looks crushed. Tiafoe is resurgent, and swiftly holds for 5-5.

Updated

Tiafoe is again up against it on serve at 30-all. Struff senses his opportunity and goes for broke, but it doesn’t come off. 40-30 … which turns into deuce. Win the next two points and Struff will be serving for a place in the fourth round. Tiafoe tonks long and it’s Struff’s advantage. Tiafoe sorely needs a first serve … but he can’t land it … and, after making his second serve, eventually hits into the net! Struff breaks!

Big trouble for Big Foe on Grandstand, as last year’s semi-finalist, already two sets to love behind, drops break point down at 30-40, 2-3. Having just lost Shelton, the home crowd really don’t want to lose Tiafoe too. Tiafoe hauls himself back to deuce and goes on to hold. And he’s waving his racket like he’s won the set. He has come from two sets down to win before, by the way, at last year’s Wimbledon against Matteo Arnaldi, but Struff is serving with such purpose and holds for 4-3.

Celebrations for Cristina Bucsa on Court 17, where the Spaniard has come from a set down to take out the 19th seed Elise Mertens, 3-6, 7-5, 6-3. I think that makes it 14 seeds out on the women’s side. And we’re only at the first day of the third round. It’s like Wimbledon all over again.

Shelton’s retirement means Carlos Alcaraz’s quarter has opened up for the 2022 champion … just as Jannik Sinner’s did after Jack Draper’s injury. As if Alcaraz and Sinner need any extra assistance.

Updated

“When he started to have pain he was leading in this match, honestly he would probably have won. I don’t know what to say, but I wish him all the best,” says a shocked Mannarino, before coming up with one of the quotes of the tournament: “I’m 37 years old, it’s the first time I’m winning a match from the toilet”. Another first for the Frenchman, at his 15th US Open, is that he’s finally reached the last 16, where he’s got a winnable meeting against Jiri Lehecka. Not that Mannarino knows it; he never wants to find out who he’s playing until the morning of his matches.

Updated

Shelton retires injured against Mannarino

Mannarino has set point at 40-30. Shelton chips the return and charges forward … the tactic doesn’t come off. Mannarino takes the fourth set 6-4 and skips off court for a quick break before the decider … will Shelton ask for more treatment on his shoulder? He does. But perhaps the more pertinent question is will he carry on? Shelton is in tears, he’s clearly in a lot of pain. He’s never retired injured from a match before, and he really doesn’t want to have to in New York, at his favourite tournament, but he’s packing his rackets into his bag and looks as if he will call it quits when Mannarino returns to court. This is so tough to watch, especially given he’d just won the biggest title of his career in Toronto and expected big things of himself here. Mannarino is back and Shelton’s retirement is confirmed, as the sixth seed goes the way of the fifth seed Jack Draper. Ach.

Updated

Tiafoe just can’t shake Struff off, and Struff breaks for a 6-4, 6-3 lead. Having had to come through qualifying, Struff, the 35-year-old German, is a set away from backing up his win over Holger Rune in the previous round,

Shelton slumps two set points down on serve at 15-40. He admirably saves both – the second with a nerveless overhead – and it’s deuce. But Mannarino picks Shelton off after the American serve-volleys. Set point No 3. Which again comes and goes. Shelton is clutching that injured shoulder as he moves to his advantage – this effort is taking so much out of him – and two points later it’s set point No 4. Shelton saves it once more, just as Tiafoe, 6-4, 5-3 down, repels a set point for Struff. And Shelton finally holds! But Mannarino will still serve for the fourth set.

And now Shelton is broken, as Mannarino rips a backhand winner! Mannarino then backs up the break for 5-3. What chance will an ailing Shelton have if this match goes the distance?

… Mannarino holds from there for 3-3, just as Struff also silences the partisan crowd on Grandstand, breaking Tiafoe, clad in an all-red tiger print kit, for a 6-4, 3-2 lead. Tiafoe said his plan in 2025 was always to peak at the US Open, where he’s had some of the best results of his career, reaching the semi-finals in two of the past three years, but he’s going to have to do it the hard way to repeat that feat this time around.

Despite his shoulder issue, Shelton has hit four aces in this fourth set, which is more than in sets two and three combined. Another hold and he edges ahead for 3-2. He’ll be desperate to get this match done in four, so he can rest up and get some treatment before what would be a last-16 meeting with Jiri Lehecka. “It’s the worst pain I’ve felt in my life,” Shelton tells his dad between games. “Come forward more,” is Shelton Sr’s reponse. Shelton duly follows the instruction, winning a point at the net for 15-all, and then coming back from 40-15 to deuce …

That set point. Perhaps it was the post-set celebrations that did for his shoulder.

Shelton appears to be struggling to put his top back on after the timeout, so let’s see whether he can actually hit the ball. Mannarino quickly holds, before Shelton begins his service game with just an 80mph first serve. He looks to be testing the shoulder out, and he quickly ramps the serve up to about 120mph, so maybe he’ll be ok. And from 40-30 he bravely holds.

Uh oh. This doesn’t look good for Shelton. He’s clutching his left shoulder and asks for the physio mid-game. The umpire, Britain’s James Keothavong, accepts Shelton’s request, rather than making the American wait until the end of the game. It looks as if he’s pulled something. His dad Bryan, himself a former pro, looks fairly relaxed in the box, so perhaps he will be able to continue. Just as Struff does his stuff, taking the first set 6-4 against Tiafoe.

Updated

Elsewhere: another great American entertainer, Frances Tiafoe, is 5-3 down in the opening set against the German Jan-Lennard Struff, who’s still smashing down aces for fun at the age of 35. And Belgium’s Elise Mertens has been pulled back to one set all against Spain’s Cristina Bucsa.

Pegula’s victory wraps up the day session on Arthur Ashe, so most eyes are on Louis Armstrong, where Shelton is drinking in the applause of his home crowd as he breaks Mannarino after a quite remarkable point to take a two sets to one lead. Shelton looked down and out … but somehow scrambles to gets a defensive forehand back which lands bang on the sideline … and Mannarino, probably not expecting the ball to come back at him, nets! Shelton leads 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

Pegula is so consistent – this is the fourth successive year she’s reached the fourth round or better – but does she have enough to beat the very best? She tends to defeat the players she should and lose to the ones she’s expected to – that said, she did have a couple of unexpected losses in the the buildup to this tournament, so she’ll be happy to have reached the second week with relative ease. As for Azarenka, she’s had some great moments on Arthur Ashe, having reached the final three times, the last time in 2020, but the 36-year-old won’t have today’s match on her New York showreel.

Pegula is asked how she snatched that second set:

I just tried to focus on going back to my strategy, things that were working well in the first set. I felt like I could still dig out the set for sure. I moved well, scrambled well, we train together in Florida so we know each other’s games so well. I could tell she was struggling physically so I wanted to keep her moving.

Pegula beats Azarenka 6-1, 7-5

Azarenka can’t get the ball into play. Four errant shots under pressure and Pegula holds to love. From a break and 5-4 down, Pegula now leads 6-5 and will be hoping to get this done in two sets. She’s two points away at 30-all on Azarenka’s serve – you’d say Azarenka deserves a tie-break for her efforts in this set while struggling with a left leg injury – but a tired forehand into the net gives Pegula match point. Azarenka’s second serve is soft, Pegula pounces on the return and Azarenka chops into the net. Pegula wins the battle of the former US Open finalists and is yet to drop a set this tournament.

As for Azarenka v Pegula, no sooner does Azarenka break, than she is broken serving for the second set. She’ll be kicking herself having worked so hard to get back into the match. It’s 5-5, after Pegula took the opener 6-1.

Thanks Rob. What a win that was for Vondrousova – remarkably her first against a top-10 opponent at a slam since her Wimbledon triumph in 2023. The Czech has been through so much since, including shoulder surgery and getting divorced, and she’ll next face another resurgent former Wimbledon champion in the last 16, Elena Rybakina. As for Paolini, having reached two slam finals last year, she’ll be disappointed not to go beyond the fourth round at a major this season. But it was always going to be so, so tough to match her breakout 2024.

Updated

Now it’s Pegula making the glaring errors, but can Azarenka capitalise and keep the match alive? She breaks to move 5-4 ahead in the second set and I’ll hand back to Katy to take you through to the end of the set – or match. Thanks for your time.

Updated

Azarenka has found some form out of nowhere and suddenly is asking questions of Pegula. But two badly timed double faults on deuce prove costly. The Belarusian loses a hard-fought service game and it is 4-4 in the second set. The American’s form dipped dramatically after she won the first set but she is looking stronger again now.

Updated

Mannarino wins the second set against Shelton 6-3 to level the match. The Frenchman has turned things round and is right in this absorbing contest now.

Marketa Vondrousova beats Jasmine Paolini 7-6, 6-1

That is mighty impressive stuff from Vondrousova who has fallen down the rankings after injury. Sad to see Paolini go but the No 7 seed will be back in the doubles.

Updated

Paolini loses her serve against Vondrousova to slip to the brink of defeat. She trails 5-1 in the second set and her hopes of recovering look forlorn.

Updated

Elise Mertens is 29 now and a former world No 1 in doubles. Her singles history is less impressive, but she has take the first set against Cristina Bucsa 6-3.

Paolini is in real trouble here against Vondrousova. She has been broken already in the second set and is 4-1 down having lost the first set tie-break.

Updated

Azarenka looks like she is battling an injured leg. And her ball toss is all over the place. But she hobbled through that service game to level the second set up at 1-1 against Pegula.

Over on Louis Armstrong, Mannarino has turned things around against Shelton after losing the first set. He’s 3-0 up in the second with a break and looking good.

Thanks Katy. A pleasure to be with you all tonight. Maybe my presence can bring an upturn in fortune for Azarenka. She is looking so frustrated at the moment …

Pegula, meanwhile, has charged through the first set 6-1 against Azarenka. With that, I’m off to grab some food. Rob is here to keep you company …

Paolini’s smile is gone as Vondrousova moves 2-0 and then 4-1 ahead despite a miscued lob from the Czech. Paolini reduces her arrears to 4-2 at the change of ends … but Vondrousova is such a canny competitor, with her mix of spins and slice, and it’s very quickly 6-2. Paolini pelts a winner to save the first set point … and is then absolutely pounding the ball at poor Vondrousova at the net on the second. So it’s 6-4 … and then first set Vondrousova when Paolini rams into the tramlines! The Italian is screaming at herself. Vondrousova looks so calm.

Like Alcaraz, Paolini plays with so much joy and energy, and while she hasn’t quite hit the heights that she did in her breakout 2024 when she reached two slam finals, she’s still had a very solid season. She gets to 30 on Vondrousova’s serve but can go no further, so we’re into a tie-break.

Updated

Vondrousova holds for 5-5. Paolini nudges ahead to 6-5. And speaking of Paolini, this is well worth a look (and read):

Paolini is pushing at 5-4 and deuce on Vondrousova’s serve. A 21-shot rally ends in Vondrousova’s favour. Phew. Meanwhile Pegula is already in charge against Azarenka, leading 4-1.

Updated

Shelton has had a strong summer, following up his quarter-final run at Wimbledon by winning his first Masters 1000 title, in Toronto, and he’s serving for the first set at 5-3. At a career-high world ranking of No 6, the 22-year-old could be a real contender this fortnight, at a tournament where he’s already reached the last four, and he’s got his game face on as he serves out the set to 15. An ominous stat for Mannarino: the 37-year-old is 0-22 against top-10 players at majors.

It’s all-change on the show courts. Just starting under the roof on Arthur Ashe it’s Jessica Pegula, last year’s runner-up, against the three-times finalist Victoria Azarenka. On Louis Armstrong, Pegula’s fellow American Ben Shelton leads 4-2 in the battle of the young lefty vs the veteran French lefty Adrian Mannarino, while on Grandstand it’s Jasmine Paolini against the former Wimbledon champ Marketa Vondrousova. It’s 3-3 in the opening set. I wish I had six eyes but two will have to do.

Updated

Rinderknech is on his knees as he completes a 4-6, 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 victory over his good friend. It’s a landmark win for the 30-year-old, who’s through to the fourth round of a grand slam for the first time. His prize/punishment is a last-16 meeting with Alcaraz.

Updated

It’s raining on one side of Flushing Meadows but not the other. Rinderknech is now a game away, leading 5-2, with Bonzi serving at 30-all. And Britain’s Sonay Kartal and Katie Boulter have just booked their place in the second round of the women’s doubles.

Raducanu’s been speaking to Sky’s Laura Robson after being outclassed by Rybakina:

It was very difficult. I didn’t get a chance to settle or feel any rhythm. But overall I think I’m heading in the right direction. It’s been a good swing in America. After Wimbledon I was straight into practice and I had some good results but against the top players I’ve got a lot of work to do. I look forward to heading out to Asia.

Dark clouds are hanging over Court 17 as Rinderknech moves to within two games of victory against Bonzi. And it’s got nothing to do with being the US Open’s “hash court”, but rather the ominous weather. He’ll hope he can complete the win over his fellow Frenchman before the possible showers come.

About 14,529 fans descend on Alcaraz for an autograph. Meanwhile news of another winner: Jiri Lehecka, the 20th seed, has ended the run of Belgium’s Raphael Collignon, who conquered Casper Ruud in the previous round on his US Open debut. Collignon said that was the best day of his life – but today came nowhere near to hitting those heights, as he lost 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.

Alcaraz speaks:

I’m not used to playing early, so my goal was to start focused. I think I did pretty well, and after that I kept it going. Great performance, so I’m proud about it. I’m not an early person so for me it’s difficult, but I played good. I felt something in my knee [when he called for the physio], but after five, six points it was gone.

Alcaraz defeats Darderi 6-2, 6-4, 6-0

Darderi is serving to stay in the match. 0-15. 0-30. 0-40, as Alcaraz comes up with a return to take the breath away. Darderi takes the next point for 15-40, but almost seemed halfway to the net to shake Alcaraz’s hand. He knows his time is nearly up. So he’s going for broke. It’s an approach that gets him to deuce, but Alcaraz creates a fourth match point, and this time Darderi hits long! Alcaraz whizzes into round four for the loss of only six games. He again opts for his golf swing celebration.

Updated

Darderi looks as if he’s had enough. He’s broken again, this time to 15, as Alcaraz fizzes a forehand winner. It’s 4-zip. Darderi then goes for broke with Alcaraz leading 40-0 on serve, as the Italian crushes and rushes on his way to hauling himself to deuce. But Alcaraz sees the game through from there. It’s 6-2, 6-4, 5-0.

The Arthur Ashe court is turning into quicksand for Darderi as he drops 3-0 down in the third. Alcaraz is a few games away from what would be a third straight-sets win on the spin. His most likely fourth-round opponent is Rinderknech, who is two sets to one up on Bonzi. Bonzi defeated the self-combusting Daniil Medvedev in the first round, as he did at Wimbledon in June, but he’ll have to take this to five if he’s to progress any further.

You wouldn’t know Alcaraz has just received treatment for a knee issue. Because he jumps out of his chair and swiftly works his way to two set points at 15-40 on Darderi’s serve. And an inopportune double fault from Darderi gifts the second set to Alcaraz. The world No 2 leads 6-2, 6-4.

More bad news for Britain after Raducanu’s exit: Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool, the top seeds and Wimbledon champions, have lost in the first round of the men’s doubles. I should have said that Raducanu’s defeat means British interest in the women’s singles is over, with Cameron Norrie the sole survivor in the men’s singles. And Norrie has the task of facing Novak Djokovic in the night session, though he will be encouraged by Djokovic’s slightly shaky performance in the second round.

Alcaraz has called for the trainer. He’s got some pain in his right knee. He says he doesn’t want any tape, so instead is having a massage on his quad to see if it’ll loosen things up.

Darderi, after the high of the previous game, struggles to focus on serve, and is soon break point down. The 23-year-old (he’s a year older than Alcaraz, despite the gulf in grand slam experience) saves it, but very quickly has to fend off another. This time he does it with an ace. And from there he gamely holds for 4-4.

Plenty of oohs and aaahs from the biggest crowd in tennis as Darderi turns into Alcaraz, becoming the showman as he dives to the drop shot and Alcaraz goes wide. Quite possibly the point of the match. And the biggest surprise of the match, as the Italian goes on to break! It’s the first time this tournament that Alcaraz has been broken, and they’re back on serve in the second set, but Alcaraz still leads 6-2, 4-3.

Updated

Meanwhile the man with the biggest smile in tennis, Carlos Alcaraz, is doing to Luciano Darderi what he did in the first set, and now leads 6-2, 4-1. Despite his five slam titles, he can be prone to lapses in concentration, but he’s been locked in here from the start and appears well set for a fourth-round meeting with Benjamin Bonzi or Arthur Rinderknech. The French pair are locked at one set all.

I think the disappointing thing for Raducanu today was that she’ll know she could have played better. Yes, she’s struggled against the top, top players in the past, but the way she took it to Aryna Sabalenka at Wimbledon and in Cincinnati marked real progress, which was halted today. But progress is rarely linear – Raducanu of all people knows that, with all the knocks she’s had during her career. Hopefully she can still build on the positives from her summer; it’s been good to see her playing with a smile again, that’s for sure.

Updated

An email. “Raducanu is ranked around 35 and I feel that is accurate,” writes Mary Waltz. “She is still young and has room for improvement. She can have a long career but I don’t see her as regular top-10 player or major tournament winner. No shame in that.”

Raducanu leaves court in double quick time. Rybakina, meanwhile, says in her interview she’s really happy with how she played and that the scoreline didn’t reflect how tough Raducanu is as competitor. She admits she doesn’t know why she hasn’t gone far at the US Open before, but hopes this year will be different. The interview takes an unexpected turn when she’s asked about her love of rollercoasters – not that she experienced one today – the match was always going only one way.

Updated

Rybakina beats Raducanu 6-1, 6-2

Alcaraz meanwhile, having conceded only two points on serve so far, leads Darderi 5-2. And here are three set points on the Italian’s serve. Darderi nets. Alcaraz has the first set in 30 minutes … as Rybakina completes victory in just 62, when Raducanu’s return flies long. A humbling day for Raducanu, having had such a promising summer. For Rybakina, surprisingly, this is the first time she’s reached the fourth round in New York … and on this form she can go deep. Next she’ll face either Jasmine Paolini or Marketa Vondrousova.

Updated

Raducanu, from 15-all on her serve, slides 15-40 down. Which may as well be two match points. The pair get into a cross-court exchange … Rybkina hits just wide. And then nets her return! Raducanu puffs out her cheeks in relief; she’ll be hoping those two missed chances will play on her opponent’s mind. But from deuce, Raducanu is dragged out of court and Rybakina then hits a winner into the open space. And Raducanu’s cross-court forehand skids into the tramlines. Rybakina will serve for the match at 6-1, 5-2. Not that the crowd are cheering; they wanted a match here. But it’s gone by in the blink of an eye. Or more accurately 58 minutes.

Raducanu wins a rare point on the Rybakina second serve for 15-all. But then a short ball is swatted away for 30-15. Roig is trying to encourage Raducanu to take a few steps back and give herself more time on the ball. His plea works; it’s soon 30-all. But Rybakina rams an ace down the T and then Raducanu drops a tame ball into the centre of the court and Rybakina has plenty of time to take aim and whack a forehand winner. It’s 6-1, 4-2.

A nice bit of play from Raducanu, as she hits back behind Rybakina, catching the Kazakhstani off guard, to secure a hold to 30. The problem is, at 6-1, 3-2 down, she’s starting to run out of chances to break.

Make that 3-0 Alcaraz. He’s looking as sharp as his haircut. And Rybakina.

Updated

Rybakina rips a few more winners and it’s 6-1, 3-1. Meanwhile Carlos Alcaraz is doing what Carlos Alcaraz does, and the 2022 champion (was it really three years ago?!) has broken for a 2-0 lead in the opening set.

Raducanu duly listens to our Tim, and has a little spring in her step as she heads back to her chair having held courtesy of a couple of winners. Can she build on it? The problem is, this match is still very much on Rybakina’s racket. For all the inconsistency Rybakina has shown during her career, when she’s playing at her best, few can live with her; she’s up there with Sabalenka and Swiatek.

Ach. Raducanu, from 40-0 up on serve at the start of the second set, makes a flurry of errors and that’s another break. She desperately needed to steady herself in this match, but Rybakina consolidates the break and is 6-1, 2-0 ahead. “Only 37 minutes on the clock but you think the next game is must-win for Raducanu,” says Henman, as Raducanu’s latest coach Francisco Roig offers some encouragement from the sidelines.

Rybakina is seeing the ball like a football out there. She’s barely missing. But Raducanu is playing a lot into the centre of the court; perhaps she’ll have more success if she gets Rybakina on the move. She needs to try something different, that’s for sure. Meanwhile Carlos Alcaraz and that buzzcut have arrived on Arthur Ashe. His victim opponent today is the Italian 32nd seed Luciano Darderi.

This game follows the first-set script as Rybakina moves to 40-30, set point. But then she throws in a double! A glimmer, perhaps, for Raducanu. But Raducanu can’t make the most of the reprieve. She bashes a backhand return into the net on the second set point and it’s been a near-rout for Rybakina, who leads 6-1.

Raducanu gets on the board as a forehand winner seals a hold to 15. That’ll have felt good. But Rybakina, undeterred, swiftly holds to 15 herself amid a flurry of errant forehands from Raducanu. Rybakina has this way of looking so calm, composed and effortless, while also being so powerful and destructive. And that’s exactly how she gets herself a double break. It’s 5-1. After just 22 minutes, the ninth seed will serve for the opening set.

Updated

And we’ve also got these two pieces on US Open stoners and dating shows. Not a sentence I thought I’d ever type.

As usual, please do get in touch with your predictions/predilections. Or with anything I’ve missed. I’ve been on holiday the past couple of weeks (the west coast of Scotland – so beautiful!), so I’m playing a bit of catch-up. And talking of playing catch-up, here’s what happened on day five:

Raducanu dropped only six games in her first two matches. But both were against qualifiers; Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon champ, represents a huge step up in quality. Raducanu has tended to struggle against the biggest hitters – and is letting Rybakina dictate early on here – but the way in which she stood up to Aryna Sabalenka in two tight defeats at Wimbledon and Cincinnati this summer will give her hope. But Rybakina backs up the break and it’s 3-0.

Rybakina underlines why she’s the best server in the women’s game with some pinpoint deliveries to get to 40-15 in the opening game. The Russia-born Kazakhstani then misfires from the baseline, but holds to 30 when Raducanu rattles her return long. Rybakina bosses the next game too, charging to 0-40 and three break points. Raducanu repels the first, Rybakina blinks on the second but makes no mistake on the third. Raducanu drops serve for the first time at this US Open and it’s 2-0.

Updated

Also getting going: Jiri Lehecka, the Czech 20th seed, against Belgium’s Raphael Collignon, the conqueror of Casper Ruud; and the all-French affair between Benjamin Bonzi and Arthur Rinderknech.

On Sky, Tim Henman is backing the Brit, but reckons it’ll go to three sets. Marion Bartoli is also going with Raducanu. Big call. The head-to-head doesn’t help us much: ER has met ER only once before, back in 2022, though Rybakina did thrash Raducanu 6-0, 6-1. The pair have plenty of respect for each other and played doubles together last month in Washington DC.

Raducanu, all smiles, steps on to court, just ahead of Rybakina. The British No 1 has looked so happy and relaxed this week, having finally won her first matches at the US Open since that unlikely 2021 triumph. Rybakina, surprisingly given her pedigree as a former Wimbledon champion, has never been beyond the third round in New York. The pair are warming up, which should give you just about enough time to read Tumaini’s preview:

Preamble

Good afternoon/morning/evening depending on your worldly whereabouts and welcome to our day six coverage of the US Open as the third round begins. Now the pre-match pleasantries are out of the way, we better cut straight to the chase, because Emma Raducanu is about to get going against Elena Rybakina on Louis Armstrong. Carlos Alcaraz will make his entrance on Arthur Ashe in about half an hour. The American contingent of Ben Shelton, Jessica Pegula, Frances Tiafoe and Emma Navarro are also in action in the day session as the Labor Day weekend gets under way, along with Jasmine Paolini and the former finalist Victoria Azarenka. Let’s do this!

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