Tennis roundup: Elena Rybakina to face teen Victoria Mboko in Montreal; Zverev to face Khachanov in Toronto

Elena Rybakina and Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko both secured spots in the WTA Canadian Open semi-finals in Montreal. Rybakina advanced after Marta Kostyuk retired due to a wrist injury, while Mboko continued her impressive run by defeating Jessica Bouzas Maneiro. Mboko's victory ensures her a top-50 ranking for the first time, setting up a semi-final clash with Rybakina.
Tennis roundup: Elena Rybakina to face teen Victoria Mboko in Montreal; Zverev to face Khachanov in Toronto
Elena Rybakina hits a return to Marta Kostyuk during quarter-final action at the National Bank Open women's tennis tournament in Montreal. (The Canadian Press via AP)
Montreal: Elena Rybakina, the 2022 Wimbledon champion, and Canadian teen Victoria Mboko advanced to a WTA Canadian Open semi-final matchup with triumphs on Monday in the Montreal hard court event.World number 12 Rybakina of Kazakhstan led 6-1, 2-1 when Ukraine's Marta Kostyuk retired in the second set with a wrist injury.Mboko, the shocker of the event, dispatched Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro 6-4, 6-2 by taking the final six games to reach her first WTA 1000 semi-final in pursuit of her first trip to a WTA final."I'm so excited to be in the semi-final here," Mboko told the supportive home nation crowd. "I want to thank everyone for your support once again. It has been unreal."

Rybakina won their only prior meeting 6-3, 7-5 last month in the second round at Washington.The top five seeds and seven of the top 10 seeds were ousted before the quarter-finals, opening the door for such upstarts as 18-year-old Mboko, who eliminated top seed Coco Gauff.World number 85 Mboko, who began the year raked 333rd in the world, has ensured herself a jump into the top 50 for the first time in her career next week.
Mboko broke 51st-ranked Bouzas Maneiro for a 5-3 lead. The Spaniard broke back in the ninth game only to drop the first set after 43 minutes when Mboko broke again.Bouzas Maneiro broke to open the second set then held but Mboko never dropped a game from there, taking the match after 77 minutes when the Spaniard sent a backhand beyond the baseline.The crowd, which chanted "it's not over" in French after the match, has been the best part of the amazing run, Mboko said."I train here (in Canada) and it's always a great opportunity to be here," Mboko said. "My first time playing in Montreal has been an unreal experience and I couldn't be more grateful."Rybakina, seeded ninth, seeks her third WTA title after Rome and Indian Wells in 2023. She has not reached a final since last year at Miami.Rybakina broke 24th-seeded Kostyuk to open the match and led 2-1 when Kostyuk received medical treatment on her right wrist and forearm.Kostyuk netted a backhand to surrender a break in the fifth game and Rybakina broke again to claim the first set in 37 minutes when Kostyuk sent a forehand long.In the second set, Rybakina held twice before Kostyuk retired after 54 minutes due to her wrist issues, walking off the court in tears.Tuesday's quarter-final matches send four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka of Japan against Ukraine's 10th-seeded Elina Svitolina and US sixth seed Madison Keys, this year's Australian Open champion, against Danish 16th seed Clara Tauson.Zverev to meet Khachanov in ATP Toronto semi-finalsToronto: Alexander Zverev reached his 21st Masters 1000 semi-final on Monday by ending the Canadian title defence of Alexei Popyrin 6-7 (8/10), 6-4, 6-3 at the ATP Toronto Masters.The final game, with Zverev serving at 5-3, was interrupted by shouts from an unruly fan who was tossed out by security.The distraction ended a run of 14 consecutive points on serve, with the seed double-faulting once he was able to continue serving.He finished off the evening with a sharp volley winner at the net on his first match point.Zverev completed his 40th win of the year in just over two and a half hours.The world number three won the tournament in 2017 but had not been past the quarter-finals in Canada since."After losing the first set, I had to tell myself we were both playing well," the holder of seven Masters trophies said."I had one or two mistakes at the end of the first, but it was a high-level match."I felt that if I kept playing well, I would get my chances -- and I did. I can't complain about the second and third sets."Zverev will bid for the oddly scheduled Thursday final against three-time semi-finalist Karen Khachanov, who dismissed young American Alex Michelsen 6-4, 7-6 (7/3)."It was a very close, competitive match," Khachanov said. "I had to come back from some tough situations."How you handle that mentally is important. I was glad to close it out in the second set. "I had to try and not give him the opportunity to step in and attack; that's what I did today."Zverev has won five of the seven matches he has played against Khachanov. Popyrin and Zverev duelled throughout the evenly matched 71-minute opening set as it went into a tiebreaker.Zverev was unable to convert on two winning chances, but Popyrin came good on his own second opportunity with a net cord winner that caught his opponent stranded at the baseline.The German began to turn the tables in the second set, taking a 4-1 lead only to see the Aussie level at 4-all.Zverev pulled away to level the match at a set apiece, breaking for 6-4 as Popyrin sent a volley wide.The top seed began the final set with a 3-0 lead on his way into the tournament final four at the pre-US Open event.Popyrin remains winless against Zverev after losing all four of their matches.
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