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Emma Raducanu celebrates winning a point against Yuan Yue during their second round match of the Korea Open
Emma Raducanu celebrates winning a point against Yuan Yue during their second round match of the Korea Open. Photograph: Ahn Young-joon/AP
Emma Raducanu celebrates winning a point against Yuan Yue during their second round match of the Korea Open. Photograph: Ahn Young-joon/AP

Emma Raducanu survives injury scare to make Korea Open quarter-finals

  • China’s Yuan Yue, the No 8 seed, beaten 6-4, 6-3
  • Briton received treatment for suspected foot injury

Emma Raducanu reached the ­quarter-finals of the Korea Open after beating Yuan Yue of China in straight sets. The 21-year-old needed seven match points to secure a hard-fought 6-4, 6-3 victory over the eighth seed.

Raducanu edged ahead to win a close first set and built a quick lead at the start of the second, then held off a comeback from Yuan and ­served eight aces during the second set.

Raducanu had battled past the American Peyton Stearns in the ­previous round to set up the ­meeting with Yuan, which was incredibly tight in the opening stages. The ­momentum shifted when some solid forehands allowed Raducanu to level at 4-4 and she broke Yuan’s serve in the ­following game to go in front.

After taking a medical timeout, the Briton then successfully served out the set and quickly picked up where she left off to take control in the ­second set, breaking Yuan’s serve in the opening game before ­extending her lead in the second, which included two aces.

She won her sixth straight game of the match to go 3-0 up but was broken in the fourth game as Yuan pulled one back and the Chinese player looked to pile on the pressure.

Although Yuan looked like she was beginning to find her rhythm, Raducanu fought back to hold serve and extend her lead further in a close sixth game. The eighth game ­produced seven deuces and ­Raducanu missed five match points before Yuan eventually broke, but the Briton stopped any chance of a late comeback by wrapping up victory in the following game.

Raducanu said: “I think my key to the success today was trying to let go of any frustration that happened. ­Closing out the match I had a lot of match points and couldn’t convert so just staying focused and breaking in that last game.”

This article was corrected on 19 September 2024 to reflect the fact that the penultimate game was on Emma Raducanu’s serve, not Yuan Yue’s.

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