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Amanda Anisimova makes positive start to Adelaide International 2 tournament

Amanda Anisimova makes positive start to Adelaide International 2 tournament

ADELAIDE, Australia — Forced to qualify for the Adelaide International 2, French Open semifinalist Amanda Anisimova is now into the second round after dispatching Liudmila Samsonova.

The American, a quarter-finalist at Wimbledon last year and former French Open semi-finalist, benefited from Samsonova’s service wobbles in a 7-5, 6-3 win on Tuesday.

The world No. 29 lost in the first round of last week’s Adelaide International 1 and, due to the high-quality field, only earned her spot in the second instalment through qualifying.

She battled through that but had few problems on Tuesday, helped by her opponent making just 52% of her first serves and conceding seven double faults.

Anisimova will next face Brazil’s much-improved world No. 15 Beatriz Haddad Maia.

Zheng Qinwen stormed home to beat Shelby Rogers 4-6, 6-4, 6-0 to book a date with Petra Kvitova.

Australian Storm Hunter will meet Estonian Kaia Kanepi later on Tuesday.

Meanwhile on the men’s side of the draw, Australian Chris O’Connell fell 6-4, 7-5 to surging American Tommy Paul in Adelaide.

Lucky loser O’Connell — who fell to compatriot John Millman in Monday’s qualifying but still progressed to the Adelaide International 2 main draw — went toe-to-toe with the world No. 35 in the 90-minute scrap.

But Paul pounced at the crucial moments, breaking O’Connell at 4-5 to claim the first set and repeating the dose at 5-6 after an equally evenly poised second set.

Paul’s whipping serve was on song in his first match of the season, while a wicked cross-court, angled forehand secured the first set against the world No. 79.

O’Connell showed his class with some clutch volleys and big forehands.

But Paul preyed on O’Connell’s second serve and, after being denied on his first two match points, secured passage and a round-of-16 clash with Brit Jack Draper.

“Always tricky first match of the season, so I’m pretty happy with how I played,” Paul said.

“We’ve had some wars (in previous matches), so I knew it would be tricky.

“Hopefully (after a good 2022 season) I keep going up, little by little.”

O’Connell will switch focus to next week’s Australian Open, the much-improved Sydney product now entrenched in the top 100 after surging about 400 places to sit just outside of the mark in 2019.

Albert Ramos-Vinolas will next face Millman, while Jason Kubler plays Tomas Martin Etcheverry on Tuesday night.

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