Stosur beaten in China Open semi

Australia’s Samantha Stosur is out of the China Open in Beijing, beaten by world No.3 Petra Kvitova 6-3 5-7 6-2 in the semi-final on Saturday.

Stosur reached the semis after a walkover against an injured Serena Williams and she pushed Kvitova, taking the second set as she broke serve in the final game.

The 2011 US Open winner and former world No.4 appeared to be capitalising on a lack of rhythm in her Czech opponents play after the game was halted because of rain, meaning the court had to be dried and the roof closed.

But the third seed in Beijing fought back in the third set, saving three break points in the second game before breaking in the fifth and seventh to make her first final in Beijing.

In the men’s competition, world No.1 Novak Djokovic continued his brilliant 100 per cent record at the China Open, overpowering Andy Murray in straight sets to make his way into the final.

It was another ruthless serving display from the top seed in Beijing, who overcame a brief fightback from the 27-year-old Scot midway through the second set to claim a 6-3 6-4 win.

Djokovic broke serve in the eighth game, taking advantage of some risky groundstrokes by Murray, to take the opening set.

The British sixth seed appeared to lose concentration early in the second set, dropping his serve in the first game and losing the next in a spell during which he failed to score a point.

But Murray took the upper hand thereafter, forcing two break points from his opponent in the fourth game, before finally clinching a deserved break at his next attempt.

The world No.11 was having his best moments of the match, taking points from Djokovic at the net during an attractive spell of tennis from both players.

However, Djokovic stepped up a gear when Murray pulled in front at 4-3, winning the next three games and allowing his opponent to take just one point.

“I felt like I could swing through the ball. I could dictate the play from the baseline better than I did in the previous games in the second set,” Djokovic said, explaining how he closed in on victory.

“Yeah, he played well. A couple of games we had some very, very long games. He broke back. He won that game. He was back in play, back in the match.

“But the comfortable hold at 4-3 probably allowed me to have that release in a way… because obviously I didn’t want him to break me and get into a third set where it can go either way.”

The Serb is bidding for his fifth title in Beijing, a tournament he has won every year since 2009 – apart from 2011 when he did not take part.

Murray was vying for his second consecutive title in China after he won in Shenzhen last weekend.

“I was doing a decent job of it myself, but I just made a few too many errors today,” he said.

“I played some good stuff. But the period the middle of the first set, and the beginning of the second set, I could have done better.”

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