The
Berlin Ladies Open Round 16 began with a series of controlled straight-set victories for several seeded players, as Madison Keys, Elina Svitolina and Paula Badosa all progressed without extended disruption. The early stages of the draw reflected expected seed separation, with most higher-ranked players managing to avoid opening-round upsets.
Elsewhere in the schedule, Eva Lys produced one of the key comebacks of the day against Magdalena Fręch, while Linda Nosková also moved through with a routine win. The doubles draw featured Karolína Muchová partnering Serena Williams in a competitive opening encounter against Gabriela Olmos and Erin Routliffe, adding an additional storyline to the day’s order of play in Berlin.
Madison Keys overturns early momentum swings to defeat Wang Xinyu
Madison Keys def. Wang Xinyu 7-6, 6-1
Madison Keys was initially pushed into extended service games as Wang Xinyu neutralised early aggression and broke back after Keys had built a rapid scoring run. Both players held through a sequence of tight service holds, leading to a tiebreak where Keys established early separation.
The second set shifted once Keys improved first-serve consistency and reduced the number of neutral baseline exchanges. Wang’s service games came under increasing pressure, particularly on second serve, which limited her ability to reset points or extend rallies.
Keys finished with 74% first-serve points won and converted 4/7 break points, reflecting the decisive gap after the opener. She progresses in the
Berlin Ladies Open Round 16 and will face Karolína Muchová in a high-level second-round matchup.
Eva Lys overturns Fręch after set-point volatility
Eva Lys def. Magdalena Fręch 6-7, 6-3
Magdalena Fręch built a strong early position by moving into a 5-1 lead and generating multiple set points, but failed to convert a series of opportunities as Eva Lys extended return games and stabilised her service patterns. The opening set ultimately turned on missed set-point conversions in both regulation games and the tiebreak.
Lys adjusted her return position in the second set, standing further inside the baseline to apply pressure on second serves and shorten Fręch’s rally options. This shift disrupted Fręch’s rhythm and led to repeated breaks of serve.
Fręch finished below 50% first-serve points won and struggled to consolidate leads once broken. Lys advances in the Berlin Ladies Open Round 16 and moves into a second-round meeting with Elina Svitolina.
Linda Nosková controls Zarazúa in straight-sets win
Linda Nosková def. Renata Zarazúa 6-1, 6-4
Linda Nosková opened with strong first-strike tennis, winning five consecutive games after an early exchange of holds and immediately taking control of baseline tempo. Zarazúa struggled to absorb pace consistently, particularly on second serve, which limited her ability to build neutral points.
The second set was more competitive, but Nosková maintained control through improved return depth and efficient service games in pressure moments. She avoided extended service-game volatility and kept break-point exposure to a minimum. Nosková finished with over 70% first-serve points won and progressed without major fluctuations. She advances in the Berlin Ladies Open Round 16.
Kateřina Siniaková extends Czech momentum in straight-sets win
Kateřina Siniaková def. Rebeka Masarova 6-2, 6-4
Kateřina Siniaková established early dominance through return pressure, breaking repeatedly in the opening set and building a sustained lead through consecutive service holds. Masarova struggled to stabilise behind her second serve.
The second set featured improved resistance, but Siniaková maintained structural control through consistent first-serve percentages and wide serve patterns that prevented baseline rhythm from developing. Siniaková finished with over 65% first-serve points won and converted multiple break opportunities to secure the win. She progresses in the Berlin Ladies Open Round 16, where she will face Jessica Pegula.
Elina Svitolina advances after Kalinskaya retirement
Elina Svitolina def. Anna Kalinskaya 6-1, 4-1 RET
Elina Svitolina established early structural control through return pressure, consistently targeting Anna Kalinskaya’s second serve and forcing her into defensive positions from the baseline. The Ukrainian created a double-break cushion early, reflecting the gap in serve efficiency and rally tolerance from the opening games.
Kalinskaya briefly disrupted the pattern with a break back, but Svitolina immediately reasserted control through deeper return positioning and improved first-ball aggression on service returns. The match ended after Kalinskaya required a medical timeout and retired while trailing 4-1 in the second set.
Kalinskaya won just 22% of second-serve points and was repeatedly unable to hold serve under sustained pressure, conceding five breaks across her service games. Svitolina progresses in the Berlin Ladies Open Round 16 and will face Eva Lys in the second round, a matchup that contrasts Svitolina’s control-based baseline structure with Lys’ home-court momentum.
Elina SVITOLINA of Ukraine celebrates his victory during the eighth day of the Roland-Garros 2026
Paula Badosa manages controlled progression over Lamens
Paula Badosa def. Suzan Lamens 6-3, 6-2
Paula Badosa opened the match by establishing early separation through consistent pressure on Suzan Lamens’ second serve, preventing the Dutch player from building neutral baseline patterns. Lamens struggled to hold depth in exchanges, particularly when forced into extended defensive positions.
As the match progressed, Badosa increased return aggression and shortened rally length, stepping closer to the baseline to take time away on Lamens’ service games. This adjustment created repeated break-point scenarios and eliminated any sustained momentum shifts from the opponent.
Badosa finished with over 70% first-serve points won and maintained strong break-point conversion efficiency, particularly in mid-set service games where she avoided prolonged deuce pressure. She progresses in the Berlin Ladies Open Round 16 and will face Coco Gauff in the second round, a high-intensity matchup between a returning aggressor and one of the tour’s most consistent counterpunchers.
Doubles: Olmos and Routliffe expose lack of cohesion from Williams–Muchová pairing
Gabriela Olmos / Erin Routliffe def. Serena Williams / Karolína Muchová 6-4, 6-4
Serena Williams and Karolína Muchová struggled to establish synchronisation in their first-round doubles match against Gabriela Olmos and Erin Routliffe, particularly in shared decision-making during neutral rally phases. At multiple points, both players hesitated on mid-court balls, with neither fully committing to aggressive interception, allowing Olmos and Routliffe to take control of key exchanges.
Despite the structural issues, the pairing intermittently displayed high-level shot-making, with both Williams and Muchová producing isolated moments of singles-quality power from the baseline and at net. However, the lack of established patterns in movement coordination meant they were frequently placed under reactive pressure in extended rallies.
Serena Williams of United States celebrates a point against Nicole Melichar-Martinez of United States and Erin Routliffe of New Zealand during day two of the HSBC Championships at The Queen's Club