
made a statement as she stormed back to beat Veronika Kudermetova and reach the last-16 in Rome. The Brit responded perfectly after losing a close first set, stepping it up and sealing a 5-7 6-0 6-1 victory.
Raducanu had an awkward mishap at the end of the second set when the umpire reminded her that she couldn't have a lengthy discussion with her team. and regrouped to book her spot in round four. But things will only get tougher as Raducanu faces world No. 3 and recent Madrid finalist Coco Gauff.
Just days ago, Raducanu , but she's clearly learning to love it. This is the first time she has reached the fourth round at a Grand Slam or WTA 1000 on the surface.
The world No. 49 was back on the SuperTennis Arena for the third time after two very different matches. She outlasted teenage qualifier Maya Joint in a rollercoaster three-setter in the first round before breezing past lucky loser Jil Teichmann on Friday.
Her third-round encounter with Kudermetova was a whole new test. The first set was a dogfight, as neither player was able to take a convincing lead.
There were boomerangs of breaks - Kudermetova was the first to pounce and she took a 4-3 lead before Raducanu got straight back on serve. Then, the Brit had a chance to close out the set at 5-4, but Kudermetova broke back and won the last three games to take it 7-5 after 63 minutes.
It was a sloppier set from the former US Open champion, who hit two double faults and only won two points on her second serve.
But the British No. 2 massively stepped it up as Kudermetova suffered a lapse in set two. The 28-year-old let 40-15 in the first game, but everything fall apart and Raducanu raced into a 5-0 lead.
Kudermetova called the physio before Raducanu had the chance to serve for the set and received an off-court medical time-out. The world No. 49 made the most of the interruption - she served some balls and spoke with Mark Petchey and Jane O'Donoghue in her box.
Raducanu played a scrappy game to close out the set, but she still got the job done, sealing a bagel and forcing a decider.
She then walked to the back of the court to continue chatting with her team but the umpire had to ask her to return to her bench, as lengthier coaching discussions are only permitted during medical time-outs.
Raducanu wasn't thrown off by the mishap. Instead, whatever Petchey and O'Donoghue told her worked perfectly. She broke in the first game of the final set and continued her relentless attack on the Kudermetova serve.
The Russian finally got on the board again after an hour and 10 minutes without winning a game, holding for 1-2. But it was the last game she won, and Raducanu reeled off four in a row to complete the comeback.
The world No. 49 now takes on Gauff, a former French Open finalist who finished runner-up in Madrid last week and loves the clay. Gauff won their only match at the 2023 Australian Open.
You may also like
Vignesh Shivan's 'Love Insurance Kompany' to hit screens on September 18
Taliban bans chess in Afghanistan, calls it 'haram'
As India-Pak tensions cool, border residents in Punjab hope for lasting peace
Donald Trump pledges to cut US prescription drug prices by 80pc
Shiv Sena(UBT) questions govt on India-Pak ceasefire, raises finger at Trump's role