• Contact
  • Magazines Archive
  • Subscribe Now
Business Today Middle East
  • News
  • Business
    • Markets
      • Money
      • Tech News
      • Healthcare
      • Opinion
    • Appointments
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Energy
  • Hospitality
    • Hotel
    • Catering
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Sports
    • Cars
    • Travel
  • Design
  • Interviews
  • Regional Roundup
No Result
View All Result
Business Today Middle East
  • News
  • Business
    • Markets
      • Money
      • Tech News
      • Healthcare
      • Opinion
    • Appointments
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Energy
  • Hospitality
    • Hotel
    • Catering
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Sports
    • Cars
    • Travel
  • Design
  • Interviews
  • Regional Roundup
No Result
View All Result
Business Today Middle East
No Result
View All Result
Home Sports

Barty ends 44-year drought in ‘dream come true’ Australian Open

Staff writer by Staff writer
January 31, 2022
in Sports

An imperious Ashleigh Barty became the first Australian to win her home Grand Slam in 44 years on Saturday, halting the charge of fearless American Danielle Collins in straight sets.

The world number one was 5-1 down in the second set but came storming back to win on a tiebreak and sweep past the 27th seed 6-3, 7-6 (7/2) to be crowned Australian Open champion in front of an expectant Rod Laver Arena crowd.

It was a third Slam title for the 25-year-old after her breakthrough French Open success in 2019 and Wimbledon last year, joining Serena Williams as the only active players to win majors on all three surfaces.

She achieved the feat with Christine O’Neill, the last Australian man or woman to win in Melbourne, watching in the stadium.

O’Neill won the title in 1978 and told reporters before the match: “I’m probably her (Barty’s) biggest fan. I’d be happy to hand it over to her because she’s so deserving of it.

“She is an absolute thinker, she’s a craftsperson, a bit like a chess player with how she constructs the points.”

There were fears she might be overwhelmed by the weight of expectation, but the Australian has dealt with intense pressure before, none more so than at Wimbledon last year.

Winning at the All England Club was the one trophy she wanted more than any others, and she handled the occasion with aplomb.

She applied the same tactical acumen with the resurgent Collins, who has enjoyed a new lease of life after surgery last year for endometriosis left her pain free, storming to her first two WTA titles, according to Agence France-Presse.

Barty-main1-750

She countered the 28-year-old’s power-hitting and big serves with her dizzying array of slices, pinpoint serving, speed and a seamless forehand, but she had a major fright.

Both players comfortably held their early service games, offering few chances as they got a feel for each other.

But Collins was employing her powerful groundstrokes and they were causing trouble.

She worked the first deuce with Barty serving at 2-2 and a wayward forehand handed her the opening break point of the night.

The Australian, though, held firm and served out with an ace.

Barty-AUSOpen

She then stepped up a gear and put pressure on the Collins serve to earn her first break point with a net volley, and the American double faulted under pressure to go 4-2 behind.

With the crowd roaring her on, Barty raced home 6-3 in 32 minutes.

But Collins wasn’t done and came storming back, breaking Barty for 2-0 in the second set – a fate the Australian has suffered just once before this tournament.

Barty-fans

Collins fended off two break points to hold serve and while Barty made a statement by winning her next service game to love. The American was pumped up and broke again for 5-1 as the top seed sent down two double faults.

Barty was in deep trouble but incredibly found a way back, breaking for 2-5 with some crisp winners then breaking again for 4-5 as Collins floundered serving for the set.

She forced a tiebreak and was always in charge to collect her fourth victory in five encounters with Collins and make history for Australia.

Share30Tweet19Share5Pin7Send
Staff writer

Staff writer

Recommended For You

Nick Oakley, Co-CEO of Dubai Basketball and Elie Nasr, General Manager of Bauerfeind

Bauerfeind Joins Dubai Basketball as Strategic Partner for 2025/26 Season

January 21, 2026

Top Global Sports Investment Frontiers for 2026

January 21, 2026

Desert Vipers Announce Strategic Partnership With Middlesex University Dubai

January 21, 2026

Strategic Guide: Investing in the Saudi Sports Sector (2026 Edition)

January 9, 2026
Saudi Pro League Privatization 2026: A New Era of Global Sports Investment

Saudi Pro League Privatization 2026: A New Era of Global Sports Investment

January 6, 2026
The Ab Hai Tumhari Bari campaign by Pepsi and PCB is redefining how girls access cricket in Pakistan

It’s Your Turn Now: Pepsi’s Innovative Cricket Initiative for Girls In Collaboration with PCB

January 6, 2026
Next Post
Dubai world’s key destination for foreign direct investment

Dubai world’s key destination for foreign direct investment

Latest News

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.2: From “Chatbot” to the First Universal AI Work Engine

OpenAI Unveils GPT-5.2: From “Chatbot” to the First Universal AI Work Engine

January 22, 2026
The Sky Mansion is a masterpiece of design

ELEVATE Sets New Benchmark with AED 38 Million Sky Mansion Sale

January 21, 2026
Breez presents a rare ownership opportunity in one of the city’s most prestigious waterfront locations

Breez by Danube Leads Dubai’s Next Wave of Waterfront Living

January 21, 2026
Dubai Holding strengthens its presence in Europe’s hospitality sector by acquiring a property in Mallorca

Dubai Holding strengthens its presence in Europe’s hospitality sector by acquiring a property in Mallorca

January 21, 2026
BusinessToday_logo

Get In Touch

Building #10, Dubai Media City
PO Box 502511, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

+971 4 420 0506

sales@bncpublishing.net
Jo@bncpublishing.net

Business Today Middle East – December 2025
BusinessToday Magazines

Business Today Middle East – December 2025

by Aya Zhang
January 13, 2026
BusinessToday-nov-2025
BusinessToday Magazines

Business Today Middle East – November 2025

by Staff Writer
January 13, 2026
Sister Publications
  • Construction Business News
  • Design Middle East
  • Logistics News ME
  • Hotel & Catering
  • Entrepreneur Al Arabiyah
  • Entrepreneur Middle East
Newsletter

Never miss any important news.
Subscribe to our newsletter.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Get In Touch

Building #10, Dubai Media City
PO Box 502511, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

+971 4 420 0506

sales@bncpublishing.net
Jo@bncpublishing.net

Sister Publications
  • Construction Business News
  • Design Middle East
  • Logistics News ME
  • Hotel & Catering
  • Entrepreneur Al Arabiyah
  • Entrepreneur Middle East
Newsletter

Never miss any important news.
Subscribe to our newsletter.

SUBSCRIBE NOW
Business Today Middle East – December 2025
BusinessToday Magazines

Business Today Middle East – December 2025

by Aya Zhang
January 13, 2026
BusinessToday-nov-2025
BusinessToday Magazines

Business Today Middle East – November 2025

by Staff Writer
January 13, 2026

Copyright © 2026 BNC Publishing. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Contact Us

© 2026 BusinessToday . All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version