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Britain’s Emma Raducanu celebrates beating Germany’s Tamara Korpatsch on day one of the Australian Open. Photo: AFP

Australian Open: Raducanu through to 2nd round in Melbourne, will face American Coco Gauff

  • British No 1 shakes off ankle injury, eases to 6-3, 6-2 win over Germany’s Tamara Korpatsch
  • Third-seed Jessica Pegula also makes strong start in her quest for first grand slam singles title
Agencies

Emma Raducanu put her injury worries behind her with victory over Tamara Korpatsch at the Australian Open on Monday to set up a second-round clash with Coco Gauff.

The British No 1 had the left ankle she rolled in Auckland 11 days ago taped up but grew in confidence through the match and eased to a 6-3, 6-2 win after an hour and 25 minutes.

While it was undoubtedly a reason to celebrate, this was also a gentle lob of a draw, with German Korpatsch, ranked one place ahead of Raducanu at 76, inexperienced at this level and a lot more comfortable on clay than hard courts.

Seventh seed Gauff, who defeated Katerina Siniakova 6-1, 6-4, will offer a significantly different challenge as she looks to emulate Raducanu by winning a slam.

Although she is more than a year younger than Raducanu, Gauff has already played for 3½ on the main tour, climbing into the top 10 and establishing the sort of solid base her next opponent is still seeking.

Given a warm welcome on a packed mid-sized arena, Raducanu initially looked hesitant on serve and stretching out wide to her backhand.

Coco Gauff waits to return the ball during her women’s singles first round match against Katerina Siniakova. Photo: EPA-EFE

The crunch moment of the first set came in the seventh game after Raducanu had twice been pegged back from a break ahead.

The 20-year-old has taken an aggressive approach under new coach Sebastian Sachs and tried to seize the initiative on her forehand.

It paid off as she secured another break, clenching her fist in the direction of her team, and it was start of a run of six games in a row that put her in full control of the contest.

By now putting a lot more weight behind her backhand and looking confident in her game plan, Raducanu wrapped up victory when Korpatsch pushed a forehand long.

Earlier, third-seed Jessica Pegula made strong a start to her quest for a first grand slam singles title, as she overwhelmed Jaqueline Cristian of Romania 6-0, 6-1.

A quarter-finalist in Melbourne in each of the past two years, Pegula needed just 59 minutes to get past the 161st-ranked Cristian, who was appearing in her third Grand Slam event.

“Today is just one of those days everything was working,” said the American, who will play either Czech qualifier Brenda Fruhvirtova or Aliaksandra Sasnovich in the second round.

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