July 30th, 2025

Leylah Fernandez wins the DC Open fueled by Shake Shack. Alex de Minaur takes the men’s title

By Canadian Press on July 27, 2025.

WASHINGTON (AP) β€” The biggest tennis title of Leylah Fernandez’s career arrived at the D.C. Open on Sunday with the help of a terrific backhand, some superb returning β€” and energy courtesy of Shake Shack’s burgers and fries.

The left-handed Fernandez, a 22-year-old from Canada who is ranked 36th, wrapped up a big week of tight matches with a lopsided victory, defeating Anna Kalinskaya 6-1, 6-2 in the final.

Fernandez earned her fourth singles trophy β€” all have come at hard-court tournaments β€” and first at a WTA 500 event. She came quite close to a Grand Slam championship as a teenager at the 2021 U.S. Open, making it all the way to the final in New York before losing to Emma Raducanu.

There almost was a rematch in Washington, but Kalinskaya eliminated Raducanu in the semifinals Saturday.

The men’s trophy was won by No. 7 seed Alex de Minaur, who earned his 10th ATP title β€” eighth on hard courts β€” by saving three championship points in a 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (3) victory over No. 12 Alejandro Davidovich Fokina. De Minaur, a 26-year-old Australian, was the runner-up in Washington in 2018.

Davidovich Fokina dropped to 0-4 for his career in finals despite leading 5-2 in the third set Sunday and repeatedly standing just a single point from victory. This was his second time frittering away multiple match points in a tournament final this year. He entered the week at No. 26 and will make his debut in the top 20 on Monday; he remains the highest-ranked man without a title.

Fernandez took quite a journey through the women’s bracket.

She needed 2 hours, 19 minutes to oust No. 1 seed Jessica Pegula β€” last year’s U.S. Open runner-up β€” in three sets in the second round, then 2 hours, 20 minutes to beat Taylor Townsend in the quarterfinals, and 3 hours, 12 minutes for a three-tiebreaker victory over No. 3 seed Elena Rybakina β€” the 2022 Wimbledon champion β€” in the semifinals.

After each of the last two, Fernandez and her father β€” who is also her coach β€” opted for Shake Shack.

β€œWe got burgers, hot dog, cheese fries β€” everything that an athlete should not eat before a match, but it did the trick,” Fernandez said about what she ate after the Townsend match. β€œIt gave me the right nutrients to recover from the cramps and get ready for the next round.”

Following the Rybakina marathon, Fernandez said she and her father β€œwere messaging, and I was, like, β€˜OK, what do you want to eat tonight?’ We both answered at the same time: burgers. … That was kind of my diet for the whole week.”

Sure worked: This was the first title for Fernandez since October 2023 at the Hong Kong Open.

Plus, she arrived in Washington with a losing record this season and hadn’t won more than two matches at the same tournament since last November.

β€œI have gone through so many different challenges this week. It just has made me stronger, in a way, that if I can get through this week β€” through the cramps, through the long matches, through the heat, the humidity β€” I can get through anything,” Fernandez said. β€œSo I was just very happy that I got to not only push myself physically through the limits, but also mentally. So that kind of will help me hopefully for future tournaments.”

Against the 48th-ranked Kalinskaya, who hadn’t dropped a set until Sunday, Fernandez saved the only break point she faced while breaking four times.

One key: Fernandez claimed 10 of the 12 points when Kalinskaya hit a second serve. Another: Kalinskaya β€” a 26-year-old Russian who is 0-3 in tour finals β€” finished with 24 unforced errors and just nine winners.

β€œAmazing fight this week,” Kalinskaya told Fernandez. β€œYou truly deserve it.”

___

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Howard Fendrich, The Associated Press




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