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Belarus's Aryna Sabalenka celebrates after beating Czech Republic's Katerina Siniakova at Wuhan Open on Wednesday. Image Credit: AFP

Wuhan China: World No 2 Aryna Sabalenka said on Wednesday that she believes her rivalry with top-ranked Iga Swiatek is “much-needed” in women’s tennis.

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The Belarusian advanced to the Wuhan Open third round with her 50th victory of the season, 6-4, 6-4 against Katerina Siniakova.

Swiatek is absent from the field in Wuhan and withdrew from the China swing after splitting with her coach of three years Tomasz Wiktorowski.

Coming down to the wire in Saudi Arabia

Sabalenka has a chance to close the gap on the Polish world No 1 with a strong run in Wuhan, with the battle for the top spot likely to come down to the wire at the season-ending championships in Riyadh next month.

“Having this rivalry with Iga is something big for tennis and something much-needed, I would say, in women’s tennis.

“To keep this competition going would be really good for tennis,” said Sabalenka, who will next face Yulia Putintseva in the last 16.

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Sabalenka, who spent eight weeks at the summit of world rankings last season, wants to reclaim the No 1 spot. Image Credit: AFP

Sabalenka, 26, spent eight weeks at the summit of the rankings last season and says reclaiming the world No 1 spot is one of her biggest goals.

“I hope she’ll figure out the coach situation and she’ll be back in the finals in her best shape.

“Hopefully we can play against each other there in… a fight for world No 1.”

Coco Gauff followed up her China Open title in Beijing on Sunday with a smooth 6-1, 6-2 win over Viktoriya Tomova.

Gauff's winning streak

Gauff has a seven-match win streak and faces 13th seed Marta Kostyuk in the last 16.

Kostyuk received a walkover after her opponent Amanda Anisimova withdrew with a left hip injury.

“Both mentally and physically I’m a little tired, if I’m being honest,” said Gauff. “But when I got on the court, I felt fine.

“How I approached Beijing, I was like, I want to approach this how I would play tennis as a kid.

“Sometimes I try to go back into that mindset and realise at the end of the day this is my dream now, and it was my dream as a kid.

“If I don’t want to do it for myself now, I can definitely do it for myself then.”

Hailey Baptiste
Hailey Baptiste of the USA reacts during her match against Czech Republic's Barbora Krejcikova. Image Credit: AFP

Krejcikova suffers shock loss

Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova crashed out to American qualifier and world No 102 Hailey Baptiste 6-3, 7-5 in just 94 minutes.

Seventh seed Krejcikova let a 3-1 lead slip in the opening set, as well as a 5-3 advantage in the second.

The 22-year-old Baptiste will next take on Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova for a place in the quarter-finals.