April 1, 2018 / 4:35 AM / Updated an hour ago

Tennis: Stephens sees off Ostapenko to win Miami title

(Reuters) - American Sloane Stephens kept intact her streak of never having lost a final as she defeated Latvia’s Jelena Ostapenko 7-6(5) 6-1 to claim the Miami Open title on Saturday.

Mar 31, 2018; Key Biscayne, FL, USA; Sloane Stephens of the United States poses with the Butch Buchholz championship trophy on Crandon Park Beach after her match against Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia (not pictured) during the women's singles final of the Miami Open at Tennis Center at Crandon Park. Stephens won 7-6(5), 6-1. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

After a tense first set, the U.S. Open champion reeled off six consecutive games in the second to beat the French Open winner and claim her first Miami title after a slow start to the season.

“I wasn’t expecting a title here or anywhere, really. I just wanted to make sure I got my game back where I wanted it to be,” Florida native Stephens said in a courtside interview after extending her record in finals to 6-0.

“I knew if I just got back to the drawing board I would be OK.”

The crowd favourite had just six winners, compared with 25 for Ostapenko, but 48 unforced errors by the Latvian and Stephens’ relentless defence were the difference.

Adding to her triumphant weekend, Stephens, who was seeded only 13th in Miami, will make her world top-10 debut on Monday, after rising to number nine.

Ostapenko is currently ranked fifth.

Their error-strewn first set began with four consecutive service breaks and went to 6-6 before Stephens pushed ahead 6-2 in the tiebreak.

Ostapenko saved four set points but couldn’t halt Stephens as the Latvian lost her first tiebreak - and first set - of the tournament when Stephens’ return pulled Ostapenko wide to the backhand and the Latvian netted.

Ostapenko grabbed the first break in the second set, but Stephens broke straight back and cruised to victory in an hour and 31 minutes.

“I was a little nervous and it was showing in my game,” Stephens said of the first set. “My feet weren’t moving. I wasn’t swinging good at the ball.

“I just needed a little reminder to go for my shots, go for my forehand and really go for it if I wanted to take the title.”

The men’s prize will be decided on Sunday with American John Isner going for the biggest win of his career against Germany’s Alexander Zverev.

Mar 31, 2018; Key Biscayne, FL, USA; Sloane Stephens of the United States reaches for a forehand against Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia (not pictured) during the women's singles final of the Miami Open at Tennis Center at Crandon Park. Stephens won 7-6(5), 6-1. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina, editing by Ed Osmond, Neville Dalton