Andreeva tops Parks in Stuttgart; to face Swiatek in quarterfinals

Andreeva tops Parks in Stuttgart; to face Swiatek in quarterfinals

No. 6 seed Mirra Andreeva prolonged her profitable streak to six matches after defeating qualifier Alycia Parks 7-6(3), 6-3 in the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix second spherical.

The champion final week in Linz, Andreeva is unbeaten on clay to this point this 12 months, and strikes into her fifth quarterfinal of 2026. There, she’ll face No. 3 seed Iga Swiatek — a two-time winner in Stuttgart — for the fourth time, and first on clay.

Stuttgart: Scores | Draws | Order of play

All three of Andreeva’s earlier conferences with Swiatek have been on exhausting courts — a slim 4-6, 6-3, 7-5 loss in the 2024 Cincinnati quarterfinals, then back-to-back wins in the 2025 Dubai quarterfinals and Indian Wells semifinals en route to each titles.

The 18-year-old gave little away about her strategy to going through Swiatek for the primary time in 13 months.

“I will just try to talk with Conchita,” Andreeva stated. “Obviously she’s a great player, but I’ll just approach this match as every other match that I had before. Obviously she’s had a good history on clay, so I’m just very curious to see how it’s gonna go. Obviously this is clay indoors, so it’s still a little bit different, but yeah, I’m kind of excited to see how this match will go on clay court for the first time.”

Against Parks, Andreeva was going through one of many WTA Tour Driven by Mercedes-Benz’s greatest hitters for a second spherical in a row, having dethroned defending champion Jelena Ostapenko in her opener. She had dropped only one recreation in opposition to Parks in their solely earlier assembly, in the primary spherical of final 12 months’s US Open, however the World No. 95 pushed her tougher in their clay-court rematch.

Andreeva broke Parks in the opening recreation with an emphatic smash, and thereafter principally stored her nostril in entrance — however that was a wrestle because the American stored on her heels, with the pair racking up 9 breaks of serve between them. Parks’ best passage of play got here as she pressured a tiebreak from 5-3 down in the primary set, saving two set factors alongside the best way — the primary with an exquisitely spun drop shot.

However, she delivered an error-strewn tiebreak, encapsulating a contest in which she fired 21 winners but additionally dedicated 41 unforced errors. Andreeva, in contrast, stored her recreation watertight with 10 winners to six unforced errors.

I’m just super happy with the way I stayed composed,” Andreeva stated. “I felt like at some moments I was getting a little bit more tight, because for me, every point was important when you play against these kind of dangerous players.”

 

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