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Imperioso paseo de Badosa en la tierra de Bastad: final tras 705 días

Imperioso paseo de Badosa en la tierra de Bastad: final tras 705 días

Tennis Made Simple: Badosa’s Final Run and Quevedo’s Top 100 Debut

How the Spanish Hope Ended in Båstad

The Spanish tennis community was hoping that a Spanish player would definitely win the small professional tournament (called a "125" event) held in Båstad. This could have happened if Kaitlin Quevedo had beaten Swiss player Simona Waltert in her semifinal match.

But here is what actually happened:

  • Simona Waltert, who is ranked 90th in the world, won that match.
  • The score was 7‑5 and 6‑2 (those are the two parts of the match, called sets).
  • Because Waltert won, she will now play against Paula Badosa in the final.
  • Badosa has been playing unstoppably well.
  • Interestingly, Waltert and Badosa have never played each other before (no precedents).

Callout – Important Point: A "125" tournament is a lower‑level event on the women’s tennis tour. Even if you win it, it does not count as a regular WTA title (we’ll explain WTA in a moment).

Paula Badosa’s Road to the Final

Paula Badosa is a 28‑year‑old tennis player from a town called Begur. She is coached by Pol Toledo (she is his "pupil").

Here is the simple scoop on her journey:

  • She is back in a final 705 days after she last won a trophy in Washington.
  • That Washington win is one of four career titles she has collected.
  • Because the Båstad event is a "125" category, winning it would not be added as a normal WTA crown.
  • In the semifinal, she beat Yulia Putintseva (from Kazakhstan, the 3rd‑seeded player in the draw) by 6‑1, 6‑2 in just 66 minutes.
  • She has not lost a single set in the whole tournament (meaning she won every mini‑part of every match).
  • Those results gave her 32 extra ranking points, moving her up to world #119.

Callout – What is the WTA? The WTA (Women’s Tennis Association) is the group that runs most professional women’s tennis. A "seed" is just a top‑ranked player given a number based on skill. A "set" is like a chapter of a match; win two sets and you win the match.

Steps Badosa Must Take to Reach the US Open Directly

The US Open is one of the four biggest tennis events in the world (called Grand Slams). It runs from August 31 to September 13. To get in without playing extra qualifying matches ("fase previa"), Badosa needs more points. Here is her to‑do list:

  1. Score points in the Båstad final (by playing well or winning).
  2. Travel to Iasi, Romania next week for a slightly bigger event called the WTA 250 (250 is a higher level than 125).
  3. Keep winning or advancing there to bank enough points so her ranking is high enough for direct US Open entry.

Quevedo, ‘Top 100’ Virtual

Even though Kaitlin Quevedo lost her semifinal to Waltert, she still has good news:

  • On Monday, she will appear in the world rankings as a top‑100 player for the first time. Think of it as joining the elite club of the 100 best female players on the planet.
  • If she keeps that top‑100 spot, she will walk directly into the last Grand Slam of the season (the US Open) without needing to play the preliminary rounds.

Callout – Important Point: Being in the top 100 normally means automatic entry to big tournaments, saving players from stressful qualifying matches.

Summary

Let’s recap everything in a nutshell:

  • Spanish tennis missed a guaranteed champion at the Båstad 125 because Quevedo lost to Waltert (7‑5, 6‑2).
  • Waltert (world #90) will face Paula Badosa in the final; they’ve never met.
  • Badosa, 28, from Begur, reached her first final in 705 days, beat Putintseva 6‑1, 6‑2 in 66 minutes, and rose to #119.
  • Badosa must add points in the final and at the Iasi WTA 250 to avoid US Open qualifying.
  • Quevedo debuts in the top 100 on Monday and may secure direct US Open access.

FAQ

1. What do the numbers 125 and 250 mean in tennis?
They are labels for tournament levels on the women’s tour. A 125 event gives fewer ranking points and is smaller; a 250 event is a bit bigger. Both are below the giant Grand Slam tournaments.

2. What is a “set” and why does it matter that Badosa hasn’t lost one?
A match is divided into sets (like rounds). You usually need to win two sets to win the match. Badosa winning all sets means she has been dominating every match part in Båstad.

3. Why doesn’t winning the Båstad 125 count as a WTA title?
The WTA only counts its main‑tour events (like 250, 500, 1000, and Grand Slams) as official titles. The 125 is a lower‑tier event, so its trophy is not listed as a regular WTA crown.

4. What is the US Open and what does “fase previa” mean?
The US Open is a Grand Slam tournament held from Aug 31 to Sep 13. “Fase previa” is the qualifying stage that lower‑ranked players must win to enter the main draw; top players can skip it.

5. Who is Pol Toledo?
He is the coach of Paula Badosa (the article calls her his “pupil,” meaning she is his student/player he trains).

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