DOHA, Qatar —  Defending champion Victoria Azarenka beat Serena Williams 7-6 (6), 2-6,  6-3 to win the Qatar Open on Sunday, earning her 16th title and ending a  10-match losing streak against the American. Azarenka will give  up the No. 1 ranking to the second-ranked Williams on Monday but  extended her current winning streak to 14 matches, which included her  second Australian Open title. More importantly, she may have turned  around what has been a one-sided rivalry against Williams. Azarenka had  not beaten Williams since 2009 in Miami, and had a 1-11 record against  the American going into Sunday’s final. “It feels incredible,”  Azarenka said. “You know, this tournament is really great. … It had  such a strong field going into it, and I’m really glad that in the end  of the week I’m the one who’s holding the trophy.” Azarenka broke  to go up 2-1 when an erratic Williams hit one of her four double-faults  in the first set, but the American ensured it was back on serve after  eight games. Williams struggled with her first serve throughout the  first set and hit 26 unforced errors, but still had a set point at 6-5  in the tiebreaker. However, she hit a poor forehand into the net, and  Azarenka then converted her first set point with a great return. Williams  dominated the second set with her powerful serve and forehand, while  Azarenka could only hit 39 percent of her first serves. Azarenka  fell behind 0-30 in the first game of the decider but recovered and took  a 3-0 lead. Williams then saved a match point at 5-2 to stay the match,  but Azarenka clinched the win on her next service game when Williams  hit a forehand wide. “I just wanted to fight and give it my best,  give myself every opportunity I can,” Azarenka said. “I started with  love-30 (in the third) and I was like, ’You have to keep it together.  You have to do something.’ Serena was on a roll … so I had to really  step up my game. I’m really glad I could turn it around and stay tough.” Williams  praised Azarenka’s performance but insisted she still wasn’t at her  best. Struggling at times with a cold and still nursing a right ankle  injury that bothered her at the Australian Open, Williams appeared  sluggish in early-round matches and needed three sets to beat Petra  Kvitova in the quarterfinals. She made 48 errors against Azarenka and only converted three of her seven break points. “This  whole week, I just don’t think I played my best tennis, and I was  fighting every match,” she said. “I can’t play that quality game against  a top player like Victoria. I have to be able to pick up my game, and I  wasn’t able to do that today. I stayed at a two out of a 10, and I  can’t play that low.” Williams had won her last eight finals.  Still, she took comfort in the fact that she is returning to the No. 1  ranking for the first time in almost two and a half years. She becomes  the oldest player to hold that title, breaking the mark previously held  by Chris Evert, who was No. 1 in 1985 just shy of her 31st birthday. “I’m  definitely not happy, but I’m No. 1,” she said, smiling.  “It was such a  long journey, and after winning Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and the  (WTA) Championships, I thought, I just don’t think I can win anymore. I  don’t know what it takes to be No. 1. So it was awesome to come here and  achieve that goal.” But with Azarenka’s win on Sunday, Williams’ stay atop the rankings may only last one week. Azarenka can reclaim the top spot in Dubai next week if she reaches the final and Williams does not. But  the rivalry doesn’t seem to prevent the players from getting along off  the court, as they laughed and chatted about the upcoming Academy Awards  after the trophy ceremony. “I always respect Victoria. I think  she’s a really good player. Obviously she’s so consistent and she plays  well,” Williams said. “It’s nice to always play someone that you go home  and you’re like, ’OK, I didn’t do great, but let me work harder’. She  inspires a lot of people to work harder, and definitely me.” Azarenka agreed. “I  feel like we’re pushing each other to go to the limit every time, to  step up, to improve, and that’s tremendous motivation to have,” she  said. “You always know that somebody’s out there wants to push you. For  me, it’s incredible privilege to be in that position.”
- 
		News
		
	
- Corrections
 - Politics
 - National
 - World
 - Security
 - The Advocates
 - DOGE Watch
 - Business & Economy
 - D.C. Local
 - Media Spotlight
 - Newsmakers
 - Waste, Fraud & Abuse
 - Inside the Ring
 - Higher Ground
 - Culture
 - Entertainment
 - Technology
 - Obituaries
 - Just the Headlines
 - Photo Galleries
 - Dive Deeper
 - Celebrating The Washington Times
 
 - Policy
 - 
		Commentary
		
	
- Commentary Main
 - Corrections
 - Editorials
 - Letters
 - Charles Hurt
 - Cheryl K. Chumley
 - Kelly Sadler
 - Jed Babbin
 - Tom Basile
 - Tim Constantine
 - Joseph Curl
 - Joseph R. DeTrani
 - Don Feder
 - Billy Hallowell
 - Daniel N. Hoffman
 - David Keene
 - Robert Knight
 - Gene Marks
 - Clifford D. May
 - Michael McKenna
 - Stephen Moore
 - Tim Murtaugh
 - Peter Navarro
 - Everett Piper
 - Cal Thomas
 - Scott Walker
 - Miles Yu
 - Black Voices
 - Books
 - Cartoons
 - To the Republic
 
 - Sports
 - 
		Sponsored
		
	
- Corrections
 - Higher Ed Harassment
 - Health Care on the Hill
 - Invest in Portugal
 - Health Care 2022
 - Africa FDI Edition
 - Immigration 2022
 - Invest in Ireland
 - ESG Investments
 - U.S. & South Korea Alliance
 - 146 Heroes
 - Invest in Malta
 - Victorious Family
 - Invest in Greece 2025
 - Free Iran 2025
 - Infrastructure 2025
 - Renewing American Energy Dominance
 - Investing in American Health
 - Transportation 2025
 - Building a healthier America
 - Faith at Work
 - Unbridled Clean Energy
 
 - Events
 - 
		Video/Podcasts
		
	
- Corrections
 - All Videos
 - All Podcasts
 - The Front Page
 - Threat Status
 - Politically Unstable
 - The Sitdown with Alex Swoyer
 - Bold & Blunt
 - The Higher Ground
 - Court Watch
 - Victory Over Communism
 - District of Sports
 - Capitol Hill Show
 - The Unregulated Podcast
 - ForAmerica
 - Washington Times Weekly
 - God, Country & American Story
 
 - Games
 - 
	
		
 - Subscribe
 - Sign In
 
Please read our comment policy before commenting.