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Dominic Thiem wins China Open title

Thiem and Tsitsipas went into the match with the Austrian leading 3-2 in their head to head. Thiem had won all but one of his matches here in Beijing in straight sets, while Tsitsipas had needed deciders in two of his matches.

Dominic Thiem wins China Open title

Dominic Thiem of Austria poses with the trophy after winning his men's singles final match against Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece at the China Open tennis tournament in Beijing on October 6, 2019. (Photo by Noel CELIS / AFP)

Top seed Dominic Thiem overcame a one-set deficit to defeat third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas in the men’s final of the 2019 China Open on Sunday.

Thiem needed two hours and 13 minutes to seal the full-sets 3-6, 6-4, 6-1 victory.

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Thiem and Tsitsipas went into the match with the Austrian leading 3-2 in their head to head. Thiem had won all but one of his matches here in Beijing in straight sets, while Tsitsipas had needed deciders in two of his, including when he took out defending champion Nikoloz Basilashvilli, Xinhua news reports.

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The first set was a closer contest than the scoreline might suggest. Neither player had an exceptionally high number of errors, meaning that the slightest slip-ups ended up being amplified, and this cost Thiem at several key moments.

Tsitsipas was broken to love on his first service game out of the gate but would respond with a break of his own to level the playing field.

Although he would go on to serve out the remainder of the opener, there were a few moments early in when Tsitsipas seemed to be getting into his own head. What looked to be a stellar backhand from missed its mark when he was serving at 2-all, causing him to throw his racket on the court in frustration.

But this proved to be a momentary blip. Tsitsipas would log an impressive performance on serve, firing off four aces and only facing breakpoint once after the initial opening trade, when serving for the set at 6-3.

Tsitsipas was exceptional on return in the first set as well, getting 91 percent of his shots in play on the way to grinding out the opener in 43 minutes.

Things got rockier for the Greek in the second set, a marathon which took nearly an hour to decide. Although he was the first to break, Thiem would immediately respond with one of his own to pull level.

Tsitsipas then started getting the trouble out of his forehand, in particular, raking up eight of 11 unforced errors in the second set on this side. He would be brought to breakpoint on every single one of his remaining service games in the second, and despite bringing Thiem to breakpoint three times as he served for the set, proved unable to stop the top seed from forcing a decider.

Things went from bad to worse for Tsitsipas in the third. He committed nine unforced errors as Thiem stormed to a 5-0 lead (this time most of them came off the backhand). A held serve to go 5-1 and avoid a bagel proved to be just a consolation. Thiem went on to serve out the set and would never face breakpoint in sealing up the decider in just 36 minutes.

Thiem takes home US $733,990 in prize money and 500 ATP points with the win, while Tsitsipas will pocket 300 ATP points and US $364,615.

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