Tennis-Battling Kvitova downs Barty to claim Sydney title
Kvitova, the 2015 champion, surrendered her serve in the opening game and struggled to recover from her poor start, with the Czech's usually lethal backhand disintegrating amid a flurry of unforced errors in the first set.
The world number eight finally hit her stride in the second, staying within touching distance of Barty until pouncing to take a 6-5 lead with a late break of serve and holding to force a decider.
Barty, ranked 15th in the world and a losing finalist in Sydney last year, has a reputation for being a fighter and called on the last ounce of grit to force another early break and take a 3-0 lead at the start of the third.
Yet Kvitova showed plenty of fight of her own, clawing her way back to 3-3 despite struggling with an apparent injury and, with her backhand finally firing, broke again to give herself a chance to serve for the championship.
Incredibly, the momentum shifted once more, with Barty breaking the Czech to love to keep her hopes of a first Sydney title alive, but the Australian's composure deserted her as she lost the next game on serve to give Kvitova another chance.
Once again, the Czech fluffed her lines, surrendering her serve successive double faults to send the match into a tiebreak but clung on grimly to carve out a championship point that she claimed with a blistering crosscourt forehand.
This year's tournament is likely to be the last Sydney International -- a competition with a history dating back to 1885 -- in its current format, with the ATP Cup coming on board next season. (Reporting by Simon Jennings in Bengaluru; editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
ALSO READ
Czechs summon Iranian ambassador after Israel attack - minister
Netherlands, Denmark, Czechs may back German air defence initiative for Ukraine, Dutch PM says
Belgium, Czech Republic seek sanctions for Russian interference in EU elections
Salt's explosion, Iyer's composure propel KKR to 222/6 against RCB
Belgium, Czech Republic want sanctions for Russian interference in EU elections