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Victoria Mboko: Teen star sets up Naomi Osaka final at Canadian Open after stunning comeback win over Elena Rybakina

Eighteen-year-old Victoria Mboko lost the first set 6-1 before rallying to complete a stunning semi-final win over ninth seed, and former Wimbledon champion, Elena Rybakina in a third-set tie-breaker; Watch the US Open live on Sky Sports from August 24

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Highlights of the National Bank Open semi-final between Victoria Mboko and Elena Rybakina

Canadian teenage sensation Victoria Mboko clinched a stunning comeback win over ninth seed Elena Rybakina to reach the final of the National Bank Open in Montreal, where she will face four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka.

The 18-year-old Mboko rallied from a set down, in which she was dominated 6-1, to not only take Rybakina into a decider, but then save a match point and break the 2022 Wimbledon champion twice to force a final tie-breaker.

Mboko, who upset top seed Coco Gauff 6-1 6-4 earlier in the tournament and also beat Jessica Bouzas Maneiro in straight sets in their quarter-final clash, ultimately prevailed 1-6 7-5 7-6 (7-4) to book her spot in the final.

Who is Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko?

Born in Charlotte, North Carolina, to Congolese parents, Victoria Mboko grew up in Toronto.

Mboko began 2025 by winning four consecutive ITF World Tennis Tour events in January and February before claiming a fifth title in March. She remains in second place on the ITF World Tennis Tour for most women's singles titles won this year.

Mboko showed promise as a junior. She won her first professional singles title at the ITF W25 tournament in Saskatoon in 2022, a title she successfully defended in 2023.

Mboko began 2025 ranked at No 333 and has since risen 248 places to No 85. She will be ranked inside the Top 50 for the first time on Monday regardless of the result in Montreal.

She then qualified for her first Grand Slam main draw at the French Open, where she reached the third round, before stunning 25th-seeded Magdalena Frech in the first round at Wimbledon.

Mboko is coached by former world No 3, 1998 Wimbledon finalist and 1997 Billie Jean King Cup champion Nathalie Tauziat.

"Incredible match, thank you to everyone for supporting me," Mboko told the crowd in French. "It was really difficult, but anything can happen.

"Playing in front of the home crowd, obviously, has its advantages. You always have everyone pumping you up as much as they can. It really pulls me through in the tough moments where I'm maybe not as positive. Really blessed to have that kind of support."

Mboko overcame 11 double-faults and battled through a wrist injury after stumbling awkwardly to the ground in the second game of the third set.

Victoria Mboko of Canada reacts during her match against Marie Bouzkova of Czechia during third round tennis action at the National Bank Ope
Image: Mboko will face Japan's Naomi Osaka in the final, with a potential victory making her the first Canadian to win the tournament since 2019

Mboko, who will move up to at least 34th in the world after starting the year outside the top 300, said afterwards that her wrist felt "a lot better".

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Rybakina was unhappy with the way the home crowd cheered her mistakes, saying: "Yeah, that wasn't nice, of course. I played in a lot of situations where the crowd was supporting the player, but I would say that here it was pretty tough from the very beginning.

"I already felt it from the first game we played, and especially when it's in between the serves. It is what it is. This is something I was kind of expecting, and definitely it didn't depend anyhow on my serve or in the mistakes I did or wrong choices. It was obvious that the crowd is going to cheer for their player."

Ranked 85th in the world, Mboko is seeking her first WTA Tour title and trying to join Faye Urban (1969) and Bianca Andreescu (2019) as the only Canadians to win their home event in the open era.

History-makers at Canadian Open


Two unseeded players (Naomi Osaka and Victoria Mboko) will face each other at the Canadian Open’s final for the third time in the Open Era, after Marsikova-Kruger (1977) and Du Pont-Cuypers (1979)

Victoria Mboko is the first Canadian player to defeat three former Women’s Singles Grand Slam champions in a single WTA event in the Open Era (Sofia Kenin, Coco Gauff and Elena Rybakina)

Mboko is the fourth Canadian finalist at the Canadian Open in the Open Era after Faye Urban (1968 and 1969), Vicky Berner (1969) and Bianca Andreescu (2019) - Mboko is the youngest

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Highlights of the National Bank Open semi-final between Naomi Osaka and Clara Tauson

In the final on Thursday night, she will face former world No 1 Osaka, who overcame 16th seed Clara Tauson 6-2 7-6 (9-7) in the other semi-final.

Osaka continued her best performance in a WTA 1000 tournament since reaching the Miami final in 2022. She stepped away from the game for 15 months towards the end of that season and had daughter Shai in July 2023.

Mboko had previously said that Osaka was her idol and the Japanese star, who has been working with coach Tomasz Wiktorowski after splitting with Patrick Mouratoglou, said: "I don't think that's ever happened. I'm shook [laughing]. It's really cute. I guess I have to have a really good attitude tomorrow. I can't let her not like me anymore.

"I don't know, it's funny because I see her on the TV, and I was low-key. That's my little twin, because we both have our blue dresses and our buns and everything. I'm really honoured. I always said that I would love to play someone that looked up to me in a way, so it's happening way sooner than I thought it would."

Shelton beats Fritz in all-American clash to reach Toronto final

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Highlights of the National Bank Open semi-final between Ben Shelton and Taylor Fritz

Fourth seed Ben Shelton beat second-seeded Taylor Fritz 6-4 6-3 in their all-American semi-final match at the National Bank Open in Toronto.

Shelton will face 11th seed Karen Khachanov in the final after he overcame top-seeded Alexander Zverev 6-3 4-6 7-6 (7-4) in the other semi-final, surviving a Zverev match point in the process.

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Highlights of the National Bank Open semi-final between Alexander Zverev and Karen Khachanov

"I've seen so many big improvements in my game this week, that's what I'm most happy about, how I'm executing, how little I'm hesitating, how I'm returning," said Shelton, who become the youngest American to reach an ATP Masters 1000 final since Andy Roddick in Toronto in 2004.

"There are a lot of things to be proud about and beating two top-10 guys back-to-back [Alex de Minaur and Fritz] is huge for me."

The 22-year-old Shelton is seeking his third career ATP Tour title. He won in Tokyo on hard courts in 2023 and Houston last year on clay.

"I'm just really excited to see myself executing like this, not wondering if the shot is going to go in or out, but expecting it to go in," Shelton said.

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