Sun, 17 May 2026
Sports World News Updated May 17, 2026 · 18:46

Russian Duo Andreeva-Shnaider Dominate to Clinch Italian Open Doubles Title

Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider won the Italian Open doubles title with a straight-sets victory over Cristina Bucsa and Nicole Melichar-Martinez. The Russian pair dominated the final, winning 6-3, 6-3 in just 69 minutes. This marks their second WTA 1000 title together and third trophy overall. The victory serves as perfect preparation ahead of the French Open at Roland Garros.

Translate

Read this story in your language

Open a machine-translated reader view in a new tab.

Italian Open: Andreeva-Shnaider clinch doubles title

Rome, May 17

Russian pair Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider underlined their growing dominance on the women's doubles circuit by capturing the Italian Open title with an emphatic straight-sets victory here on Sunday. The duo defeated seventh seeds Cristina Bucsa and Nicole Melichar-Martinez 6-3, 6-3 in a one-sided final that lasted just 69 minutes at the Foro Italico.

The triumph marked the pair's second WTA 1000 title together and their third trophy as a team overall, further strengthening their reputation as one of the most dangerous partnerships on tour heading into Roland Garros. Rome also provided the perfect response after their disappointment in Madrid earlier this month, where Andreeva and Shnaider finished runners-up following a defeat to doubles specialists Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend in the final.

This time, however, there was little room for drama. From the opening exchanges, the Russian duo controlled the pace of the match with aggressive returns and sharp net play, rarely allowing Bucsa and Melichar-Martinez to build sustained momentum. After taking the first set with authority, they quickly tightened their grip on the contest in the second to complete a dominant title run in the Italian capital.

The championship adds another significant milestone to a partnership that continues to gather momentum at the highest level. Since joining forces, Andreeva and Shnaider have now claimed titles in Brisbane, Miami, and Rome, while also reaching the Madrid final in an impressive stretch across the season.

Their latest run included a statement semifinal victory over second seeds Siniakova and Townsend, making them the first team outside the experienced Czech-American pairing to lift a WTA 1000 doubles title since Dubai earlier this year.

For Andreeva, the title also capped an encouraging recovery after a frustrating singles campaign on clay. The teenage star had suffered heartbreak in the Madrid singles final before exiting early in Rome following a defeat to Coco Gauff. Shnaider, meanwhile, was knocked out in singles by Naomi Osaka.

But together, the pair once again looked a class apart in doubles competition. Olympic silver medallists from Paris 2024, Andreeva and Shnaider, now head to the French Open with growing expectations and the confidence of another major clay-court title behind them.

— IANS

Found this useful?

Share with someone who'd want to read it

Continue reading

More in Sports World News

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
In a country obsessed with singles tennis, doubles rarely gets the attention it deserves. But these two are showing how exciting the format can be. That semifinal win over Siniakova and Townsend was simply brilliant. 👏
V
Vikram M
Three titles already this season including Miami and Rome - that's some serious consistency! Andreeva and Shnaider are proving that youth and aggression can beat experience. The French Open will be their real test though. Let's see if they can handle the pressure.
M
Michael C
Impressive stuff from the Russian pair. They bounced back well after Madrid. But I wonder if the lack of top-level competition in Rome hurt their preparation for Roland Garros? Still, a title is a title. 🇮🇹
S
Siddharth J
What a turnaround after Madrid! The final was one-sided but that semifinal victory over Siniakova and Townsend was the real statement. These two have genuine chemistry on court. Reminds me a bit of Sania Mirza's partnerships - hope they can achieve similar success.
R
Rohit P
Good to see doubles getting more recognition. But honestly, 69 minutes for a WTA 1000 final? That's too quick. The match lacked drama. Maybe the competition wasn't strong enough in Rome. At Roland Garros, expect tougher battles. Let's wait and watch.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50