Vaishnavi Adkar's Dream Run Ends in ITF W100 Bengaluru Final

Third seed Hanne Vandewinkel of Belgium dominated the final of the ITF W100 Bengaluru, defeating Indian wildcard Vaishnavi Adkar in straight sets. Despite the loss, Adkar's run to the final was historic, making her the first Indian woman since Sania Mirza to reach an ITF W100 championship match. The 21-year-old from Pune defeated multiple higher-ranked opponents, a performance that will propel her into the WTA top 500 for the first time. Both players highlighted the positive takeaways, with Vandewinkel praising her focused start and Adkar emphasizing the boost to her confidence and game.

Key Points: Vandewinkel Wins ITF W100 Bengaluru, Adkar Runner-Up

  • Vandewinkel wins title 6-0, 6-1
  • Adkar first Indian in W100 final since Sania Mirza
  • Historic run boosts Adkar's ranking into top 500
  • Belgian's experience and consistency proved decisive
  • Adkar gains confidence and self-belief from breakthrough week
3 min read

Vaishnavi's dream run ends with a runner-up finish at ITF W100 Bengaluru

Belgium's Hanne Vandewinkel defeats India's Vaishnavi Adkar in straight sets to win the ITF Women's Open W100 Bengaluru 2026 title.

"I think it was a very solid week for me, learned a lot of things... a week like this is really going to be helpful. - Vaishnavi Adkar"

Bengaluru, Feb 22

Third seed and World No. 124 Hanne Vandewinkel of Belgium finished a stellar week with a 6-0, 6-1 win against wildcard Vaishnavi Adkar in the final of the ITF Women's Open W100 Bengaluru 2026. Adkar, a 21-year-old from Pune and ranked World No. 690, played the biggest match of her career after becoming the first Indian woman since Sania Mirza to reach an ITF W100 final. However, Vandewinkel's experience and consistency were clear from the start.

For her title run, Vandewinkel received 100 WTA ranking points and USD 15,239 in prize money. Meanwhile, Adkar gained 65 ranking points and USD 8,147, providing a notable boost that will help improve her position in the rankings.

The Belgian player broke Adkar early in the game before she could get into a rhythm and quickly established a 3-0 advantage, taking advantage of unforced errors and controlling the game with her forehand. By maintaining consistent depth from the baseline, Vandewinkel secured the first set 6-0 with a service ace.

The second set started similarly, with an early break giving the World No. 124 the lead. Adkar displayed moments of determination in the third game, hitting a few winners to hold her serve for the first time in the match. Later, she secured three break points in the fourth game when Vandewinkel briefly lost focus.

The Belgian responded wisely by slowing down her returns and changing her patterns to throw off Adkar's timing. She saved all three break points, held at 3-1, and kept applying pressure. Vandewinkel pushed Adkar to deuce once more before extending the lead to 4-1. Despite the Indian's attempts to prolong rallies and induce errors, the Belgian stayed calm.

In the seventh game, Vandewinkel reached two match points and clinched the victory on the second, securing the championship in just over an hour.

"It was a bit of an unknown coming into the match, but I knew she beat some really good players, so I was very aware of that. I didn't want to make the mistake of not being fully there in the match and letting her come into the match, because I saw in the last few matches she could play some really good tennis. So I think I was just there from the beginning. I made her work for every point, and I think that was the goal of today, and I think I managed pretty well," Vandewinkel commented after clinching the title.

"I think it was a very solid week for me, learned a lot of things and especially after a tough year last year, a week like this is really going to be helpful. I already feel so much better about my game, and it has helped a lot with the self-belief and confidence," Adkar emphasised on the positives after the Final.

Although the Final was a stretch too far, Adkar's breakthrough week as a wildcard marked a significant achievement. She defeated multiple higher-ranked opponents and reached a historic W100 Final, breaking into the top 500 for the first time in her career. She is now projected to be the second-highest-ranked Indian.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The scoreline looks one-sided, but reaching the final itself is a massive victory. Beating higher-ranked players shows her potential. She just needs more exposure at this level. The AITA and sponsors must back her properly now.
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Aman W
First Indian woman since Sania Mirza to reach this final! That's a huge statement. The gap in experience was clear today, but she fought. Those three break points in the second set showed she has the fight. Proud of her!
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Sarah B
Respect to Vandewinkel, she played a smart, clinical match. But full credit to Adkar for her attitude. Her comment about self-belief is key. In sports, sometimes a loss like this teaches more than an easy win. Great tournament for Bengaluru!
K
Karthik V
A reality check, but a positive one. The difference between top 150 and 600+ is huge in consistency. She needs a solid coaching team and regular competition at this level. Hope this performance gets her wildcards into bigger WTA events.
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Nisha Z
So proud! From Pune to making history in Bengaluru. The prize money and points will help her travel and train better. We need to celebrate our athletes more when they achieve, not just when they win gold. Well done, Vaishnavi! 👏

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