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Five-Star Champion: Liu Shiwens World Cup Dynasty

No player in ITTF World Cup history, man or woman, has conquered the tournament more times than Liu Shiwen. Her five ITTF World Cups span a remarkable decade2009, 2012, 2013, 2015 and 2019. While fellow Chinese legends Wang Nan and Zhang Yining each claimed four Womens World Cup titles, Liu stands alone at the summit with five.
Liu Shiwen announced herself on the global stage at ITTF Womens World Cup 2009 in Guangzhou. At just 18 years old, she upset compatriot and established star Guo Yue in a thrilling seven-game final (11-5, 9-11, 7-11, 12-10, 11-3, 3-11, 11-3). The match, lasting over an hour, showcased the young players remarkable poise under pressure as she fought back despite falling behind after three games.
Three years after her breakthrough, Liu returned to the top step of the podium at ITTF World Cup 2012 in Huangshi. She dominated Romanias Elizabeta Samara in a straight games final (11-6, 11-7, 11-3, 11-3), confirming her status as not just a promising talent but a consistent champion.
Liu made history at ITTF World Cup 2013 in Kobe, Japan, becoming only the third woman after Wang Nan and Zhang Yining to win the tournament three times. Facing defensive specialist and teammate Wu Yang in the final, Liu delivered a masterclass in attacking table tennis, winning in four straight games (11-3, 11-7, 11-7, 11-2).
ITTF World Cup 2015 in Sendai saw Liu claim her fourth title, equalling the record set by her legendary predecessors Wang Nan and Zhang Yining. Facing Japans home favourite Kasumi Ishikawa in the final, Liu once again demonstrated her championship pedigree with a dominant straight games victory (14-12, 11-2, 11-9, 11-2).
Liu Shiwens fifth and final World Cup triumph at ITTF World Cup 2019 in Chengdu stands as one of the most significant achievements in table tennis history. With this victory over teammate Zhu Yuling in six gripping games (4-11, 11-8, 11-8, 11-6, 3-11, 11-9), she became the most successful World Cup player ever. Coming four years after her fourth title and following her World Championship victory earlier that year, this record-breaking performance showcased Lius extraordinary longevity and competitive spirit. At 28, she combined the technical precision of her youth with the tactical wisdom of a veteran to secure her place in table tennis immortality.
What made Liu Shiwen such a dominant force at the World Cup was her combination of technical excellence, tactical intelligence, and mental resilience. Throughout her decade of World Cup appearances, she continuously evolved her game to remain at the pinnacle of the sport even as new challengers emerged. When under pressure, Liu demonstrated the champions ability to find another level when it mattered most.
As players prepare for the ITTF Womens World Cup Macao 2025, Liu Shiwens legacy remains the benchmark against which all performances are measured. Her five titles across a decade of competition have set a standard of excellence that may never be surpassedthe definitive record-breaker in World Cup history.
The ITTF Mens and Womens World Cup Macao 2025 takes place from 14-20 April at the Galaxy Arena in Macao, China.

Its hotting up in the Future series, as the good and great of Para table tennis aim to bring their top form to the Finnish city of Lahti.
More Thrills To Come
After a week off, its right back to it in the circuit as Lahti hosts the third Para Future event of 2025. Last week saw the debut of the Challenger events, with plenty more to come this month and beyond, but Future takes centre stage again after previous events in Lignano and Costa Brava.
And this is the series that just keeps on giving! Because while this might be the fourth event in the new-look Para table tennis series, Lahti is the first that includes a special Under-23 event. Beginning on 6th April and running until the 7th, this is the first of three currently planned. Buenos Aires will host one in May, with another planned for November in Al Ain.
This weeks event in Finland has a wealth of home heroes at the heart of it, and there are no names more hopeful of success than Aino Tapola. Tapolas head-to-head battles with Dorota Buclaw of Poland have become one of the key stories in recent months, facing off countless times including in the Lignano opener this series. With no Buclaw this time, Tapola has eyes on success from the off.
Its the same story for Timo Kalevi Natunen, another Finn (M1) who has hopes for the coming months and years in the long run up to LA2028.
A strong French contingent will be competing again in Lahti, with the likes of Francois Geuljans and Mateo Boheas both signed up, having achieved gold medals in Future events already this year.
And with 97 players from 21 associations signed up, it promises to be a few days that again help to reshape the look of the circuit.
What Has Happened in the Series So Far?
The debut of the new Para circuit structure always promised to provide intrigue and excitement, and stops one and two have delivered both in abundance. The opening week in Lignano acted as a chance to get to grips with this new setup, and with 16 singles titles and eight more finals in the doubles, it was a launchpad to what promises to be a revolutionary move for the sport.
The hosts Italy were at the heart of big results, with icon Giada Rossi winning the Class 2 crown. Federico Crosara, Matteo Parenzan and Carlotta Ragazzini all shone too, whilst the Class 1 rivalry between Aina Tapola (FIN) and Dorota Buclaw (POL) seeing the Finn come out on top this time. For full results from Lignano, click here.
In the second instalment taking place in Costa Brava in March, it was arguably even more unmissable. It was a particularly successful stop for France, as Fabien Lamirault, Francois Geuljans, Alexandre Delarque and Mateo Boheas all emerged victorious in mens competition, while Morgen Caillaud won singles glory on the womens side.
A Recap on the Three-tiers
Announced in November 2024, the new structure of the Para circuit incorporates three separate tiers: future, challenger and elite.
- Future is designed as a development point for emerging talents to hone their skills on the international stage and build their ranking.
- Challenger is the next step on the ladder. Competitions will tend to be larger and adopt a higher intensity. With up to eight Challenger events in 2025, each one promises to create big stories and develop exciting rivalries.
- Elite is where you can expect the very top stars of Para sport to meet. Huge showdowns, moments of pure magic and exhilarating competition are all guaranteed.
Each event in 2025 has something major at stake: valuable ranking points. Points will be awarded based off performances at each event, with the rankings adjusting throughout the course of the year to track who has been performing at the most consistent level.
For 2025, there is a one-year transition period which allows players to defend those points accumulated over the previous 52 weeks.
Whats Coming Up Next?
Four events down, plenty more to come! Amman (JOR) is next on the Future timeline, taking place just a few days after Lahti. And then its to a Challenger double-header later in April. Sao Paulo (BRA) is coming up from 24-27 April, before Montenegros capital city, Podgorica, takes place just a few days later.
May and June are stacked full of competition too, with four Future, one challenger and the opening Elite of the series lined up.
Continental championships are to come towards the end of the year too as Auckland (NZL), Sao Paulo (BRA), Beijing (CHN), Giza (EGY) and Helsingborg (SWE) play host to the very best from across the world.
How To Follow The Action
Select live streaming of this competition will be available to watch on our YouTube channel. To keep up-to-date with the action as it happens, follow the schedule and results page on our website. And head to our events page to recap everything we have seen so far.
Salma Hany, Leonel Cardenas claim Manchester Open 2025 squash titles

Egypts Salma Hany and Mexicos Leonel Cardenas have claimed the Manchester Open 2025 titles after beating top seeds Georgina Kennedy and Aly Abou Eleinen in the PSA Squash Tour Bronze-level events.
The womens final was first up on finals day as defending champion Kennedy looked to score a win in her third consecutive Manchester Open final. Hany had been in terrific form all week and started in superb style in the final. She raced out to a 1-0 lead winning 11-2, silencing the home crowd.
Kennedy fought back in game two and started to get in front of the Egyptian. Her trademark quick boast was starting to ask questions of the Hanys movement and answers werent forthcoming. Kennedys line hitting improved and so did her points haul. She moved through the gears to win the game 11-9.
Hany turned the tide back in her favour in game three and after winning 11-3 to lead 2-1, looked determined to close the match out in four. Kennedy had other ideas however and chose to change the ball which worked perfectly at the start of the fourth game.
The top seed ran out to a 4-1 lead by stepping up on the volley and forced Hany into making guesses when her attacks were loose. Hany gave up the ghost at the end of the game with Kennedy holding a strong lead at 10-5 and it wasnt long before we entered the fifth game.
In a nervous fifth, neither could get away on the scoreboard until Hany won three points in a row to earn three match balls at 10-7. Kennedy clawed two points back to set up a nervy final match ball for Hany but a wicked cross court from a heavy Kennedy drop sealed the first title of the season for the Egyptian.
I still cant believe its over. What a battle. said Hany after her win.
I feel really proud with how I kept it together til the end. I felt really sharp but playing Gina is not easy at all. Shes such a fighter. We played a battle here last year so Im just really happy I could win this one.
This means a lot. This is extra special. Especially after my injury at the start of the season and it was really important to me and my team and weve all been through a lot with the injury. It was really tough and today I just wanted to stand up for myself and my team and Im always so grateful for their support and heres to more wins.
Both mens finalists had reached the title decider relatively unscathed and knew that only their best would be good enough to capture the trophy. The Mexican No.1 stormed through the first game, using his strength around the middle of the court to dominate the rallies and leave Eleinen searching for answers. None came for the top seeded Egyptian and in a matter of minutes, the No.2 seed was in the lead.
The Egyptian fired back in game two and started to assert himself at the front of the court to showcase his attacking abilities. He claimed the game 11-5 to draw level in a match that was just getting started. Cardenas did well to reverse the momentum once again and sneak ahead in game three. The World No.17 closed out the game with several hard-nosed rallies, squeezing Eleinen on the side walls and tidying up the resulting loose balls. 11-9 was the score in the third game, as the Mexican moved ahead.
A big response was needed by the Egyptian and thats what we got. The World No.13 showed exactly why he is capable of beating the top players such as Mostafa Asal. He resorted back to basics and forced errors from the Mexicans racket to force an exciting decider.
As the fifth game progressed, there was nothing between the two with both eager to remain solid and not give anything away. Cardenas kept his concentration the better and moved through to 9-6. Eleinen wasnt done there however and came back to 9-8. Cardenas earned a match ball and pumped a ball straight down line on match ball and after a no let was given after a review, the Mexican was the champion.
It was an unbelievable match.said Cardenas.
All credit to Aly, it could have gone either way and Im just happy with the way we played today. Im sure it wont be the last final that well play together. Weve been playing since juniors and hes one of the best players on the tour right now.
I want to thank all my supporters in Mexico, my sponsors and my family. I want to thank the crowd, this is probably the biggest crowd that Ive played in front of and it helped me get over the line for sure and I hope to be back next year.
PSA Squash Tour action heads to Egypt next for the El Gouna International Squash Open 2025, the final Platinum level event of the 24/25 season. The tournament runs between 12-18 April.
Result: Manchester Open Womens Final
[3] Salma Hany (EGY) bt [1] Georgina Kennedy (ENG) 3-2: 11-2, 9-11, 11-3, 5-11, 11-9 (63m)
Result: Manchester Open Mens Final
[2] Leonel Cardenas (MEX) bt [1] Aly Abou Eleinen (EGY) 3-2: 11-2, 5-11, 11-9, 3-11, 11-8 (71m)

The inaugural edition of the U23 World Squash Championships got off to a rip-roaring start at DHA Creek Club as 20 top quality matches wowed the Karachi crowd.
The tournament, which will see the winners claim the lions share of a $60,000USD prize pot and qualify automatically for this years PSA World Championships, is taking place in Pakistan from 6-10 April.
In the match of the day, Malaysian 3/4 seed Ameeshenraj Chandaran was pushed to the limit by unseeded Pakistani Muhammad Ammad in a 71-minute epic on the glass court.
Ammad, 19, thrived in front of the assembled squash royalty including Jahangir Khan and Qamar Zaman, taking a surprise lead against the World No.89 with a thrilling 12-10 win.
Chandaran fired back with an 11-7 win only for Ammad to dig in to reclaim the lead 11-9 in game three.
Ammad, whose highest World Ranking to date was 336 in 2023, was briefly in the ascendency in game four as he sensed a famous upset, only for Chandaran to finally find his rhythm, drawing level once again with an 11-9 win of his own.
With the wind in his sails, Chandaran pushed on and the 21-year-old closed out after a nervous video referee decision on match ball 11-8 to set up a second round clash with Hong Kong, Chinas Matthew Lam.
There was so much on the line and Ammad put up a very good fight. Ive got juice left in me, but Im going to take it one game at a time, Chandaran said afterwards.
Ammad was one of six home representatives in action today. In the womens draw, Amna Fayyaz and Sana Bahadar battled bravely before going down in close matches against Kurumi Takahashi and Tamara Holzbauerová, while Mariam Malik was beaten in straight games by Noa Romero Blazquez.
In the mens event, the hosts secured two wins via Noor Zaman and Hamza Khan. Noor Zaman grandson of Pakistan great Qamar Zaman fought back from a game down to beat Kuwaits Hussain Alzaatari, while Khan World Junior Champion in 2023 cruised past Radu Stefan Pena of Romania.
Click here to view all the results from round one of the 2025 U23 World Squash Championship.

Squad selection for the Lions always stirs up debate and fly-half is set to be a hotly-contested position.
England duo Fin Smith and Marcus Smith, Scotland's Finn Russell and the Ireland pair of Sam Prendergast and Jack Crowley will be under consideration to wear the 10 jersey.
Former Ulster fly-half Ian Humphreys believes England fly-half Fin Smith could be named in the squad at the expense of England team-mate Marcus Smith, with Russell and Prendergast also included.
"I think Prendergast will go and will start the first Test," said Humphreys.
"Marcus Smith could miss out because he didn't play there much in the Six Nations, so I think it will be Fin Smith, Prendergast and Russell.
Seymour disagreed and said Marcus Smith's versatility and credit in the bank before the Six Nations means he is still in a strong position to get the nod.
"I feel like Marcus Smith was in a really strong position before the Six Nations," said Seymour.
"Through performance and selection he's maybe not as clear-cut now, and Fin Smith has been a wonderful player for England.
"Marcus Smith's ability to play 15 as well might provide him with a little bit of a leverage on Fin Smith."
An outside contender is Owen Farrell, son of head coach Andy, who has recently returned from injury for Racing 92, but has not played Test rugby since the 2023 World Cup.
"He's missed a lot of the season, but if he can get back to playing well - you talk about multiple positions," added Humphreys.
"In a good way, I don't think he [Andy Farrell] cares what anyone else thinks.
"If he can go out there and do a job, which no doubt he probably can, then it's not beyond the realms of possibility."

Former British and Irish Lions and Wales fly-half Dan Biggar has ended his playing career.
Biggar finished his 18-year career with French club Toulon, who he joined in November 2022.
He won 112 caps for Wales in a 15-year Test career and scored more than 600 points. His final appearance was at the 2023 Rugby World Cup.
Biggar went on two British and Irish Lions tours, making three Test appearances in South Africa in 2021.
"There comes a point where you just know, not because of anything in particular, but someone once said to me when you know, you'll know," Biggar said as he announced his decision on social media.
"Rugby has given me everything. I threw myself into this game at 17 and it's given me a life that I could never have imagined.
"I've lived out my childhood dreams for the best part of two decades and I'm so so grateful for that."
More to follow.
After all the injuries and losses, Bueckers and UConn complete storybook journey

TAMPA, FLA. -- Sue Bird, Diana Taurasi and Breanna Stewart gathered at the UConn Huskies' team hotel following their alma mater's loss in the 2022 national championship game to South Carolina. The trio of UConn greats wanted to console the Huskies -- and Paige Bueckers.
The defeat was devastating, historic. It was UConn's first loss in a national title game after 11 previous wins, extending the school's championship drought another year. And yet, the alumni wanted to reassure Bueckers, then a sophomore, that heartbreak was all part of the process.
"[The titles] never come without some really trying times," Bird recalls telling Bueckers and teammate Azzi Fudd. "Even if you go 39-0 in a season, it still wasn't perfect." Bueckers' tenure in Storrs, while undoubtedly impressive, has been far from perfect. Her freshman year was held in a bubble amid the COVID-19 pandemic. She missed more than half of her sophomore season and her entire junior year because of knee injuries, most consequentially tearing an ACL in summer 2022. She reached the Final Four three times before this year, and fell short in each instance.
But not this time. In her final game as a Husky, Bueckers earned that elusive national title. She scored 17 points and grabbed six rebounds in an 82-59 victory over defending champion South Carolina that secured the sole accolade missing from Bueckers' résumé and snapped UConn's nine-year title drought.
The past five years for Bueckers and UConn have been defined by their shared pursuit of that coveted championship, with the common thread of getting knocked down and needing to find their way back up.
"When you lose at UConn, it's like the world is ending," Stewart told ESPN. "[We knew] that they were going to get it. It took a little bit longer, but they got here today."
The path might have been circuitous. The process might have been trying. But the ending for Bueckers and UConn? It was as perfect as it gets.
"It's truly storybook," said Rebecca Lobo, who like Bueckers won her first and only national championship with UConn in her final career game. "For her and the journey that she's had, what she's been through, I think, too, it means so much because of all the trials and tribulations she's had along the way."
The entirety of that tumultuous and rewarding five-year journey was distilled in the 10-second hug Bueckers and coach Geno Auriemma shared on the sideline when she checked out of the game for the last time. It was the first time Auriemma had seen Bueckers cry, and he told her, "I love you." It was Auriemma who couldn't hold back tears later, calling this "one of the most emotional Final Fours and emotional national championships I've been a part of since that very first."
"[Bueckers'] journey," he said on ESPN's postgame show, "has been the most incredible for any kid I've had."
NEARLY SIX YEARS to the day before Bueckers cut down the nets in Amalie Arena, she was visiting Tampa as a junior in high school attending the 2019 Final Four for USA Basketball. It was just days after she'd announced her commitment to UConn, her dream school, where she envisioned winning championships and getting the Huskies back on top.
The pairing of Bueckers and UConn proved seamless. With a swagger to her game to pair with her on-court dominance, she took the college basketball world by storm as soon as she arrived in Storrs, becoming the first freshman to win multiple national player of the year awards. She propelled the Huskies to the Final Four, but even after they were upset by Arizona in the national semifinal, it seemed that time was on Bueckers' and UConn's side.
But the middle chapters of Bueckers' career taught her that nothing -- not time, not championship opportunities, not health -- could be taken for granted. She missed 19 games because of a tibial plateau fracture and meniscus tear as a sophomore, later admitting she forced her return too quickly. After tearing an ACL four months later, she sat her entire junior season.
Bueckers pushed through nearly two years of rehab, often masking her anguish. She completely altered her approach to the game and how she takes care of her body, prioritizing better nutrition, embracing Pilates and working with one of women's basketball's most renowned performance enhancement specialists. She leaned into her faith; she said that even if she didn't understand why this had happened to her, she believed there was a reason God handed her this obstacle.
Things went far from smoothly even once she returned to the court in November 2023. Last season took a toll on her as the Huskies confronted a new slew of season-ending injuries. By the postseason, Bueckers was playing some of the best basketball of her career, back better than ever from her ACL injury, but the happy-go-lucky player was nowhere to be seen, replaced by someone feeling so much weight that she'd wake up on game days just wanting them to be over.
"I was so worried about all that could go wrong," Bueckers said, "that you can't even do anything right," which all came to a head in the 2024 Final Four when the Huskies fell to Iowa by two.
This past season, Bueckers' fifth in the program, was different. With the help of a sports psychologist and Auriemma's continued guidance, she learned how to stay where her feet are. To not be so outcome-oriented. How to be more at peace with herself, to run her own race and to not let the pressure amid ever-heightening expectations become a burden.
In the leadup to Sunday, Bueckers wasn't consumed by the fear of losing. Well before she was even crowned a champion, Bueckers said she still wouldn't change a thing about her journey -- and in the end, it made Sunday's emotions all the stronger.
"You recognize the things that you've overcome to get to this point, and you feel like it's all been worth it," she said. "Just an overwhelming sense of gratitude for everything that's happened through the ups and downs. I wouldn't trade it for the world. And to be rewarded with something like this, you can't really even put it into words."
THE 12 NATIONAL championships Auriemma has won over 40 years of coaching don't alter his thinking: Winning is hard, and it requires so much to break your way.
For most of Bueckers' career, he believed that little worked in her favor. Her time in Storrs overlapped with the program's most snakebitten stretch in decades: Since Bueckers' sophomore year, UConn players have sustained 12 season-ending injuries. Bueckers and Fudd, who were recruited to be the most potent backcourt pairing in the country, appeared in just 17 games together prior to the 2024-25 campaign. It was a stretch Fudd described as having "bonded [the team] through trauma."
Even when the Huskies found themselves in the Final Four during Bueckers' sophomore and redshirt junior years, it wasn't with a group that Auriemma thought was healthy enough to have a real shot at winning it all. That's what bothers the coach most, he said this weekend, about how these past few seasons went. Because for as sensational as Bueckers had been, Auriemma has long maintained that she wouldn't be able to lift UConn to a championship -- and knock off the South Carolina juggernaut -- alone.
Finally, in her last season in Storrs, the stars aligned. For the first time in years, Auriemma believed UConn was playing at full strength. "We kind of have a chance to be able to manipulate the game a little bit better than we had before -- that's rewarding," he said Saturday. "That makes up for all the heartache and all the trauma and tribulations that we have had to go through."
Fudd enjoyed her healthiest season since arriving at UConn, playing twice as many games (34) as she had in the previous two seasons combined (17). Freshman Sarah Strong -- who announced her commitment to UConn one year ago Sunday -- surpassed even internal expectations, emerging as one of the best players in the country and a superstar in her own right.
The Bueckers-Fudd-Strong big three reminded Auriemma, as early as December, of some of his other championship cores: Rebecca Lobo, Kara Wolters and Nykesha Sales; Breanna Stewart, Morgan Tuck and Moriah Jefferson; Renee Montgomery, Maya Moore and Tina Charles.
The emergence of this UConn team -- which outside of Bueckers skews younger and inexperienced because of the team's injury spell -- was more of a slow burn, particularly after early losses to Notre Dame and USC (games in which Fudd was limited or unavailable) and a stunning February upset at Tennessee. But 10 days after looking like a shell of themselves in Knoxville, the Huskies showed their first real glimpse of what they could be, demolishing South Carolina by 29 points on Feb. 16 in Columbia -- an indication that they had changed, and a harbinger of what was to come.
"About two months ago, this team fell in love with each other," Auriemma told ESPN's Holly Rowe. "At first they would play, it was like, 'Yeah we like each other, we like each other a lot.' ... I think after the Tennessee game, they fell in love with each other, with the process, with ourselves as a group, and they started liking their coaches. I've never been happier than I've been the last couple of months coaching a team."
Playing with a new mindset, Bueckers saved some of her best performances for her final NCAA tournament, scoring 105 points across the second round, Sweet 16 and Elite Eight, the most points scored in any three-game stretch by a UConn player. She and the Huskies breezed through the tournament in such dominant fashion because of Auriemma's mastery at getting his teams to peak at the right time.
Everything was coming together with the makings of a fairytale ending. That's why, amid his usual nerves, Auriemma kept the faith.
"I don't think the basketball gods would take us all the way to the end [only for UConn to not win]," Auriemma said. "They've been really cruel with some of the kids on this team. They've suffered a lot of the things that could go wrong in their college careers as an athlete. ... So they weren't going to take us here and give us more heartbreak."
IT WAS 30 years ago Wednesday that the Huskies celebrated their first national championship by beating Tennessee in Minneapolis' Target Center. They thought they might get their full-circle moment back in 2022, when Bueckers, a Hopkins, Minnesota, product, returned to the state for her second Final Four. But it instead came three years later in the Sunshine State, when that Minnesota kid delivered the Huskies back to the mountaintop in her final collegiate basketball game, riding into the sunset a champion.
Auriemma tried to posit that Bueckers didn't need a championship to be considered one of the program's all-time greats, that her individual play and ability to lift all those around her elevated UConn to heights it wouldn't have achieved without her. People debated what her legacy would be without a ring. But now that's a moot point.
Sunday was her coronation. ESPN's "The Bird & Taurasi Show" displayed after the game a graphic listing Bueckers' collegiate accomplishments: three-time Big East player of the year, three-time unanimous first-team All-American, 2021 national player of the year.
"All those don't count," Taurasi said. "Only thing that counts is she has a national championship. She is a champion. She will forever be in the record books."
And she did it in her own way. After years of being pushed by Auriemma, even criticized by outsiders, to play more aggressively, she didn't take over the game, nor did she need to. Fudd and Strong dazzled with a combined 48 points, and the team played the UConn way. Bueckers is known for her selflessness as a teammate, so it was fitting that she could celebrate in the background as Fudd was presented the Most Outstanding Player trophy.
"It's destiny, and obviously I have a great faith, so I believe God planned it perfectly in the way that it went out," Bueckers said. "It's a great last showing of the great team basketball that we've been playing all season."
Bueckers was the last player to cut down a piece of the net, twirling it around as she let out a roar. She departed the court for the last time in her collegiate career, surrounded by a throng of screaming UConn fans and with the rest of the net around her neck -- enshrined as a national champion.
"There is something extremely validating about winning a championship. There is something about shutting people up when you win a championship," Bird said. "I'd imagine, just given the roller-coaster ride that has been her career in terms of the injuries, I think this would just be such a warm, fuzzy-feeling way to end everything."
Added Lobo: "When you get to the other side and look back, you realize sort of the perfection of it all. How many players end their career with a victory? Very few. It's just sort of the incredible culmination of everything, the exclamation mark on everything that you've done."
Pegula stuns Kenin with comeback to land Charleston Open

World number four Jessica Pegula mounted a superb second-set fightback as she beat Sofia Kenin 6-3 7-5 to land her first clay-court title at the Charleston Open.
In what was the first all-American final at the tournament since 1990, the 31-year-old Pegula took charge initially, breaking Kenin in the opening game on her way to going a set ahead.
But 2020 Australian Open champion Kenin, 26, fought back to lead the second set 5-1 and appeared poised to take the match to a decider.
However, top seed Pegula saved three set points and won six games in a row to seal victory against an opponent 40 places below her in the world rankings.
The success, coming a week after her Miami Open final loss to Aryna Sabalenka, was the eighth title of Pegula's career and second of the year after victory in Austin last month.
"To be able to come here this week after a long two weeks in Miami and take the title is just incredible," said Pegula, who will climb to number three in the rankings.
The 31-year-old told the Tennis Channel she felt tired in the second set in what were "super windy" conditions.
"In the second set, I just wanted to hold, I just wanted to tell myself to get momentum for the third, because coming into a third like that never feels good," she added.
"I honestly didn't think I was going to break her twice, but luckily I could play some good tennis."
Compatriot Jenson Brooksby clinched his first ATP title at the US Men's Clay Court Championships in Houston.
The 24-year-old, who entered the tournament as a qualifying wild card, stunned the second seed and 2023 champion Frances Tiafoe 6-4 6-2.
Brooksby, ranked a lowly 507th to Tiafoe's 17th on the ATP list, has returned to the tour this season after serving a 13-month ban for three doping test 'whereabouts' failures in a 12-month period.
He has a career-high ranking of 33rd and was voted the ATP Newcomer of the Year in 2021.
Having brother in box helps Djokovic 'on different level'

World number three Alcaraz's only tournament win this year came in Rotterdam in February.
Monte Carlo marks the start of his clay-court season and it a surface on which the 21-year-old has strong credentials, having won last year's French Open.
The four-time Grand Slam champion admits external pressure to replace the suspended Jannik Sinner as world number one has been affecting his form, but he begins in Monte Carlo with a different mindset.
Italian Sinner is serving a three-month doping ban from tennis.
"A lot of people are asking me, or are telling me, that I have the chance to become number one if Jannik is not playing," Alcaraz told a news conference on Sunday.
"So probably that pressure has killed me in some way."
The Spaniard said the ranking is no longer his focus, and he expects that to allow him to play more freely.
"I'm just thinking that I'm not able to become number one in the clay season, even if Jannik is not playing, I don't have the chance to do it," Alcaraz said.
"I think I'm too far from Jannik. So I'm just here and I realise that I don't have to think about it and just go there and play.
"That's my mindset right now."

After a nervy delay of about 25 minutes, firemen in a cherrypicker finally freed the parachutist - who wasn't hurt - to big cheers from the crowd.
The players, who had returned to the dressing room while the rescue took place, were called back out and the last-16 match finally kicked off.
Holders Toulouse went on to secure their place in the quarter-finals with a 38-15 victory.
Dominic McKay, chairman of tournament organisers European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR), thanked everyone involved in Trouillet's rescue.
"We would like to extend our sincere thanks to all involved at the stadium, both clubs and the emergency services for safely returning the parachutist to the ground," he said.
"The safety of the individual and of spectators in the stadium is of the utmost priority.
"We will pick up with Stade Toulousain and the stadium in due course."