- US TikTok ban looms as Trump seeks last-ditch solution
- Swiss Ruegg wins uphill finish to lead women's Tour Down Under
- Rybakina needs physio 'magic' after fighting on at Australian Open
- Swiatek destroys Raducanu as Sinner steps up Melbourne defence
- Impeached South Korean president arrives for arrest warrant hearing
- Irving shines as Mavs roll Thunder, Nuggets scorch Heat
- History-making 'lucky loser' Lys into Australian Open last 16
- Three-set specialist Navarro credits billionaire dad for stamina
- Rampant Swiatek has ball 'listening' to her in rout of Raducanu
- Scratchy Navarro dumps Jabeur out of Australian Open
- In Brazil, disinformation deals Lula a bruising defeat
- South Korea court to decide on extending president's detention
- Slew of satellite projects aims to head off future wildfires
- TikTok could 'go dark' in US Sunday after Supreme Court ruling
- Brutal Swiatek routs Raducanu to reach Australian Open last-16
- Menendez brothers' hearing delayed by LA fires
- Tsunami survivor Sasaki overcame tragedy to reach MLB
- 'We're entertainers': Pegula backs Djokovic call to jazz up tennis
- Marathon man Draper warns Alcaraz he's in for a battle
- Israeli government approves Gaza ceasefire deal
- Hoffman, Hoey share PGA Tour lead in La Quinta
- Japanese star Sasaki announces joining LA Dodgers
- 39 dead in Colombia guerilla violence, govt suspends peace talks
- The video games bedeviling Elon Musk
- Gamers tear into Musk for 'faking' video game prowess
- Kvaratskhelia signs for Paris Saint-Germain from Napoli
- US Treasury to take 'extraordinary measures' to avoid debt default
- Lille warm up for Liverpool clash by going third in Ligue 1, Monaco lose
- Man Utd and Scotland great Denis Law dies aged 84
- Frankfurt heap more pain on Dortmund as Marmoush eyes Man City move
- Canada vows 'Trump tax' on US in response to tariffs: minister
- 'More sad than shocked': TikTok users brace for ban
- Global equities rally, pushing London and Frankfurt to new records
- US grounds SpaceX's Starship after fiery mid-air explosion
- Frankfurt heap more pain on struggling Dortmund
- With Kvaratskhelia sale, Napoli turn page on historic Scudetto triumph
- US offered infrastructure incentive for DRC-Rwanda peace deal: official
- Pochettino wants to see some Argentine spirit in his USA squad
- US to tighten trade rules to hit low-cost China shipments
- Former Man Utd striker and 'football giant' Denis Law dies aged 84
- Sloppy Monaco stunned by Ligue 1 strugglers Montpellier
- Denis Law, the king of Man Utd's 'holy trinity'
- At VW home base, Germany's Scholz vows to revive economy
- Frankfurt drop Marmoush against Dortmund, confirm Man City talks
- Frankfurt drop Marmoush against Dortmund, confirm transfer talks
- US grounds SpaceX's Starship rocket pending probe
- Sixers star Embiid sidelined with knee swelling
- UK film, theatre legend Joan Plowright dies, aged 95
- 30 killed in Colombia armed violence, govt suspends rebel peace talks
- Trump readies for triumphant, but icy, inauguration
Rampant Swiatek has ball 'listening' to her in rout of Raducanu
Iga Swiatek warned Saturday her best was yet to come and the ball was "listening" to her as she sounded an ominous warning to her Australian Open rivals with a third-round rout of Emma Raducanu.
The five-time Grand Slam champion has only once reached the semi-final in Melbourne but signalled she is ready to go all the way with a 6-1, 6-0 destruction of the 2021 US Open winner.
World number two Swiatek sailed into the second week for the loss of only 10 games in three matches and warned she would only get better.
"I feel much more fresh than for the past two years," the Pole told reporters after rattling off 11 straight games in a brutal demolition of Britain's Raducanu on Rod Laver Arena.
"The last two years I felt much more fatigue and also a bit more stress. For sure I can now just focus on improving my game."
The relentless Swiatek hit 24 winners to all corners of the court.
"I played a few shots that I thought after them, this is what I practise for to play these kind of shots, and that's why I really enjoyed today's match.
"I felt great. I felt like the ball is listening to me," said Swiatek, who committed just 12 unforced errors.
"I felt really confident, so at the end I could push for even more."
- 'Lost her belief' -
It was the first time that Raducanu had reached the third round in Melbourne.
Ranked 61, Raducanu's best Slam effort since winning the US Open has been a lone fourth-round at Wimbledon.
Swiatek, the 2022 champion in New York, is looking to improve on her patchy record at the Australian Open and was ruthless once she had Raducanu on the ropes.
She said it was important not to let up.
"I felt like she might have lost her belief a bit (in the second set)," she said.
"But honestly, you never know what's going on on the other side of the net.
"I know if I would not be so intense, if I would back out, she for sure would use it because she's an experienced player."
Swiatek put the 22-year-old Raducanu under severe pressure from the start, forcing the Briton to save break points in her opening service game.
That was to be the only time Raducanu bothered the scoreboard as Swiatek, 23, was untouchable, winning in just 70 minutes.
Swiatek's path to a first Australian Open final is opening up.
With the in-form Coco Gauff and defending champion Aryna Sabalenka in the other half of the draw a potential semi-final against Elena Rybakina looms as her biggest hurdle.
Swiatek next faces "lucky loser" Eva Lys from Germany, ranked 128 for a place in the quarter-finals.
M.White--AT