
Victoria Mboko, left, of Canada, is congratulated after her win by Naomi Osaka, right, of Japan, in final action at the National Bank Open women’s tennis tournament in Montreal on Thursday.
12:51 JST, August 8, 2025
MONTREAL (AP) — Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko completed a dream run to the National Bank Open title Thursday night, overcoming a slow start to beat Japanese star Naomi Osaka 2-6, 6-4, 6-1.
The 18-year-old Mboko — who will jump from 85th to 25th in the world — won her first WTA Tour title and joined Faye Urban in 1969 and Bianca Andreescu in 2019 as the only Canadians to win the home event in the open era.
Mboko dropped to her knees after Osaka fired a shot into the net as a raucous packed house burst into cheers around center court. winner ran to hug her family and coaches in the courtside box.
The crowd was so rowdy, the umpire repeatedly asked fans to “please be quiet during the points.”
“It’s been an incredible week here in Montreal,” Mboko told the crowd. “Montreal, je vous aime!”
After the match, when the crowd applauded Osaka with some yelling mixed in, she said, “Thanks, I guess,” and did not congratulate Mboko. Osaka later declined to speak to the media.
There were 13 service breaks in 25 games, with Mboko converting eight of nine break points. Fighting a wrist problem after a fall Wednesday, Mboko had 13 double-faults.
Born in Charlotte, North Carolina, to Congolese parents, Mboko grew up in Toronto. She beat four majors champions in the hard-court event, routing top-seeded Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-4 and also topping Osaka, Sofia Kenin and Elena Rybakina.
Osaka, the four-time Grand Slam champion who reached No. 1 in the world, had her best performance in a WTA 1000 tournament since also reaching the Miami final in 2022. She stepped away for 15 months toward the end of that season and had daughter Shai in July 2023. She’s winless since the 2021 Australian Open.
Mboko is the third wild card to win a WTA 1000 title event, following Maria Sharapova at Cincinnati in 2011 and Andreescu at Indian Wells in 2019.
"Sports" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Hakone Ekiden 2026: Aoyama Gakuin Leads Tokyo-Hakone Ekiden After Record-Breaking End to 1st Day (Update 1)
-
Hakone Ekiden 2026: Aoyama Gakuin Hakone Ekiden Runners Kept Departed Teammate in Their Thoughts During Race
-
‘King Kazu’ Joins J3’s Fukushima United FC on Loan; 58-Year-Old Kazuyoshi Miura Returns to J.League for 1st time in 5 Years in 2026
-
At 58, the World’s Oldest Professional Soccer Player Says He Is Only Getting Better with Age
-
Hakone Ekiden 2026: Aoyama Gakuin Defends Tokyo-Hakone Ekiden Title
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
BOJ Gov. Ueda: Highly Likely Mechanism for Rising Wages, Prices Will Be Maintained
-
Core Inflation in Tokyo Slows in December but Stays above BOJ Target
-
Osaka-Kansai Expo’s Economic Impact Estimated at ¥3.6 Trillion, Takes Actual Visitor Numbers into Account
-
Japan Govt Adopts Measures to Curb Mega Solar Power Plant Projects Amid Environmental Concerns
-
Japan, U.S. Start Talks on Tokyo’s $550 Bil. Investment in U.S.; Energy, AI Projects Were Focus of 1st Meeting

