<p>Russian ninth seed Daria Kasatkina has emerged from a battle of two gifted artists to deny former finalist Marketa Vondrousova in the second round at Roland-Garros.</p>.<p>In a captivating spectacle of shot-making on Court Suzanne-Lenglen the ninth seed punched her ticket 6-3, 6-4, reports rolandgarros.com.</p>.<p>Vondrousova first stamped her Grand Slam credentials four years when unseeded she went on a tear in Paris before succumbing to Ashleigh Barty in the final.</p>.<p>Yet to pass the quarter-finals at a major since, she is back on the ascent with three of her nine top-10 wins coming this year alone.\</p>.<p><strong>Also Read |<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/political-statements-not-banned-says-itf-after-djokovic-kosovo-row-1223710.html" target="_blank"> 'Political statements not banned,' says ITF after Djokovic Kosovo row</a></strong><br /><br /> </p>.<p>While the Czech was sidelined due to wrist surgery during last year's Roland-Garros, Kastakina went on a roll in Paris.</p>.<p>The ninth seed notched her maiden major semi-final and with points to defend this fortnight, the 26-year-old soon took control.</p>.<p>Despite falling behind an immediate break, Kasatkina knew she could not let the Czech lefty dictate and set about out- manoeuvring her opponent.</p>.<p>Both were masters at exploring every angle of the court and after almost an hour, it was Charleston semi-finalist Kasatkina who snuck the one-set advantage.</p>.<p>Brimming with confidence at 2-3, 30-all in the second set, she pulled off a crosscourt tweener passing shot, lifting the Court Suzanne-Lenglen crowd on her way to a 3-all hold.</p>.<p>The ninth seed barely blinked again, sealing a showdown with American Peyton Stearns after an hour and 44 minutes.</p>.<p>The win improved Kasatkina's record against the Czech to 3-2, her first since Rome four years ago.</p>.<p>While her 23 winners (20 off the forehand) were three fewer, Kasatkina kept her error count lower. Her 26 unforced errors were nine fewer than the Czech's.</p>.<p>Vondrousova could only convert 2/12 break point opportunities throughout the match.</p>
<p>Russian ninth seed Daria Kasatkina has emerged from a battle of two gifted artists to deny former finalist Marketa Vondrousova in the second round at Roland-Garros.</p>.<p>In a captivating spectacle of shot-making on Court Suzanne-Lenglen the ninth seed punched her ticket 6-3, 6-4, reports rolandgarros.com.</p>.<p>Vondrousova first stamped her Grand Slam credentials four years when unseeded she went on a tear in Paris before succumbing to Ashleigh Barty in the final.</p>.<p>Yet to pass the quarter-finals at a major since, she is back on the ascent with three of her nine top-10 wins coming this year alone.\</p>.<p><strong>Also Read |<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tennis/political-statements-not-banned-says-itf-after-djokovic-kosovo-row-1223710.html" target="_blank"> 'Political statements not banned,' says ITF after Djokovic Kosovo row</a></strong><br /><br /> </p>.<p>While the Czech was sidelined due to wrist surgery during last year's Roland-Garros, Kastakina went on a roll in Paris.</p>.<p>The ninth seed notched her maiden major semi-final and with points to defend this fortnight, the 26-year-old soon took control.</p>.<p>Despite falling behind an immediate break, Kasatkina knew she could not let the Czech lefty dictate and set about out- manoeuvring her opponent.</p>.<p>Both were masters at exploring every angle of the court and after almost an hour, it was Charleston semi-finalist Kasatkina who snuck the one-set advantage.</p>.<p>Brimming with confidence at 2-3, 30-all in the second set, she pulled off a crosscourt tweener passing shot, lifting the Court Suzanne-Lenglen crowd on her way to a 3-all hold.</p>.<p>The ninth seed barely blinked again, sealing a showdown with American Peyton Stearns after an hour and 44 minutes.</p>.<p>The win improved Kasatkina's record against the Czech to 3-2, her first since Rome four years ago.</p>.<p>While her 23 winners (20 off the forehand) were three fewer, Kasatkina kept her error count lower. Her 26 unforced errors were nine fewer than the Czech's.</p>.<p>Vondrousova could only convert 2/12 break point opportunities throughout the match.</p>