Karolina Muchova won the Qatar TotalEnergies Open by beating Victoria Mboko 6-4, 7-5 in the final.
The Czech player, seeded 14th at age 29, took the WTA 1000 title in 94 minutes on the Doha hard courts. She converted two of six break points and won 78 percent of her first-serve points.
Muchova faced no break points herself across 72 total points. Mboko hit four aces to Muchova’s two but landed only 61 percent on first serves.
The Canadian had one double fault to Muchova’s two. Muchova pocketed $280,000 and 1000 ranking points.
This victory marked her first trophy since 2019 after injury time away. She returns to the top 20 ahead of next month’s Indian Wells.
Mboko, a 19-year-old wildcard, reached her second WTA 1000 final in a row. She upset Elena Rybakina in the quarterfinals. In semis, Mboko beat Jelena Ostapenko 6-3, 6-2. Her 13-3 season record lifts her to No. 10.
Mboko grabbed a 4-2 lead in the second set with strong returns. Her opponent broke back twice, using slice backhands and net rushes.
She served out the match at 6-5 with a solid first serve. The first set stayed close until Muchova broke at 2-1.
Muchova reached semis by rallying past Maria Sakkari. She trailed 3-6, 0-1 before winning 6-4, 6-1.
The Khalifa International crowd filled the stands for this early 2026 WTA clash. Baseline exchanges filled the air along with net forays and serve holds.
After the match, Muchova recalled the feeling of victory, after going for so long without a title: “It’s been a while since I won a tournament, so it’s nice to get that feeling again, to be reminded of that victory feeling again.” She also praised Mboko for her feat: “I’d like to congratulate Victoria, you’re still a teenager, but you play with so much maturity. I’m sure you have many titles ahead of you.”
Muchova built her game around variety all week. She mixed topspin forehands with low slices. Mboko relied on flat groundstrokes and athletic covers.
The final swung on service games. Muchova held firm under pressure, while Mboko pushed hard in set two but faded late. Both players traded long rallies early, but it was Muchova’s movement that helped her soar.
