HARIMOTO Miwa and HAYATA Hina sealed the Women’s Doubles title with a straight-games victory over ODO Satsuki and YOKOI Sakura, winning the final 3-0. The official match-center record shows Harimoto/Hayata taking Game 1 11-8, Game 2 11-5, and then closing a tight finish in Game 3, 12-10, to complete the sweep.
The result mattered most in the final game, where Odo/Yokoi pushed the match deep into deuce territory and used a timeout in an attempt to turn the momentum. Harimoto/Hayata, however, held firm through the closing exchanges to finish the championship match without dropping a game.
How the final unfolded game by game
Harimoto/Hayata established the early edge by taking the opening game 11-8. The official commentary sequence around the late stages of Game 1 shows the score tightening as Odo/Yokoi reached 9-6 and then 10-7 and 10-8, but Harimoto/Hayata stayed in front and finished the game at 11-8 to move ahead 1-0.
In Game 2, Harimoto/Hayata extended their control and won 11-5. The score progression in the match-center feed shows them building a lead and repeatedly adding points as the game moved through 3-2, 5-2, 6-3, and 7-3. Odo/Yokoi did register points to keep contact at moments—such as 5-3 and 9-4—but Harimoto/Hayata closed the second game out cleanly at 11-5 to take a 2-0 match lead.
Game 3 provided the most dramatic stretch of the final. Odo/Yokoi fought to stay alive, and the official record includes a timeout requested by Odo/Yokoi during the game. After the timeout sequence, the match remained on a knife edge as the score continued to swing.
The commentary log shows Harimoto/Hayata working through a deficit and then trading points in the latter stages. Odo/Yokoi held a 9-6 advantage at one point, with the feed recording their points at 6-8 and then 6-9. Harimoto/Hayata responded to narrow the gap and level the game, with the score reaching 9-9 and then 10-10.
From there, Harimoto/Hayata produced the decisive finish. The match-center notes show them moving in front at 11-10 and then taking the final point for 12-10. With that, the official confirmation recorded the match as won by Harimoto/Hayata in Game 3, 12-10, for a 3-0 victory overall.
Key moments: timeout, deuce, and the closing points
The third game was defined by Odo/Yokoi’s push and their use of a timeout, which was logged as requested and then marked as started and ended in the official match-center commentary. Despite that intervention, Harimoto/Hayata were able to bring the score back from 9-6 down to 10-10.
In the final two points, the official sequence shows Harimoto/Hayata taking the lead at 11-10 and then converting match point for 12-10 to end the contest. Across the match, the commentary also recorded 29 service changes, reflecting the constant rotation of serves typical in doubles and the steady rhythm of the final as it moved from a controlled first two games into a tense deuce finish.
Ultimately, Harimoto/Hayata’s straight-games win—11-8, 11-5, 12-10—completed the Women’s Doubles final in three games, with the closest pressure arriving at the end, and the title decided on the last point of a deuce third game.
