WASHINGTON -- Coaches often tell players to practice the way you play. That strategy didnt work out for Sloane Stephens. Playing her first match since Wimbledon, the No. 2-seeded Stephens fell to Olga Puchkova 7-5, 6-3 in the first round of the Citi Open on Monday. "Leading up, I didnt practice that great and I just wasnt feeling the ball out there," said Stephens, who lost to eventual Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli in the quarterfinals on July 2. "Sometimes you have days like that and its unfortunate that it came today." The struggles started early for the 15th-ranked Stephens, particularly with her service game. The highest-ranked American behind Serena Williams, Stephens was broken three times in each set by the unseeded and 88th-ranked Russian. In the mens event, Mardy Fish rebounded from an early exit in Atlanta and losing the first set to defeat qualifier Matthew Ebden 2-6, 6-1, 6-3. After falling behind 3-0 and 4-1 in the first set, the 20-year-old Stephens worked her way back into a 5-5 tie, only to falter in the end. After Puchkova held serve, Stephens could not do the same, unable to win a single point en route to dropping the set. The final set was more of the same. "I couldnt really get it together, but there will be more tournaments, so its OK," Stephens said. She dealt with an abdominal injury earlier this summer, but said it wasnt a factor on Monday. "I felt fine. When Im injured, I play great. When Im healthy I cant hit a ball on the court." Battling back from a heart condition, Fish only played four matches in 2013 before facing Ebden, including a first-round loss last week. After dropping the opening set, the 31-year-old Fish turned the momentum by winning the lengthy opening game of the second set. He capped the service break with a cross-court winner and took the next three games for a 4-0 lead. Fish broke Ebden at 3-2 in the second set, leading to his first victory since March. Fish credited his practice performance for his positive outcome. "It feels real good. Ive played well in practice, put in a lot of hours in the past, you know, Id be remiss not to say months. But its been months. Yeah, its satisfying," Fish said. Defending champion and No. 7 seed Magdalena Rybarikova rallied past Christina McHale for a 2-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory. Playing with a wrap on her left thigh because of a lower back injury, Rybarikova twice lost serve in the opening set. The 43rd-ranked Slovak rebounded as McHale also struggled on her serve. "Her game went down and I had my chances," said Rybarikova, who broke McHale three times in the final set. "Especially in the third set, I really played my game." Along with Stephens, McHale is one of 11 American women ranked in the top 100. 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LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- Olympic leaders asked the World Anti-Doping Agency on Saturday to oversee a global system for tackling drug cheats with more power to punish failing organizations.After the IOC hosted a meeting of world sports officials, it upheld WADAs future role after months of strained relations amid fallout from the agencys call to ban Russia from the Rio de Janeiro Games because of state-backed doping.The Olympic body called for WADA to lead a more robust, more efficient, more transparent and more harmonized anti-doping system, and promised more finance for the agency if it passed reforms.WADA is now set to get substantial additional powers, the agencys president Craig Reedie told reporters after a four-hour closed-door meeting.Reedie said a new testing authority -- taking control of when and where athletes are tested from international and domestic sports federations -- could operate in time for the 2018 Winter Olympics.Sports governing bodies are also set to lose control of banning athletes who dope -- with the Lausanne-based Court of Arbitration for Sport to gain sanctioning powers.WADA was asked to discuss the proposals at board meetings on Nov. 19-20 in Glasgow, Scotland.Olympic leaders have long favored taking control of drug testing from sports federations, and most of the proposals made Saturday repeated calls from a previous summit held in Lausanne one year ago.However, WADAs possiblee role in a revamped and more independent system has been questioned since it appointed two investigations that detailed Russian doping and cover-ups.ddddddddddddSaturdays meeting went ahead despite a final report of the second WADA investigation panel, led by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren, not being due until at least late-October.McLarens interim report in July provoked calls by WADA for Russias expulsion from the Rio Games -- which IOC president Thomas Bach resisted -- and his final document should go into more detail of how a WADA-accredited laboratory manipulated home athletes tainted samples at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games.Still, there was no mention of Russia or McLaren in the three-page document issued Saturday by the IOC.The IOC made clear that WADA must seek to earn an increase on its annual budget of about $27 million, paid equally by the Olympic movement and national governments.The increase in financing depends on the implementation of the reforms by WADA and is based on the results provided by WADA after the review of the anti-doping system, the IOC statement said.A new WADA investigations unit started work this month, led by a German former detective who worked on the first Russian investigation that focused on state-backed doping and cover-ups in track and field. 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