With the victory, the 13th-seeded Belarusian gained revenge for a
quarter-final loss to the second-seeded German at the Australian
Open, her only defeat of the season, but had to fight tooth and nail
to earn it in a 94-minute tussle.
Kerber, who had her upper left leg covered in heavy strapping,
looked dead and buried on several occasions in the second set but
was able to stay alive with a gutsy break when Azarenka served for
the match at 5-4.
Parity was short-lived, however, as Kerber handed back the break in
the next game and Azarenka did not waste another opportunity to seal
the deal to move one win away from a third Miami title and second
straight tournament triumph.
"I am very happy I stayed really strong in the end and actually
started really well," Azarenka, who beat Serena Williams to claim
the Indian Wells title on March 20, said in a courtside interview.
"I started to dictate (early) and I think the beginning was really
important," she added of the victory over the Australian Open
champion.
KUZNETSOVA NEXT
"She's such a fighter and an amazing player. I'm glad I kept pushing
and kept trying to break her rhythm. Glad I stayed really strong.
"For me it was really painful to watch my match from the Australian
Open and I'm really glad that I corrected my errors there and
improved my serve. Although there were a lot of breaks, when I
needed it, it came strong."
As well as avenging the Melbourne defeat, Azarenka improved to 7-1
in head-to-head meetings against the German and took her 2016 record
to an impressive 21-1.
Next up for the 26-year-old is Kuznetsova in the final, after the
Russian held off a strong challenge from Switzerland's Timea
Bacsinszky 7-5 6-3 in searing afternoon heat. The 15th-seed relied
on a never-say-die attitude and a powerful baseline game as she
improved her career record to 3-0 against the Swiss, ending the
match with a crunching backhand crosscourt winner after nearly two
hours on court.
[to top of second column] |
"I am happy that I could hang in there and never let my hands down,"
Kuznetsova, who won the Miami title in 2006, said courtside.
"I have not been feeling my best but I have been fighting every ball
and just trying to run as much as I could.
"I was praying to finish it in two sets so I can have a little bit
of time to rest," smiled the Russian, referring to Saturday's final.
Kuznetsova, who pulled off a stunning upset when she ousted world
number one Williams in the fourth round, won a tight opening set
after ending a brilliant baseline slugfest between the two with an
overhead smash.
Though she failed to hold serve in the first game of the second set,
the Russian broke her 19th-seeded opponent in the second and fourth
games to lead 3-1, then fought back from 15-40 down on serve in the
ninth to seal victory.
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes and Benjamin Everill in Los
Angeles; Editing by John O'Brien)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|