Chung
blazes trail into Australian Open semi-finals
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[January 24, 2018]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Chung Hyeon's
trailblazing run through the Australian Open continued on Wednesday
as the relentless South Korean tossed American Tennys Sandgren aside
6-4 7-6(5) 6-3 to become his nation's first grand slam
semi-finalist.
Bespectacled like Clark Kent but playing like Superman at a
sunbathed Rod Laver Arena, world number 58 Chung became the lowest
ranked player into the last four at Melbourne Park since Marat Safin
in 2004.
The muscular 21-year-old will meet either champion Roger Federer or
Tomas Berdych for a place in the final, and should head into that
clash brimful of confidence.
As in his fourth round elimination of six-times champion Novak
Djokovic, Chung had all the answers against world number 97
Sandgren, returning virtually everything the battling American could
throw at him.
A near-perfect display finished with a wobble when serving out the
match, as he squandered a 40-0 lead and saw a total of five match
points evaporate into a cloudless sky.
He later admitted to thinking prematurely about victory and what it
might mean for his expectant nation.
"I think (in the) last game, many things come together. If I win one
more point, I make history in Korea," he told reporters.
"Something I (was) thinking like that. I have to think about the
ceremony. Anyway, I had to stay calm because... the match was not
finished yet."
Chung's raw power ultimately prevailed, a blazing forehand into the
corner causing a scrambling Sandgren to push his desperate retrieve
well past the baseline.
Chung flashed a broad grin as South Koreans draped in flags roared
in the terraces and his mother shaped a love heart with her arms
from the players' box.
South Korea has been late to the party in global tennis but Chung's
success could light a fire for the sport in the east Asian nation.
It has also been a devastating raid by a player barely spoken about
before the tournament, with most of the buzz around young guns like
Germany's Alexander Zverev, who Chung dismantled in the third round,
and Australian Nick Kyrgios.
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Chung Hyeon of South Korea shakes hands with Tennys Sandgren of the
U.S. after Chung won their match. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
FALSE ALARM
The match began in an unnerving way for all concerned, a false alarm
ringing out and warning to "evacuate, evacuate, evacuate" early in
the first set.
Play was halted for a few moments and some fans scurried for the
exits.
Chung broke Sandgren in the third game and served out the set to
love, then took the heavy-legged American's serve again to take a
2-0 lead in the second.
Sandgren rallied strongly, breaking Chung twice but he faltered when
serving for the set at 5-3.
The Korean converted a second break point to get back on serve and
the pair fought furiously in a breathless tiebreak.
Sandgren wound his forehand up for a straightforward winner to
secure two set points but instead thumped the ball into the net to
allow Chung to level at 5-5.
Another rush of blood saw the American fire long, and a clinical
Chung needed only one chance to take the set.
The Korean flapped his hands at the crowd in triumph, as a red-faced
Sandgren retired to his chair to shake his head and fume.
The American appeared spent and slumped to a 3-1 deficit, but gave
the crowd their money's worth with brilliant volleying to save a
fifth match point.
The 26-year-old bowed out to warm applause from the crowd, though a
storm over his social media links with right wing nationalists raged
on in the background.
"I'm happy with being resilient," Sandgren said.
"It's not easy to come off some big wins, biggest wins of my career,
crazy stages, like quarter-finals of a slam... and to deal with the
stuff off the court as well."
(Editing by Greg Stutchbury/John O'Brien)
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