Van de Zandschulp had enjoyed a remarkable run, taking down 11th
seed Diego Schwartzman to reach his first Grand Slam
quarter-final, where he fired off 20 forehand winners and was
the first player here to take Medvedev past the two-hour mark.
The Dutch qualifier outlasted the Russian in a 20-shot rally and
then converted on break point in the fifth game of the third set
before taking it on Arthur Ashe Stadium, the first sign of
weakness Medvedev had shown since arriving in New York.
But the 2019 runner-up, who fired down 13 aces in the match,
came roaring back in the fourth set, winning all but two of his
first-serve points and never facing a break point.
Van de Zandschulp fended off match point in the 10th game,
holding his serve to wild applause from a rowdy New York crowd,
but Medvedev responded with a quick hold and a break, helped by
a double fault from the Dutchman.
The match was the first real challenge of the tournament for
Medvedev, who looked on track to flatten yet another competitor
at the start after getting up two breaks through the first five
games.
The Australian Open runner-up never faced a break point in the
second set, which he wrapped up in a brisk 22 minutes, but
struggled in the third set, making 13 unforced errors, and van
de Zandschulp pounced.
"First two sets were kind of under control. He was missing some
balls, some important points," said Medvedev. "Then third and
fourth set was really tough. He played top level, served really
big.
"Was breaking the rhythm a little bit, so was really tough set.
I'm really happy that in the fourth I managed to, first of all,
hold my serve really easily and managed to break him in the end
where I had few opportunities to do before also."
Medvedev, who lost in the semi-finals a year ago to eventual
winner Dominic Thiem, is one of the main candidates aiming to
thwart world number one Novak Djokovic's bid for a calendar
Grand Slam - though he is not thinking about facing the 20-times
major winner just yet.
"I don't think about him, because as we saw, anybody can beat
anybody. If he's in the final, and if I'm there, I'm happy,"
said Medvedev. He's also happy, I guess."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Ken Ferris and Toby Davis)
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