After Japan's Osaka battled past Belinda Bencic 4-6 6-3 6-4
earlier in the day, Swiatek, who will become world number one on
Monday, claimed her 16th straight win with a 6-2 7-5 victory
over Pegula to reach a third straight WTA 1000 final.
Swiatek sailed through the opening set but had to fight back
from an early break down in the second. She squandered two match
points at 5-4 before sealing victory two games later.
The 21-year-old is the first player to make back-to-back finals
at Indian Wells and Miami since Victoria Azarenka won the
'Sunshine Double' in 2016.
Swiatek has faced Osaka only once, with the Japanese player
winning in straight sets at Toronto in 2019.
"My second match on the WTA Tour, when I felt I am doing a
breakthrough, was against her (Osaka)," said Swiatek, who will
go top of the rankings following Ash Barty's retirement.
"Even though I lost that match, it inspired me to work harder
because she was number one back then. Right now I feel like I am
on a different level, so I can actually compete ... We'll see
how it is going to go. I'm really excited."
OSAKA OVERCOMES BENCIC
Four-times Grand Slam winner Osaka fired off 18 aces as she
defeated Olympic champion Bencic to reach her first Miami Open
final.
Osaka conceded only two first-serve points in the first set but
was unable to convert when it counted as Bencic saved a pair of
break points in the second game.
Osaka, who had not dropped a set in the tournament, then lost
her serve in the third game and again in the fifth.
The pair traded breaks early in the second set before Osaka
seized the momentum after breaking in the sixth game.
"She had a really amazing service return - there were times I
thought that I hit great serves but she just hit winners," Osaka
said.
"(I was) just battling my inner thoughts and trying to know that
I must play one point at a time and adjust if I have to but try
not to overwhelm myself with my thoughts."
Osaka saved five of six break points in the third before closing
out the match with an ace and a grin, having reached her first
final since her second Australian Open title a year ago.
"I feel like if I was negative for a split second I would have
lost the match today," said Osaka, who will play in her fourth
WTA 1000 showpiece match on Saturday.
"I have to keep pumping myself up and I haven't played as many
matches as a lot of these other players so I just have to keep
learning."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York and Manasi Pathak in
Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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