Swiatek, Gauff power to Cincinnati semi-finals
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[August 19, 2023]
(Reuters) -Iga Swiatek beat Czech 10th seed Marketa
Vondrousova 7-6(3) 6-1 to reach the Cincinnati Open semi-finals on
Friday, as Coco Gauff downed Italy's Jasmine Paolini 6-3 6-2 and
Aryna Sabalenka beat an ailing Tunisian fifth seed Ons Jabeur 7-5
6-3.
World number one Swiatek, who raised her game at the key moments,
broke the Wimbledon champion five times and saved four of six break
points to seal victory in 91 minutes, in a clash between the last
two Grand Slam winners.
"It wasn't easy to adjust to her spin because she's a lefty," French
Open champion Swiatek said during her on-court interview.
"She really used that and her experience for sure but I really
wanted to be determined and fight for every ball, and in the end
this is what worked."
Vondrousova enjoyed an ideal start and dropped only three points on
serve by the time she built a 5-3 lead and served for the set twice.
But she was denied both times by Swiatek before the Pole ran away
with the tiebreaker.
Swiatek found a higher gear in the second where she feasted on
Vondrousova's serve and broke three times, including in the final
game where she sealed the win with a forehand down the line that the
Czech was unable to chase down.
Swiatek, who is using this event as a tune-up ahead of her title
defense at the Aug. 28-Sept. 10 U.S. Open, credited the adjustments
she made in between sets for her ability to make quick work of
Vondrousova in the second frame.
"I tried to learn from that first set, and in the second set I knew
exactly what to do and I think that's why it was such a good
performance," Swiatek said.
Swiatek, who has occupied top spot in the world rankings since April
2022, will next face American seventh seed Gauff, whom she has
beaten in all seven of their previous meetings, including twice this
year.
Gauff has yet to drop a set in Cincinnati and after going down an
early break on Friday she found the momentum against Paolini,
breaking the Italian in the third, fifth and ninth games of the
first set.
Gauff, who picked up the biggest title of her career in Washington
earlier this month, dropped her serve in the first game of the
second set but quickly hit her stride to sweep the final six games
of the brisk, one hour and 13-minute match.
The 19-year-old acknowledged that while she does not have a good
track record against upcoming opponent Swiatek, she believes recent
improvements to her game could yield better results.
"I do feel a lot more confident going into it tomorrow. But she's
not an easy opponent to play, especially against me," she told
reporters.
[to top of second column] |
Aug 16, 2023; Mason, OH, USA; Iga
Swiatek, of Poland, serves the ball to Danielle Collins, of the
United States, during the Western & Southern Open at Lindner Family
Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Carter Skaggs-USA TODAY Sports
"I think I really just got to take it point by
point and try to stay mentally engaged every ball."
Unseeded Czech Karolina Muchova needed just 11 minutes on court to
reach the semis as compatriot Marie Bouzkova retired from their
match with right leg strain while trailing 3-0.
Muchova now faces Belarusian second seed Sabalenka, whom she beat in
the Roland Garros semi-final earlier this year.
Jabeur overcame Sabalenka en route to the Wimbledon final this year
and their rematch had all the makings of an epic battle as they
twice traded breaks in a tense first set before Sabalenka closed out
the 12th game with a lethal backhand return.
Jabeur was up a break in the second set when the affair began to
unravel, however, as the Tunisian took a medical timeout to have her
right foot taped by a member of the tournament staff.
She bounded off her bench and jogged back onto the court but was
clearly not herself anymore as she handed Sabalenka the break with a
double fault in the sixth game and could not put up much of a fight
as the Belarusian broke her again in the eighth.
"I'm super happy to be in the semi-finals again in Cincinnati, but
right now I'm a little bit sad for Ons," the Australian Open winner
said in on-court remarks.
"Fingers crossed - (Muchova is) a great player, we had really great
battle at Roland Garros."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto and Amy Tennery in New York;
Editing by Hugh Lawson and Sonali Paul)
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