Amanda Anisimova defeats Naomi
Osaka at the U.S. Open to reach her 2nd Grand Slam final in a row
[September 05, 2025]
By HOWARD FENDRICH
NEW YORK (AP) — Amanda Anisimova eliminated four-time Grand Slam
champion Naomi Osaka 6-7 (4), 7-6 (3), 6-3 in a U.S. Open semifinal
that ended at nearly 1 a.m. Friday and featured two of the most
powerful first-strike hitters in women’s tennis.
The No. 8-seeded Anisimova, a 24-year-old who was born in New Jersey
and grew up in Florida, reached her second straight major final by
coming through after 2 hours, 56 minutes.
“I wasn’t sure I would make it past the finish line and I tried to
dig deep,” said Anisimova, who needed three match points to get the
job done. “It was a huge fight out there today.”
When it was over, Anisimova yelled, “Let's go!” and enjoyed the
moment by kneeling on the court and leaning forward.
She will face defending champion and current No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka
on Saturday for the title. Sabalenka beat Jessica Pegula in three
sets on Thursday. Sabalenka owns three major trophies, all on hard
courts.
This is the fifth consecutive women's final at a Slam involving an
American woman.
At Wimbledon in July, Anisimova had a Grand Slam breakthrough,
upsetting Sabalenka in the semifinals — a result that increased the
American's edge in their head-to-head series to 6-3 — and making it
all the way to the title match before losing 6-0, 6-0 to Iga Swiatek.
But Anisimova recovered from that quickly enough and well enough to
get past Swiatek in two sets in the U.S. Open quarterfinals.

Now Anisimova is the first opponent to beat Osaka — a former No. 1
player who was seeded No. 23 in New York — this late in a Grand Slam
tournament. Before this loss, Osaka had been a combined 13-0 over
her career in major quarterfinals, semifinals and finals, with two
trophies apiece from the U.S. Open and Australian Open.
“I mean, honestly I don’t feel sad. It’s really weird. Well, it’s
not weird, because I just feel like I did the best that I could,”
said Osaka, who took a series of mental-health breaks starting in
2021, then was away from the tour while having a daughter.
“Honestly, it’s kind of inspiring for me, because it makes me just
want to train and try to get better, and hopefully, just give it my
very best shot again and see what happens. But I think I can’t be
mad or upset at myself.”
Anisimova first got to the final four at a major tournament at the
2019 French Open at age 17. In 2023, she took a break from the tour,
saying she had been “ struggling with my mental health and burnout ”
for nearly a year.
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Amanda Anisimova, of the United States, reacts after defeating Naomi
Osaka, of Japan, during the women's singles semifinals of the U.S.
Open tennis championships, Friday, Sept. 5, 2025, in New York. (AP
Photo/Seth Wenig)

At this time last season, Anisimova was ranked 50th
and still working her way back. She's most certainly back — and
better than ever.
Asked what allowed her to win against Osaka, Anisimova replied: “Oh,
my God. I don’t know. I mean, Naomi is playing amazing tennis. She's
back where she belongs.”
Well, Anisimova did it by forgetting about the opening set, and
forgetting about a 6-5 deficit in the second.
She also did it by not holding anything back down the stretch, going
for — and delivering — big groundstrokes that usually landed deep in
the court and right where she wanted them. That tends to be Osaka's
style, too, but she was not quite able to keep up in the late going
and took some pills a trainer gave her after examining her left foot
in the third set.
“I wouldn’t say it’s a bigger challenge than I expected, because I
kind of knew that she’s that type of player. It was just kind of
funny at times, because there is no pattern to what she’s doing.
It’s kind of like she just hits at the empty court or whatever, and
it usually goes in,” Osaka said about taking on Anisimova.
“Obviously she went to the finals of Wimbledon, and now she’s in the
finals here, so it just shows that she’s a really good player.”
Both players frequently went over to the corners of the court to
look up at their coaches and trade words.
Osaka showed frustration after getting broken in the second set by
smacking a ball in anger off the blue court and then tossing her
racket toward the sideline.
Osaka pounded serves at up to 119 mph and produced 15 aces.
Anisimova's purest-in-the-sport backhand and almost-as-good forehand
helped her compile 50 winners, 18 more than Osaka.
“Sometimes, I was like, ‘How are we making these shots?’” Anisimova
said. “But we were.”
It's true: Both were. But Anisimova made more.
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