Aryna
Sabalenka remains on track to defend her Australian Open crown after reaching
the Melbourne final by avenging her loss to Coco Gauff in last year's US Open
showpiece.
Belarusian second seed Sabalenka won 7-6 (7-2) 6-4 against
American fourth seed Gauff in a tense semi-final.
Both were edgy in an error-strewn first set with six breaks
before Sabalenka pounced decisively late in the second.
Sabalenka will face Chinese 12th seed Zheng Qinwen in Saturday's
final.
Zheng, 21, reached her first Grand Slam showpiece by ending
Ukrainian qualifier Dayana Yastremska's incredible run with a 6-4 6-4 win in
Thursday's second semi-final.
Zheng is aiming to become the second Chinese woman to win the
Australian Open singles title - on the 10th anniversary of Li Na's famous
victory.
"It feels unbelievable," Zheng said. "I'm super
excited to have such a great performance and arrive in the final."
Anticipation for the
contest between Sabalenka and Gauff at the opening Grand Slam of the season was
high.
Both players had been impressive as they worked their way
through the draw, setting up a rematch of their thrilling US Open final which
19-year-old Gauff edged in September to claim her first major title.
It took place under the roof on Rod Laver Arena - as did the
second semi-final - because of persistent rain in Melbourne.
Sabalenka had been particularly dominant and, after showing
resilience to recover from sticky spells against Gauff, still has not dropped a
set over the past fortnight.
The 25-year-old Belarusian unleashed her explosive game on Gauff
from the start, cracking 33 winners and attacking her opponent's second serve
in a high-octane demonstration of her power.
While Sabalenka's style still often leads to errors, she seems
more at ease at Melbourne Park this fortnight having the experience of lifting
her first major title here.
Now, after keeping her composure to serve out victory, she is the
first woman to reach back-to-back finals since Serena Williams in 2017.
"I think I was able to focus on myself and I was prepared
for her moving really good and putting every ball back," said Sabalenka,
who has reached at least the semi-finals of the past six majors.
"I had to be ready to make an extra shot and I was ready
for tonight."
Gauff
fulfilled what had long seemed her destiny by winning in New York, when she
fought back from a set down to beat Sabalenka.
This time she was unable to repeat the feat as Sabalenka ended
her unbeaten start to the 2024 season.
Gauff came to Melbourne on the back of winning a WTA title in
Auckland and did not drop a set in her opening four matches.
But, after scraping past Ukraine's Marta Kostyuk in what she
called a "bad" quarter-final, she looked extremely nervy in the early
stages of the semi-final.
Gauff's tension was illustrated by six double faults in the
first set, although she also showed her ability to mentally reset as she twice
recovered from being a break down.
After soaking up so much pressure, Gauff broke for 6-5 but blew
the chance to serve out the set from 30-0 and was punished as Sabalenka
dominated the tie-break.
Gauff had to fight off more break points in the first and sixth
games of the second set, with the pressure telling when loose errors from the
baseline allowed Sabalenka to break for 5-4.
This time, Sabalenka did not allow the opportunity to slip from
her grasp and earned the "revenge" she wanted to exact on Gauff for
her Flushing Meadows defeat.
"It was a tough match for me," said Gauff, who looked
close to tears while she left Rod Laver Arena.
"Overall it was a positive tournament. I had chances in
both sets, but she played better. I think it just came down to a couple of
points and that's tennis."
Zheng has hit more
aces and won more first-serve points than any other player in the women's
singles
Unlike
Sabalenka and Gauff, neither Zheng nor Yastremska had ever played a Grand Slam
semi-final match - and both were looking to emulate notable major triumphs of
the recent past.
Zheng - an aggressive baseliner with a hefty serve - was aiming
to follow in the footsteps of Chinese trailblazer Li.
Yastremska, meanwhile, was the first qualifier to reach the last
four of a major since Britain's Emma Raducanu at the 2021 US Open.
It was Zheng who continued her journey to the delight of a vocal
Chinese backing in a city where there is a large population with links to the
Asian country.
After dropping her opening service game, Zheng instantly broke
Yastremska and took the 23-year-old Ukrainian's serve once more to seal the
opener.
Yastremska, who said it was her "mission" to ensure
people remember about her nation's fight against Russia's ongoing invasion,
needed treatment for what appeared to be an abdominal injury.
But, as promised before the match, the world number 93 continued
to show the same fight she had displayed to come through qualifying to make the
last four.
Losing serve for 2-1, Yastremska stopped Zheng consolidating the
break by taking her fourth break-point opportunity in the next game.
However, a double fault set the tone for a poor seventh game where
Zheng pounced again and the Chinese player used her dominant serve to see out
victory.
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