Pegula stuns Swiatek, Sinner overcomes Medvedev
Jessica Pegula ousted top seed Iga Swiatek in the quarterfinals to continue the rich vein of American success at the US Open while men’s world No. 1 Jannik Sinner beat Daniil Medvedev to book his spot in the semifinals. Pegula took advantage of an error-strewn performance from Swiatek to book a spot in her maiden Grand Slam semifinal 6-2 6-4, while Sinner prevailed 6-2 1-6 6-1 6-4 to reach the last-four at Flushing Meadows for the first time.
The losses for Swiatek and Medvedev ensured that the US Open will crown two new champions this year.
Sinner will face Jack Draper for a spot in a second Grand Slam final after the British surprise package earlier stunned hobbled Australian Alex de Minaur 6-3 7-5 6-2 to become the first British man to reach the semis since 2012.
Pegula, who had lost six previous Grand Slam quarterfinals, will take on Karolina Muchova after the unseeded Czech beat Brazilian Beatriz Haddad Maia 6-1 6-4 in the day session at Arthur Ashe stadium despite battling a “bug”.
“I’m really happy to be through to the semifinals,” said Pegula, who joined male compatriots Taylor Fritz and Frances Tiafoe at the business end of the tournament.
“I thought I played a really clean match. I feel like I didn’t really do anything that bad, and was able to kind of jump on her really early and I think frustrate her.”
Swiatek, the 2022 champion, could not claim the same as she suffered service issues in the opening set and made 41 unforced errors over the match. “I didn’t really understand why my serve wasn’t working,” Swiatek lamented.
“It was hard for me to find, like, a proper solution for that. Today I just made too many mistakes.”
Mistakes also plagued 2021 champion Medvedev, who made 57 unforced errors over a topsy-turvy match against top seed Sinner.
The Russian failed to capitalise on the momentum he gained by winning the second set, losing five games straight in the third before handing Sinner a break in the fourth with an unforced error. “It was strange the first two sets because whoever made the first break started to roll,” said Sinner, who beat Medvedev in the Australian Open final this year before losing to him in the Wimbledon quarterfinals.
“It was very tough... we knew it would be very physical,” Sinner added.
Draper powered into his first Grand Slam semifinal without having dropped a set in the tournament, having earned his first career victory over 10th seed De Minaur.
The Australian battled to find his range from the start and was broken early, setting the tone for the match as he racked up the unforced errors. “The way he can spread the court, being a lefty and really move you around the court, it takes a toll on the body,” De Minaur said.
Not since Andy Murray won the title in 2012 has Britain had a representative in the men’s singles semifinals at the US Open.