Gulf Today

Pegula draws on energy of billionair­e dad’s Bills in Slam breakthrou­gh

Pegula said her parents were her biggest fans and she wrote ‘Hi mom and dad’ on the television camera ater winning her match against the Ukrainian

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American Jessica Pegula said she was inspired by the Buffalo Bills’ run to the NFL playoffs in beating a top-10 player for the first time Monday to make her first ever Grand Slam quarter-final.

The unseeded 26-year-old, whose billionair­e father Terry owns the Bills, has been in scintillat­ing form at Melbourne Park and she overwhelme­d fith seed Elina Svitolina 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.

It set up a last-eight clash with fellow American Jennifer Brady, who beat Croat Donna Vekic in straight sets.

“It’s definitely something I think I tried to take into my game a litle bit, even watching the team geting that grit, that competitiv­e atitude, having that mindset,” she said of the National Football League franchise.

“In tennis, it’s like 90 percent sometimes of the matches.

“I think it’s been really cool to watch them and kind of channel that energy into how I’ve been doing.”

Pegula’s tycoon father, who made his money in natural gas, took over the Bills in 2014, outbidding rival suitors Donald Trump and rock star Jon Bon Jovi.

They made the American Football Conference Championsh­ip game last month but were pipped to a Super Bowl by the Kansas City Chiefs, who went on to lose in the showpiece Super Bowl to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Pegula said her parents were her biggest fans and she wrote “Hi mom and dad” on the television camera ater winning her match against the Ukrainian.

“They’ve been obviously the main support system my whole life. They’re always the first to text me, watch all my matches,” she said.

“Not just my parents, but my brother and my sisters, as well.

“I wrote my sister’s name last time. My dad was like ‘when are you going to write my name?’. They’re happy he got a shout-out today. They’re really happy.”

Ranked just 61 and playing only her second Australian Open, Pegula took out former world number one and 12th seed Victoria Azarenka in the opening round then dropped just four games in her next two matches.

Svitolina had won in straight-sets when the pair met at Abu Dhabi last month but it was Pegula who took the initiative Monday, creating three break points that were saved before a double fault on the fourth handed her a 4-3 lead.

She held serve to consolidat­e her advantage and take the set ater some punishing baselines batles.

They traded breaks early in the second set before Svitolina held then broke again for 3-1 as Pegula temporaril­y lost focus.

But Pegula, who missed most of 2017 with a hip injury that forced her to consider retirement, bounced back in the decider and secured a crucial break in the fourth game with a backhand volley winner.

A double fault allowed Svitolina back, but Pegula broke again for 5-3 and served out for her biggest win.

It was a disappoint­ing end to a major again for Svitolina, who has fallen to players ranked outside the top 25 in the past three Grand Slams.

Meanwhile, Serena Williams’ coach insisted she’s not “obsessed” with equalling Margaret Court’s record of 24 Grand Slam titles, arguing her achievemen­ts could not be compared with titles won in the amateur era.

The 39-year-old, 23-time major winner has lost four Slam finals while chasing Court’s all-time mark since her last major victory at Melbourne Park in 2017 while pregnant.

Despite now having a three-year-old daughter, Olympia, in tow, Williams is still grinding away. But her coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u said she had nothing to prove.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Jessica Pegula celebrates after her victory over Elina Svitolina in their Australian Open match in Melbourne.
Agence France-presse Jessica Pegula celebrates after her victory over Elina Svitolina in their Australian Open match in Melbourne.

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