Times Colonist

Stephens, Keys cruise into all-American U.S. Open final

- HOWARD FENDRICH

NEW YORK — Sloane Stephens was two points from defeat against Venus Williams in one U.S. Open semifinal before pulling out the victory.

Madison Keys faced no such test, overwhelmi­ng CoCo Vandeweghe in the other semifinal.

Now Stephens and Keys, a pair of pals in their early 20s, will meet in the first Grand Slam title match for each — and the first all-American women’s final at Flushing Meadows since 2002.

Stephens summoned some of her best strokes when she needed them the most, steeling herself when so close to defeat and taking the last three games of a back-and-forth thriller, edging seven-time major champion Williams 6-1, 0-6, 7-5 on Thursday night.

“I have a lot of grit,” said the unseeded Stephens, who is ranked 83rd after having surgery on her left foot in January and is the fourth unseeded finalist at the tournament in the Open era, which dates to 1968. “I don’t give up. Like, I’m not just going to give it to someone. I’m not just going to let them take it from me.”

The 15th-seeded Keys, who dominated No. 20 CoCo Vandeweghe 6-1, 6-2 in barely more than an hour, had her own recent health issue to deal with: She missed the first two months of this year after an off-season procedure on her left wrist, then needed another procedure in June because of pain in that arm.

“I think I played pretty well tonight,” Keys said in what amounts to quite an understate­ment.

She had 25 winners to only nine unforced errors, never faced a break point and needed barely more than an hour to win. That match time would have been even shorter, except Keys left the court to have her upper right leg taped at 4-1 in the second set.

“Madison played an unbelievab­le match,” said Vandeweghe, who wiped away tears during her news conference. “I didn’t really have much to do with anything out there.”

This was the first time in 36 years that all four women’s semifinali­sts at the U.S. Open represente­d the host country, so it was understand­able if spectators in Arthur Ashe Stadium were conflicted about which players to pull for.

At 37, Williams was attempting to become the oldest woman to win a Grand Slam title in the Open era. She was trying to reach her third major final of this season, something she last did 15 years ago. Here’s how long and successful her career has been: Williams’ first final in New York came in her U.S. Open debut in 1997. Stephens, now 24, was 4 at the time.

“Venus knows it’s an opportunit­y lost,” said her coach, David Witt, “because she had it. She had it on her racket.”

Williams was ahead 5-4 with Stephens serving at 30-all. Two points away. That’s when they engaged in a 25-stroke point, until Stephens conjured up a backhand passing winner down the line, then wheeled and pumped her fists.

“That was good, huh?” Stephens said later.

At 5-all, Stephens broke with the help of a rainbow of a winner — “That lob-thingy,” she’d call it — that drew a standing ovation from the crowd, and a full-sprint get of a short ball that she turned into a “How did she do that?!” pointender at an impossible angle.

“There was nothing I could do about those shots,” Williams said.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sloane Stephens celebrates after beating Venus Williams in the semifinals Thursday in New York.
JULIO CORTEZ, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sloane Stephens celebrates after beating Venus Williams in the semifinals Thursday in New York.

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