The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Djokovic, Sabalenka make Australian Open semis

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MELBOURNE: Top seed Novak Djokovic battled past Taylor Fritz into an 11th Australian Open semi-final and a record-extending 48th at Grand Slams on Tuesday, but a rampant Aryna Sabalenka had a much easier ride.

The Serbian superstar came through a probing test on Rod Laver Arena against the 12thseeded American 7-6 (7/3), 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 to keep his bid for an unpreceden­ted 25th major crown on track.

Djokovic almost always gets the evening slot on centre court, but was bumped to the afternoon on a day on which temperatur­es soared to 32 degrees Celsius (90 degrees Fahrenheit) and the world number one admitted it was tough going.

“Physically and emotionall­y very draining,” he said after the three hour and 45 minute epic, adding that he “suffered a lot” in the first two sets.

“He was serving well, staying close to the line and kind of suffocatin­g me from the back of the court,” he said.

“I think I upped my game probably midway through the third set all the way to the end.”

The 36-year-old will face either Italian fourth seed Jannik Sinner or Russian fifth seed Andrey Rublev next, with the omens not good for either man.

Djokovic has won all 10 previous semi-finals he has played at Melbourne Park, stretching back to his first title in 2008 and is on a 33-match unbeaten streak on the blue hardcourts.

In contrast to his long slog, fellow defending champion Sabalenka was off court in just 71 minutes, crushing ninth seed

Barbora Krejcikova 6-2, 6-3 with minimum fuss.

She will face fourth seed Coco Gauff next in a replay of last year’s US Open final that the American teenager won in three sets.

On current form, Gauff will be the underdog after taking more than three hours to down unseeded Ukrainian Marta Kostyuk 7-6 (8/6), 6-7 (3/7), 6-2 in a scrappy affair.

Sabalenka had won all seven of her previous Grand Slam quarter-finals, and wasted little time laying down the law against Krejcikova, the 2021 French Open champion. She broke three times in each set, with her booming groundstro­kes unstoppabl­e.

“I played really great tennis, I just hope I can keep playing this way,” said the 25-year-old Sabalenka.

“I mean, it’s all because of the atmosphere. I have the best support here.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Photos show Djokovic and Sabalenka in action during their respective matches.
— AFP photos Photos show Djokovic and Sabalenka in action during their respective matches.
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