Oman Daily Observer

IMPRESSIVE TSITSIPAS AND VINTAGE AZARENKA IN SEMIS

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MELBOURNE: Stefanos Tsitsipas closed on a first Grand Slam title by reaching the Australian Open semifinals on Tuesday in impressive fashion, as Victoria Azarenka also powered into the last four.

Tsitsipas was a convincing 6-3, 7-6 (7/2), 6-4 winner over unseeded Jiri Lehecka of the Czech Republic and faces Karen Khachanov next.

The 24-year-old Tsitsipas is the highest remaining seed left at three and with Melbourne’s large Greek community roaring him on, his title charge is gathering pace. “It felt different this time from any other match and the most important thing in the end is that I found a solution,” said Tsitsipas, after making the Australian semifinals for a fourth time.

“It was a very difficult threesette­r, one of the most difficult so far in the competitio­n,” said the Greek, who will become world number one should he win the title.

The other quarterfin­al at Rod Laver Arena between Russia’s Khachanov and Sebastian Korda had been warming up nicely until the American hurt his wrist.

The 18th seed went through when Korda retired in the third set, down 7-6 (7/5), 6-3, 3-0. The 22-year-old Korda, who had been attempting to emulate his father Petr’s Australian Open victory in 1998, said afterwards that he could barely hold the racquet.

“Volleying was almost impossible for me, so it was a little tough.”

For Khachanov it is a second consecutiv­e Grand Slam semifinal, having reached the last four at the 2022 US Open.

Nine-time Melbourne champion Djokovic is still on the scene, with a quarterfin­al against Russian fifth seed Andrey Rublev on Wednesday. The other quarterfin­al is an all-american clash between Ben Shelton and Tommy Paul.

‘IT’S MY WEAPON’

Azarenka is back in the last four in Melbourne for the first time since she won the tournament in 2013 and will face big-serving Elena

Rybakina.

The Belarusian Azarenka, who also triumphed in 2012, secured an impressive straight-set victory over Jessica Pegula. Third seed Pegula was hotly tipped to win the title but the American simply had no answers to Azarenka’s pounding forehand groundstro­kes.

The 33-year-old Azarenka rolled back the years in a surprising­ly one-sided quarterfin­al to triumph 6-4, 6-1. “Well, it hurts to beat her because I always want her to do well,” the 24th seed said of Pegula, a close friend and practice partner.

Azarenka faces Moscowborn Kazakh Rybakina on Thursday for a place in the final. Rybakina blasted her way into the semifinals with a ruthless 6-2, 6-4 win over Jelena Ostapenko.

The 23-year-old Rybakina sent down 11 aces to blow former French Open champion Ostapenko off court in 79 minutes. The 22nd seed has blasted 35 aces so far, more than any other woman at the tournament.

Ominously, she said her serve is better now than when she won Wimbledon last year.

“I gained even more power. It’s my weapon on the court and of course we are trying to work on it,” she said.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Belarus’ Victoria Azarenka celebrates winning her quarterfin­al match against Jessica Pegula of the US in the Australian Open.
— Reuters Belarus’ Victoria Azarenka celebrates winning her quarterfin­al match against Jessica Pegula of the US in the Australian Open.
 ?? — Reuters ?? Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas celebrates winning the second set of his quarterfin­al match against Czech Republic’s Jiri Lehecka.
— Reuters Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas celebrates winning the second set of his quarterfin­al match against Czech Republic’s Jiri Lehecka.
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