HIGH RIDING KERBER TAMES US OPPONENT
Swiss ace brushes off Berdych to book showdown with Chung
ROGER Federer zeroed in on a 20th grand slam title yesterday with Chung Hyeon next in his Australian Open firing line as dominant Angelique Kerber and Simona Halep raced into a semifinal showdown.
The clinical Swiss ace strode into the last four at Melbourne Park for a 14th time with a clinical 7-6 (7/1) 6-3 6-4 dismantling of old foe Tomas Berdych.
He now faces Chung tomorrow for a place in the final, after the unseeded South Korean kept his dream run going by battling past American Tennys Sandgren 6-4 7-6 (7/5) 6-3 to become the lowestranked semifinalist since Marat Safin in 2004.
Germany’s Kerber, champion two years ago, swept aside Madison Keys 6-1 6-2, easily taming the American’s big serve and will go into her clash with the world No 1 on a 14-match winning streak.
Top seed Halep was equally impressive on the Rod Laver Arena in thumping sixth seed Karolina Pliskova 6-3 6-2, reeling off nine games in a row after going 0-3 behind in the first set.
Defending champion Federer, chasing a sixth Australian title, held a 19-6 lead over the Czech 19th seed going into the match and after a close first set, it was one-way traffic.
“I’m very happy I got out of that first set. It was key to the match in the end,” he said.
He was excited to now be up against Chung.
“It’s great to see new names on the scene. He reminds me a lot of Novak [Djokovic].”
Ranked 58, the bespectacled Chung, nicknamed “The Professor”, proved too hot for his fellow quarterfinal rookie Sandgren, although he needed six match points before claiming victory. “I never played in the second week of a grand slam, so I’m really surprised,” the delighted Suwon resident, who is the first player – man or woman – from his country to reach a grand slam semifinal, said.
Sandgren, who wiped his Twitter account ahead of the game after being dogged by controversy over his political views, paid tribute to the Korean.
“He’s a fantastic player,” he said, adding that he was also upbeat about his own future after a breakthrough tournament.
Keys was expected to be a stiff challenge for Kerber, having not dropped a set en route to the quarters, but she melted under the German’s relentless groundstrokes and pinpoint return of serve.
“I’m just trying to find the feeling back I had like 2016,” Kerber, who had a forgettable year after winning not only in Australia but also the US Open in 2016, said.
“Madison is a hard hitter, and she served good, so I was trying to play from the first point aggressive and moving good and also bringing a lot of balls back.”
The win ensures Kerber, seeded 21, will move back into the world’s top 10.
Halep is next for her today, with the nuggety Romanian taming towering Czech Pliskova’s serve to scamper into the last four for the first time in Melbourne.
“I didn’t have the best start, but I restarted after three games.
“I stopped missing so much and moved better,” Halep, who showed no signs of the ankle injury that has been troubling her in previous rounds, said.
She is wary of Kerber and vowed to “stay calm and play like I did today”.
“I know most of the time where she’s hitting. That’s why maybe I can win against her.”