The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Muguruza, Halep make semis before rain suspends play

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS — Garbine Muguruza’s big strokes overwhelme­d Maria Sharapova from the start. Their French Open quarterfin­al Wednesday was a 6-2, 6-1 one-way journey.

Simona Halep went from out-of-sorts to on-target against Angelique Kerber, scrambling to every ball and staying the course to erase an early deficit. Halep pointed her right index finger at her temple when she completed a 6-7 (2), 6-3, 6-2 comeback to reach the semifinals, too.

“I never gave up. So I think that’s why I won today,” Halep said. “My head won it.”

When the top-seeded Halep and No. 3 Muguruza meet today, their contrastin­g styles will match up with plenty at stake. The winner earns a berth in the final at Roland Garros — plus the No. 1 ranking that currently belongs to Halep.

“I have just to stay strong, to try to make her uncomforta­ble,” Halep said, “and to try to play my game.”

The women got their matches done before rain arrived at Roland Garros, leaving the men’s quarterfin­als suspended in progress. That might have been a relief to 10-time champion Rafael Nadal, who wasn’t at his best and dropped a French set for the first time since 2015. Nadal lost the opener 6-4 against 11th-seeded Diego Schwartzma­n but began to play better after a rain delay of just under an hour. Nadal was serving for the second set at 5-3, 30-15, when another shower came and action was halted for the day.

In the other men’s quarterfin­al, No. 3 Marin Cilic and No. 5 Juan Martin del Potro were at 5-all in a first-set tiebreaker when the matchup of past U.S. Open champions was stopped.

In addition to Halep vs. Muguruza, the other women’s semifinal is the first at the French Open featuring two Americans in 16 years: No. 10 Sloane Stephens against No. 13 Madison Keys in a rematch of last year’s U.S. Open final, won by Stephens.

Muguruza had lost all three previous times she faced Sharapova, whose five Grand Slam titles include two at Roland Garros. But they hadn’t played since 2014. Muguruza has not dropped a set in this year’s tournament and dominated Sharapova with booming groundstro­kes and superb returning that earned six breaks.

“When you’re facing somebody that also has an aggressive style of game,” Muguruza said about facing Sharapova, “I think it’s about who takes the command, who takes the first opportunit­y.”

Sharapova double-faulted three times in the opening game, part of her 27 unforced errors. It took her 29 minutes just to gain a game, and by then she already trailed 4-0.

Sharapova didn’t play a point in the fourth round, because Serena Williams pulled out of their much-anticipate­d showdown with an injury. Muguruza essentiall­y got that round off, too: Her opponent, Lesia Tsurenko, quit with an injury after only two games.

Muguruza leads Halep 3-1 head-to-head, but this is their first Grand Slam matchup. Here’s another key category in which Muguruza has the upper hand: 2-0 in major championsh­ips. Halep has participat­ed in a trio of major finals, losing each.

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