USA TODAY US Edition

Konta sweeps Stephens out of Paris

- Andrew Dampf

PARIS – Sloane Stephens never stood a chance.

Johanna Konta produced a remarkably dominant performanc­e against last year’s tournament runner-up, winning 6-1, 6-4 Tuesday to become the first British woman to reach the Roland-Garros/ French Open semifinals since Jo Durie in 1983.

The match was so one-sided that 26th-seeded Konta won all but one point on her serve in the second set, and the one that she lost was a double fault.

Konta served six aces, stepped into the court to crush winners off second serves and never gave seventh-seeded Stephens time to find her rhythm or groove.

“To play one of the best players in the world and then play at the level I did, I feel really proud of myself,” Konta told the crowd.

The match ended in a brisk 71 minutes, with the late-arriving Parisian spectators still filing into their wooden seats inside Court Philippe Chatrier as it was finishing.

“There is not much you can do when someone is playing like that,” Stephens said. “I didn’t get a chance to really get into the match. … She executed a good game plan, and that was that.”

Konta’s semifinal opponent will be 19-year-old Marketa Vondrousov­a, who let a 5-2 lead slip in the second set before finally converting her fourth match point for a 7-6 (7-1), 7-5 victory over 31st-seeded Petra Martic. Vondrousov­a improved to 26-5 since exiting the Australian Open in the second round — a stretch that includes finals in Budapest and Istanbul — and now is into her first Grand Slam tournament semifinal.

Konta, who also beat Stephens recently during her run to the Italian Open final, improved to 3-0 in her career against the American.

Fans attempted to motivate Stephens with “Come on Sloane” and “Just keep working,” but the 2017 U.S. Open champion struggled to deal with Konta’s pace and highly aggressive shots.

Konta hit 25 winners, more than twice as many as Stephens, and they were evenly distribute­d between her forehand (9) and backhand (8), with a few volleys mixed in, too.

Early in the second set, Stephens was stretched out wide and replied with a desperatio­n forehand that landed on the line. Stephens’ must have thought her shot was going out, because she stood still and didn’t even attempt to run down Konta’s reply.

“I don’t even remember what that point was,” Stephens said.

On Konta’s first match point, Stephens hit a forehand that was called in by the line judge. But the chair umpire came down and overruled the call after inspecting the mark on the clay.

Konta has now reached the semifinals in three of the four Grand Slam tournament­s after the Australian Open in 2016 and Wimbledon in 2017.

 ?? SUSAN MULLANE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Johanna Konta dominated Tuesday’s quarterfin­al match against Sloane Stephens 6-1, 6-4 in Paris.
SUSAN MULLANE/USA TODAY SPORTS Johanna Konta dominated Tuesday’s quarterfin­al match against Sloane Stephens 6-1, 6-4 in Paris.

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