Otago Daily Times

Krejcikova, Pavlyuchen­kova make final

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LONDON: Barbora Krejcikova’s icy resolve and Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova’s try, try and try again perseveran­ce has set up an unlikely French Open women’s final that will be brimful of emotion for the two combatants tomorrow.

Krejcikova, an unseeded Czech once dismissed sniffily as just a doubles specialist and guided by the spirit of her late mentor Jana Novotna, showed astounding resilience to save a match point while dousing the fire of Maria Sakkari in a marathon semifinal yesterday.

Her unlikely victory came after Pavlyuchen­kova, a Russian stalwart tipped as a prodigious­ly gifted kid to go on and rule tennis, could finally smile after breaking the record for competing in more grand slams, 52, than any other woman before making her first final.

Asked after her accomplish­ed 75, 63 win over Slovenian Tamara Zidansek what the 14yearold world No 1 junior Pavlyuchen­kova might have told the 29yearold version, she laughed: ‘‘What took you so long?’’

It certainly has not taken world No 33 Krejcikova, a fivetime grand slam doubles champion, long to make her singles mark as she delivered, in only her fifth main draw, a performanc­e featuring the good, the bad and the downright lovely to oust Sakkari .

Although at points in the match seeming to have completely lost both her backhand and her serve, she dug deep to rescue a match point at 53 down in the decider with a backhand drive volley and then break back with the Greek serving for the match.

Did she feel the late Wimbledon champ and Australian Open finalist Novotna come to her aid?

‘‘Every time before the match or after the match I just feel like she’s there, she’s looking after me,’’ Krejcikova said.

She showed real mental strength too when, while holding a fourth match point of her own, a Sakkari forehand was called long, only for the chair umpire to overrule it.

Hawkeye, not in use at Roland Garros, later revealed the ball really was out and that victory should have been awarded then to Krejcikova.

She did not complain, but shrugged and got on with it.

‘‘I was like, ‘OK, well . . . It’s fine. Doesn’t matter. Just let’s go, try to win the replayed point’.’’

She did not, but soon after an elegant backhand winner, her 29th, to accompany her 58 unforced errors in a match of seesawing fortunes, sealed victory after an exhausting three hours, 18 minutes .

Pavlyuchen­kova is a rare fighter, too. The 31st seed, a winner of 12 tourlevel titles who had previously never managed to get past six grand slam quarterfin­als, reflected: ‘‘It’s been a long road, lots of ups and downs. It’s been a tough one.

‘‘Maybe I had a lot of expectatio­ns that I couldn’t deal with over the years,’’ she added, after beating the record of Italian Roberta Vinci who took 44 slams before reaching her first final at the US Open.

Vinci did not win that 2015 final but Pavlyuchen­kova will start favourite.

‘‘I’d love to go further and get more. I feel like I can do better,’’ said Russia’s first woman slam finalist since Maria Sharapova at Melbourne in 2015. — AAP

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Russian to victory . . . Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova celebrates after beating Slovenia Tamara Zidansek in the semifinals of the French Open in Paris yesterday. Pavlyuchen­kova won 75, 63.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Russian to victory . . . Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova celebrates after beating Slovenia Tamara Zidansek in the semifinals of the French Open in Paris yesterday. Pavlyuchen­kova won 75, 63.

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