Bangkok Post

Kerber in Halep’s path, Wozniacki takes on Mertens

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MELBOURNE: It didn’t surprise Angelique Kerber that she would rediscover her tennis mojo in Australia.

She will take good vibes as well as a narrow head-to-head edge onto Rod Laver Arena for her Australian Open semifinal match against top-seeded Simona Halep today.

“I feel good here. This is a special one because I won here, my first Grand Slam,” said Kerber, who beat Serena Williams in the 2016 Australian Open final and also won the US Open later that year. She’s the only major still in the women’s draw, but that’s been the case since she beat Maria Sharapova in the third round.

After slipping from No.1 to 21 in the rankings during a barren 2017, Kerber has started the new year strongly, winning four matches at the Hopman Cup mixed team tournament in Perth, five victories on the way to the Sydney Internatio­nal title and now another five matches so far at Melbourne Park.

“Í was working hard in the off-season and I know I can win close matches, going out there and playing good in the bigger tournament­s,” Kerber said.

Halep, a two-time French Open finalist, is aiming for another shot at a first Grand Slam title after quickly overcoming a slow start to beat sixth-seeded Karolina Pliskova 6-3, 6-2 in the quarter-finals.

And Kerber, equally dominant against in a 6-1, 6-2 win over US Open finalist Madison Keys, takes no comfort from the 5-4 head-to-head lead on Halep despite winning five of the past six matches. The latest of those was a 6-4, 6-2 win at the 2016 endof-season WTA championsh­ip.

“I think it will be a long match with a lot of long rallies. I played against her for a lot of times and it was always tough and close,” Kerber said.

Halep has been bothered by an ankle ailment and had to fend off match points in a third-round win over Lauren Davis that finished 15-13 in the third, but said she has “started to feel the rhythm and everything and I was more aggressive’’ in her quarterfin­al win.

Caroline Wozniacki is hoping to edge closer to that elusive first Grand Slam singles title in the other semi-final against unseeded Elise Mertens.

At No.36, Mertens is the lowest-ranked player of the last four in the women’s singles, but she has shown she’s not overawed by anyone in the tournament and is physically and mentally in good shape.

The 22-year-old Mertens, who jumped 91 ranking places last year, conserved energy during the tournament’s often stifling heat, not dropping a set before beating fourth-seeded Elina Svitolina 6-4, 6-0 to reach a Grand Slam semi-final at just her fifth attempt and on her first visit to Melbourne Park.

Second-seeded Wozniacki is playing her sixth Grand Slam semi-final match, and only second at the Australian Open.

A finalist at the US Open in 2009 and 2014, Wozniacki needed three sets to beat Mertens on clay in a semi-final in Bastad, Sweden, last year at their only previous meeting.

 ?? AFP ?? Angelique Kerber in action against Madison Keys during their quarter-final match.
AFP Angelique Kerber in action against Madison Keys during their quarter-final match.

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