Daily Camera (Boulder)

Jabeur beats shaky Garcia to reach final

- By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

Getting to a Grand Slam final is no longer new to Ons Jabeur. She figures it’s time to add a major trophy to her list of groundbrea­king accomplish­ments.

And she’s sure she is more ready to do it at the U.S. Open than she was at Wimbledon two months ago.

Jabeur reached a second consecutiv­e Slam title match without needing to produce her best tennis Thursday night, taking full advantage of a shaky showing by Caroline Garcia to win their semifinal at Flushing Meadows 6-1, 6-3.

The No. 5-seeded Jabeur, a 28-year-old from Tunisia, was the runnerup at the All England Club in July and now will be the first African woman to participat­e in a final at the U.S. Open in the profession­al era, which dates to 1968.

“Feels more real, to be honest with you, just to be in the final again. At Wimbledon, I was kind of just living the dream, and I couldn’t believe it,” Jabeur said after ending No. 17 Garcia’s 13-match winning streak, which included a victory over 18-year-old American Coco Gauff in the quarterfin­als. “Now just, I hope, I’m getting used to it. ... Now maybe I know what to do.”

“After Wimbledon, (there was) a lot of pressure on me,” Jabeur said following a win that took barely more than an hour, “and I’m really relieved that I can back up my results.”

On Saturday, Jabeur will meet the winner of the semifinal between No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland and No. 6 Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus.

None of the last four players in the women’s bracket had ever made it to the final in New York.

The same goes for the men’s semifinali­sts who will play Friday: No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz of Spain vs. No. 22 Frances Tiafoe of the United States, and No. 5 Casper Ruud of Norway vs. No. 27 Karen Khachanov of Russia.

With four-time major champion Arantxa Sánchez Vicario in her guest box — they traded thumbsup signals at match’s end

— Jabeur improved to 6-0 in semifinals this season and earned her tourleadin­g 92nd victory in all since the start of 2021. No. 91 came when she defeated Ajla Tomljanovi­c, who eliminated Serena Williams in the third round.

To Jabeur’s surprise, and delight, she heard her quarterfin­al victory over Tomljanovi­c on Tuesday was drawing viewers back home, even though it was on TV the same night as a Champions League game between Juventus and Paris St. Germain.

“In Tunisia, it’s all about soccer,” she said. “But people were not watching the game, they were watching my game, which is impressive to me.”

That’s part of the way in which she is changing views about tennis in her country — and on a continent.

Since pro players were first admitted to major tennis tournament­s, never had an African woman or Arab woman been to a Slam final until she did that two months ago at Wimbledon, where she ended up losing to Elena Rybakina.

In 2020, at the Australian Open, she became the first Arab woman to reach the quarterfin­als at a major. Last year produced all sorts of milestones: first Arab player to break into the top 10 of the men’s or women’s rankings; first Arab to win a WTA title.

“Definitely saying out loud what I want to do is part of me achieving things,” said Jabeur, who dropped to her knees and let out a yell when the semifinal against Garcia ended, then followed that up by laying on her back in the middle of the court.

“I’m sure it’s a lot of pressure on her shoulders,” said Garcia, a 28-year-old from France. “But she looks like to be managing it really well.”

On this 75-degree (24 Celsius) evening under the lights in Arthur Ashe Stadium, Jabeur paid attention to her coach’s instructio­n to focus on going after Garcia’s backhand and finished with 21 winners — after one that was aided by a fortuitous bounce off the top of the net, Jabeur put up a hand to apologize, then blew a kiss to the sky — and just 15 unforced errors.

She delivered eight aces.

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