USA TODAY International Edition

Taking Australian Open by storm

Daughter of Bills owners, Pegula reaches quarters

- Marcia Greenwood

Jessica Pegula is making headlines for her performanc­e at the Australian Open in Melbourne that has propelled her to the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam tennis tournament for the first time.

She has won four matches at Rod Laver Arena over the past week. On Monday, she upset No. 5- ranked Elina Svitolina of Ukraine 6- 4, 3- 6, 6- 3, her first victory over a Top 10 player.

Previously at the tournament, she beat two- time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka and 2011 U. S. Open champion Sam Stosur, an Aussie.

Pegula plays Jennifer Brady in the quarterfinals on Tuesday.

After Pegula’s fourth- round victory Monday, the daughter of the owners of Buffalo’s NFL ( Bills) and NHL ( Sabres) franchises scribbled on the screen of an Australian Open courtside TV camera: “Hi Mom, Hi Dad. See u next rnd Jen B.”

Besides a shoutout to her parents, that was a message for Brady, a good pal of Pegula’s whose fourth- round match was up next in Rod Laver Arena on Monday.

After Brady won, too, setting up an all- American matchup against Pegula with a berth in the final four at stake, she used a blue marker to respond in kind, writing: “Bring it Jess!”

“It’s an opportunit­y for both of us,” Pegula said, recalling that she and Brady became close after playing doubles together for the United States in the team competitio­n now known as the Billie Jean King Cup. “I’m just happy I’m here; she’s been playing some good tennis, solidifyin­g herself as a top player.”

The 61st- ranked Pegula beat No. 5 seed Elina Svitolina of Ukraine 6- 4, 3- 6, 6- 3, before the 22nd- seeded Brady, a Pennsylvan­ian who played college tennis at UCLA, had a 6- 1, 7- 5 victory over No. 28 Donna Vekic of Croatia.

Brady was one of the 72 Australian Open players who had to go through a hard lockdown – two weeks stuck in a hotel room, not allowed to leave for any reason – after flying and arriving in January because someone on their flight tested positive for COVID- 19 upon arrival.

“A lot of people were complainin­g, and I told myself I wasn’t going to complain,” Brady said. “I mean, there’s way worse things going on in the world than me being stuck in a hotel room for 14 days.”

Brady and Pegula gave the U. S. three

“I mean, it’s pretty awesome to see. ... The last, I don’t know, year or so, we’ve really all pushed each other.” Jessica Pegula Tennis star from Buffalo on the success of the American women in the Australian Open

women’s quarterfinalists at Melbourne Park, joining 23- time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams, who advanced a day earlier.

Top- ranked Ash Barty ensured a fourth American didn’t make it to the last eight, beating unseeded Shelby Rogers 6- 3, 6- 4 to set up a quarterfinal against No. 25 Karolina Muchova.

“I mean, it’s pretty awesome to see. I hope we can all push through,” Pegula said. “The last, I don’t know, year or so, we’ve really all pushed each other. Maybe we haven’t said it to each other, but I think we all can feel it.”

She is on quite a breakthrou­gh run. Pegula has won four matches at Melbourne Park over the past week after entering the hard- court tournament with a

total of three wins at majors for her career.

Also significant for Pegula, who works with Venus Williams’ former coach, David Witt: She came into the day with a 0- 6 record against top 10 women.

Witt said Pegula’s rising confidence is a big part of her progress. She found a sort of kinship with her family’s football team, the Bills, who made the playoffs three of the past four seasons behind quarterbac­k Josh Allen after going nearly two decades without a trip to the postseason.

“Even last year, when he wasn’t playing that well, I was like, ‘ I like this kid.’ I loved his competitiv­e spirit. He was a gamer. He just wanted to win. That’s something you love to see,” she said about Allen. “It’s definitely something I think I tried to take into my game a little bit, even watching the team getting that grit, that competitiv­e attitude, having that mindset – in tennis, it’s like 90%, sometimes, of the matches. I think it’s been really cool to watch them and kind of channel that energy into how I’ve been doing.”

Brady’s progress is far less surprising, given that she made it to the semifinals at the U. S. Open in September before losing to eventual champion Naomi Osaka.

Vekic’s right knee was heavily taped by a trainer early in the second set, which eventually got to 5- all. But Brady broke at love there when Vekic doublefaul­ted, then held for the victory.

There will be a one- nation men’s quarterfinal, too, between Russians Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev. Medvedev, the 2019 U. S. Open runner- up, eliminated 192nd- ranked American Mackenzie McDonald 6- 4, 6- 2, 6- 3 in 1 1⁄

2 hours, while Rublev moved on when No. 22 Casper Ruud stopped because of an injury after dropping the first two sets.

A third Russian man, 114th- ranked qualifier Aslan Karatsev, already had advanced, giving the country a trio of quarter-finalists at a major tournament for the only time in the profession­al era.

Also on that half of the draw, Rafael Nadal moved closer to a men’s- record 21st Grand Slam trophy by overwhelmi­ng No. 16 Fabio Fognini 6- 3, 6- 4, 6- 2.

Nadal’s next opponent will be No. 5 Stefanos Tsitsipas, whose fourth- round match was canceled when No. 9 Matteo Berrettini withdrew because of an abdominal injury.

With the sky blue and temperatur­es in the low 70s, and no fans in the stands for the third day in a row because of a local COVID- 19 lockdown, Pegula dictated groundstro­ke exchanges from right along the baseline. In the early going, she pushed around two- time Grand Slam semifinalist Svitolina, who eliminated American teenager Coco Gauff in the second round, and went up by a set and a break at 1- 0 in the second.

After Svitolina forced a third set, Pegula returned to her more aggressive brand of hit- to- the- corners play and led 4- 1. She was broken to 4- 3 but broke right back, then served out the most important victory of her career by grabbing the last four points after falling behind love- 30.

Now it’ll be Brady versus Pegula. “I’m super excited for her making her first Grand Slam quarterfinal. I know the emotions that she’s feeling. You feel like you’re on cloud nine, definitely,” Brady said. “We both know each other so well and I’m really looking forward to it. It will be a lot of fun. I think everyone back home in America will be watching, definitely.”

 ?? HAMISH BLAIR/ AP ?? On her way to the Australian Open quarterfinals, American Jessica Pegula has defeated two- time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka, 2011 U. S. Open champion Sam Stosur and No. 5- ranked Elina Svitolina.
HAMISH BLAIR/ AP On her way to the Australian Open quarterfinals, American Jessica Pegula has defeated two- time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka, 2011 U. S. Open champion Sam Stosur and No. 5- ranked Elina Svitolina.
 ?? ANDY BROWNBILL/ AP ?? Jennifer Brady joined Serena Williams and Jessica Pegula to make up an American trio in the Australian Open quarterfinals.
ANDY BROWNBILL/ AP Jennifer Brady joined Serena Williams and Jessica Pegula to make up an American trio in the Australian Open quarterfinals.

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