Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Svitolina reaches first US Open semifinal with win over Konta



2019 US Open - Day 9
Elina Svitolina celebrates during her quarterfinal match against Johanna Konta at the US Open 

​The match came down to smallest mistakes and for Elina Svitolina, her poise got her into the semifinals of the US Open Tuesday. The world number five drew errors and won free points against Johanna Konta who had too much trouble to end the quarterfinal in straight sets 6-4, 6-4 at Arthur Ashe Stadium at the Billy Jean King National Tennis Center. The Ukrainian marked her second consecutive major semifinal increasing her career success.

The series between the two sat heavily with the Ukrainian but Sunday showed that history could be changed. The tenacity and strength Konta found to upset world number three Karolina Pliskova led her to prove that it had the potential to happen again. This was their first meeting in a grand slam and all four of them have come on hard courts. With Svitolina seeking out her second consecutive major semifinal and the Brit looking for her third, the pace had the possibility of swinging in every direction with so much on the line.

Strong service games started the opening set with Konta leading the way against Svitolina. Each got the other deep into rallies, but no breaks were apparent for either as they held through four games. In the fifth, Svitolina had the first breakpoint but a long ball past the baseline saved Konta’s serve. The Brit battled through two breaks but enabled a second chance for the fifth seed who clinched it to take the lead.

Upping the ante to consolidate a break was challenged by the Brit who overcame a three-point streak and broke back keeping them level. A key mistake on a drop shot in the seventh gave the Ukrainian another break chance. She tried to do it again during the rally to save breakpoint but Svitolina got into position for the ball fast, ending it for the double.

To not give away another break, the fifth seed held firm on serve but dealt with some late changes to Konta’s return tactics. Handling the situation, Svitolina pressured unforced errors from Konta to open the gap on the scoreboard and play for the set. Konta made sure not to let it end on her service and sealed the deal to get back into reach of extending the set. Svitolina had no intention of letting her serve to go waste and with drawn errors from Konta, the fifth seed got the job done gaining a leg up after 49 minutes.

The second went the same as the first with Svitolina staying with Konta until her chance for the break came in the fifth with the Brit trailing in the game. She forced deuce but the first AD point was the last as the fifth seed locked it down for the 3-2 lead. Konta fought to avoid going down two games battling Svitolina to deuce and saved key points. Three was the charm for Konta who delivered a great baseline lob getting over the net and no chance for the fifth seed to return.

Knowing she missed an opportunity to hold a service game, Svitolina captured the double break on Konta who erred on chances suffering the break to love. Consolidation for the world number five gave her a 5-3 stance hoping to smash the Brit on serve in the ninth. Errors continued to rack up for Konta who fell behind but gained one back on a longball return from the Ukrainian. A second error leveled the score for the Brit but a bad hit off the racket giving Svitolina match point.



She erred to save Konta for the second time in the match and after a few breaks of deuce, the Briton saved a second match point that kept her alive. Svitolina again found her chance to serve for the match and with great response during a wide crosscourt rally and aggressive response, the 24-year-old won her way into the semifinal watching a long crosscourt return land wide right near her ending the match in 1 hour and 40 minutes.

"It was a very tough match," Svitolina said to ESPN's Pam Shriver. "I think we were both striking the ball and it was quite even and in the end, I had to close on my serve which was very tricky and just very happy with how I handle the pressure today." I was trying to take one point at a time and for me I was trying to stay calm and tried to think that I'm still up and have a chance to close the match again."

With one step between the 24-year-old before the final, she’ll wait to see if she faces Serena Williams or Qiang Wang on Thursday.

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