Pegula takes down No. 1 Swiatek to reach National Bank Open final in Montreal
Jessica Pegula could not get her serve going on Saturday. Luckily for her, neither could her opponent.
Jessica Pegula could not get her serve going on Saturday. Luckily for her, neither could her opponent.
The American broke world No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland 11 times en route to a 6-2, (4) 6-7, 6-4 victory in an unusual semifinal where serving appeared to be a major disadvantage at the National Bank Open in Montreal.
“I was getting frustrated that I wasn’t holding,” said Pegula, who was broken eight times herself. “But then at the same time I knew she was having trouble holding as well.
“I was just like, I know I’ll get more chances if I can just …Â hold. Basically, it was whoever could kind of consolidate the break.”
Pegula, the tournament’s fourth seed, advanced to Sunday’s final where she’ll face the winner of the semifinal match between third-seeded Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan and 15th-seeded Liudmila Samsonova of Russia.
PEGULA PREVAILS 🙌<a href=”https://twitter.com/JPegula?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@JPegula</a> takes down Swiatek in three sets 6-2, 6-7, 6-4 advancing to the finals for the first time in Montreal. <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/NBO23?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#NBO23</a> <a href=”https://t.co/no3bGLU6nv”>pic.twitter.com/no3bGLU6nv</a>
—@WTA
Pegula will have to wait until Sunday afternoon to learn who her opponent will be as play was called off in Montreal due to poor weather conditions. The semifinal is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. ET, and the final is expected to be played later in the evening.
It’s Pegula’s first time in the NBO final after falling out in the semis the last two years.
Up 5-4 in the third set, Pegula broke Swiatek a final time after the top seed hit two shots long to take the win in two hours 30 minutes on a sunny afternoon at IGA Stadium.
The two opponents only won 11 of 30 service games combined.
Pegula even had a chance to end the match much earlier, up 5-4 in the second set and serving, but Swiatek broke her serve to stay alive and eventually win the set in a tiebreak.
New tennis balls
So how does one explain why the players struggled so much on serve? Pegula couldn’t say for sure, but wondered if it might have something to do with new tennis balls.
WTA players are testing out Wilson extra duty balls — instead of regular duty — for the first time on hard courts this week, through next week and into the U.S. Open in late August/early September.
“I don’t know why this week all of us seem to be really having trouble, even girls that are considered the best servers on tour. It’s weird,” said Pegula. “It feels like the conditions, it’s flying a little bit, it’s swirling. I know it’s also the first week we’re playing with the Wilson extra duty balls.
Swiatek — the No. 1 for 71 weeks running — made an uncharacteristic number of errors throughout the match, including four double faults.
“I kind of knew what I had to do to push her. Sometimes I could do that, sometimes I was making more mistakes — and I think that was the difference,” said Swiatek. “But I tried to play aggressively for the whole match.”
Pegula, who beat doubles teammate Coco Gauff on Friday, advances to her second WTA final this year.
The 29-year-old can bring her career title count to three with a win Sunday. She hasn’t won a tournament so far this season.
Game plan
Whether she plays Samsonova or Rybakina — who played until 3 a.m. local time Saturday morning — Pegula says her approach will be the same.
“Two similar players, serve big, hit big, like to really go after their shots, both really tall, physical girls,” she said. “Whoever wins I feel like it’s a very similar game plan, trying to take away their serve and then do my best to just play my game.”
Serving was not an advantage from the beginning on Saturday. Pegula broke three times and Swiatek broke twice to start the match, which was filled with numerous long rallies.
And Pegula wasn’t done there. She broke once more as Swiatek continued making unforced errors while serving, despite getting 86 per cent of her first serves in play.
The American then served to take the set handily, sealing it with an ace.
Swiatek opened the second set strong, finally winning her first service game of the match.
Then the pattern from the first set continued as both players struggled gaining momentum on serve.
Swiatek and Pegula both broke each other twice consecutively before the American held to tie the set 3-3.
Then the players returned to breaking each other until Swiatek and Pegula both held to tie it 6-6 before the tiebreak.
Pegula lost the ensuing five points and the tiebreak before falling behind 2-0 to Swiatek early in the third, but climbed back knowing she’d always have a chance to break back the way the match was going.
De Minaur off to final in Toronto
At the men’s tournament in Toronto, Alex de Minaur rolled to a 6-1, 6-3 victory over Alejandro Davidovich Fokina on Saturday to reach his first career Masters 1000 final.
The Australian was in full control of the semifinal between unseeded opponents.
De Minaur broke the Spaniard’s serve on his first opportunity and kept the pressure on throughout the 77-minute match.
Davidovich Fokina made 22 unforced errors to just four for de Minaur on a sunny, windy afternoon at Sobeys Stadium.
The 18th-ranked de Minaur will play the winner of the evening semifinal between 12th-seeded American Tommy Paul and seventh-seeded Italian Jannik Sinner.
That finals-bound feeling 🤜<a href=”https://twitter.com/alexdeminaur?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@alexdeminaur</a> | <a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/NBO23?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#NBO23</a> <a href=”https://t.co/7wDyDv93rZ”>pic.twitter.com/7wDyDv93rZ</a>
—@NBOtoronto
Davidovich Fokina upset third-seeded Casper Ruud and 13th-seeded Alex Zverev en route to the semifinal.
The 37th-ranked player showed flashes of his previous form but appeared sluggish at times and made too many careless mistakes.
The consistent de Minaur did give up a break late in the second set but broke right back to improve to 32-16 on the season.
He won his lone ATP Tour title this year in Acapulco with a three-set win over Paul.
De Minaur has a 5-0 career record against Paul but has dropped all four previous matchups against Sinner.
In the early doubles semifinal, El Salvador’s Marcelo Arevalo and Jean-Julien Rojer of the Netherlands posted a 6-3, 3-6, 10-5 win over Spain’s Marcel Granollers and Argentina’s Horacio Zeballos.
Arevalo and Rojer will next play the third-seeded pairing of American Rajeev Ram and Britain’s Joe Salisbury, who picked up a 6-4, 6-4 win over sixth-seeded Kevin Krawietz and Tim Puetz of Germany.