The US Open
US Open Women’s Day 9
Coco Gauff set a personal best at the US Open with her Tuesday victory over Jelena Ostapenko to reach the semi-finals of her home major for the first time.
The 19-year-old defeated the moody Latvian with the loss of just two games in what quickly became evident was one-way traffic.
The Floridian will bid for the final at Flushing Meadows against Karolina Muchova, who beat Sorana Cirstea 6-0, 6-3,
“It was unbelievable, a sweet victory,” the winner said.
The Czech winner will be playing her third semi-final at a major after Australia two years ago and Roland Garros in June, where she finished runner-up to Iga Swiatek.
Muchova moved into a repeat of last month’s Cincinnati final, where she lost to Gauff.

“She is an amazing player and will have the home crowd, I’ll try tp put up a battle against Coco.”
Gauf became the first teenager to reach an Open semi-final since Serena Williams 22 years ago.
The 19-year-old dominated as she broke an exhausted Ostapenko six times.,
The Latvian later complained about playing a late-night match on Sunday and coming back in the heat of the day 36 hours later.
“It’s really hard to recover from those night matches, because after beating world No. 1 (Iga Swiatek) I went to sleep at, like, 5:00 in the morning.
“Yesterday the whole day I felt very low energy. I thought today I was going to wake up and feel better.
“But honestly, I didn’t really feel much better.
“When you go to sleep at 5:00 or 6:00 in the morning you need a few days just to recover – I think it’s a little bit crazy.”
Gauff won the opening set in 20 minutes but had minor niggles with her first serves in the second set on the way to the win in 69 minutes on a third match point.
Gauff, who lost in the Wimbledon first round but has since turned her form on its head, has won 16 of her last 17 matches, including WTA hardcourt titles in Washington and Cincinnati.
She is riding a 10-match win streak.
The winner said she could take nothing for granted against an unpredictable opponent and former Grand Slam champion.
“Playing Jelena, you know that 6-0 set quite literally means nothing. That’s tennis in general because there’s two out of three (sets).
“Honestly, I wouldn’t lie… I’m surprised not by the result but how the match went today. I’m happy with how I was able to stay in it.”
Gauff added: ” I don’t know if the heat really played a factor or not, because the match was short. If it was a longer match, I think it would have favored me even more.
“But I definitely could tell that she was a little bit frustrated with her performance today.
“Right now I feel emotionally fresh, which I think was the problem in the past in Grand Slams – I would be emotionally drained.
“I’m physically fresh and emotionally fresh; that just came from experience.”
ATP
Positive vibes after RG takes player crisis meeting
The peace talks came after a Friday interview boycott by most top players, who limited their pre-event interactions with media to 15 minutes while snubbing TV broadcasters.
Players are asking for a larger share of Grand Slam prize money, aiming for a rise from 15 to 22 per cent, a figure well below payouts in other spots.
French federation (FFT) officials promised a response to the demands in the immediate future. Confrontations with Wimbledon and the US Open are also likely to proceed during the Paris fortnight.
The Australian Open has already sided with the players when the issue first arose earlier this season.
The FFT “has committed to responding to the players’ proposals in the coming weeks,” the ruling body said.
Players are seeking a closer involvement in the big decisions of the sport along with increased health insurance and retirement benefits.
Sinner, with USD 56 million already in career prize money at age 24, might do well to follow the example of retired icon Roger Federer, who earned 130 million on court and much more off it,
The Swiss, reportedly now a tennis billionaire, often said he would not be needing his ATP pension but was happy to work on behalf of other players.
Strasbourg
Raducanu plays coaching lottery with return to her OG
Emma Raducanu has gone back to the future with her latest choice of coach, choosing to re-group with the mentor who helped her to a US Open title five long years ago.
The Briton whose career has been a patchwork of changing coaches and near-constant injuries and illness since her 2021 big day in New York, revealed she has re-employed Andrew Richardson, her OG coach.
The pair split not long after then-teenaged Raducanu won the Open title from an unprecedented qualifying start.
She has since struggled and wil head to Roland Garros from next Sunday with only one clay tournament, a late wild-card entry into Strasbourg.
“Grateful to have reconnected with someone who has known me for over a decade now and looking forward to building together one iteration at a time,” she posted on social media.
The WTA no. 30 has played just 15 matches this season – none on clay – with her last one more than two months ago.
Main photo:- Emma Raducanu with her coach, Andrew Richardson at the 2021 US Open
The Australian Open
Wimbledon goes modern with electronic reviews
Wimbledon will bow to the high-tech future by introducing limited electronic reviews of line calls on major courts at the Championships, the club revealed on Saturday.
The All England Club will allow the technology on showcourts including Centre Court, No. 1 and four others. During controversial moments, competitors will be allowed to ask the chair umpire for a review of the point in question.
The wizardry is coming late to Wimbledon having been used at the US Open since 2023 and later adapted by the Australian Open. Roland Garros relies on marks in its clay surface to determine line calls.
Under the rules, players can ask for the review any number of times, with electronic line-calling now in effect at the grass-court major for a second year after the 2025 elimination of human line judges.
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