Jessica Pegula is back in the quarterfinals at the US Open after a 6-4 6-2 victory over Diana Shnaider, her seventh trip to that round at a Grand Slam tournament.
Now comes the hard part: Pegula is 0-6 in major quarterfinals over her career and this next one will come against No 1 Iga Swiatek.
The No. 6-seeded Pegula, an American whose parents own the NFL’s Buffalo Bills and NHL’s Buffalo Sabres, is on quite a run at the moment, having won 13 of her past 14 matches, all on hard courts. That included her second consecutive title in Canada and an appearance in the final at the Cincinnati Open, where she lost to No 2 Aryna Sabalenka.
“I feel like there’s been more pressure this year, because I did so well coming into this tournament,” said the 30-year-old Pegula, the oldest woman left in the field on Monday.
Swiatek was tied at 4-all with No 16 Liudmila Samsonova on Monday night before grabbing seven straight games en route to winning 6-4 6-1. When Swiatek captured the 2022 US Open for one of her five Grand Slam titles, she eliminated Pegula in the quarterfinals.
Indeed, half of Pegula’s six quarterfinal exits at Slams came against a No. 1 player Swiatek twice and Ash Barty once.
“I’ll just try to draw from those experiences and kind of how I felt going into the next match, but it’s just so tough,” Pegula said.
Also returning to the quarterfinals was Karolina Muchova, a 6-3 6-3 winner over No. 5 Jasmine Paolini, the runner-up at the French Open and Wimbledon this season.
Muchova next plays No. 22 Beatriz Haddad Maia, who got past 2018 Australian Open champion Caroline Wozniacki 6-2 3-6 6-3 to become the first woman from Brazil in the US Open quarterfinals since Maria Bueno in 1968.
Haddad Maia is a 28-year-old left-hander who was given a 10-month suspension after failing a doping test in 2019. She was a semifinalist at the French Open last year but had not been past the second round at Flushing Meadows until now.
Muchova enjoyed a breakthrough 2023, getting to the final in Paris and the semifinals in New York, before needing surgery on her right wrist in October, sidelining her for 10 months.
“This was my worst and most serious injury, I would say. But, I mean, I love the sport, so in my head, I was like, ‘I will do everything I could to (get) better and try.’ And here I am today,” said Muchova, whose US Open ended a year ago with a loss to eventual champion Coco Gauff.
Gauff was seeded No. 3 this year and was eliminated Sunday by No. 13 Emma Navarro.
In men’s action Monday, No. 25 Jack Draper became the first British man to reach the quarterfinals in New York since the recently retired Andy Murray did it in 2016.
Draper, who exited in the fourth round a year ago, will appear in his first Slam quarterfinal thanks to a 6-3 6-1 6-2 win against unseeded Tomas Machac.
“I obviously miss Andy. Shoutout to Andy. What an unbelievable career the guy’s had. Just an icon of the game. I miss him in the change rooms. I miss being next to his stinky shoes and all his stinky clothes,” said Draper, who’ll take on No. 10 Alex de Minaur, a 6-0 3-6 6-3 7-5 winner against Jordan Thompson in an all-Australian matchup.
No. 5 Daniil Medvedev, the 2021 champion who is the only past men’s winner still in the bracket, overwhelmed beat Nuno Borges 6-0 6-1 6-3 in a victory delayed for six minutes along with every other match going on at the time because of a fire alarm in the building that houses the electronic line-calling system. Medvedev’s quarterfinal opponent will be No. 1 Jannik Sinner or No. 14 Tommy Paul.
Everything went Pegula’s way against the 18th-seeded Shnaider, a 20-year-old Russian who played one season of college tennis at NC State and won a silver medal in women’s doubles at the Paris Olympics.
Pegula compiled 22 winners, hit six aces, saved 7 of 9 break points that she faced and claimed five of Shnaider’s service games.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: Sep 03 2024 | 2:57 PM IST