Russian second seed Medvedev, chasing his first Slam title,
eliminated 117th-ranked Dutch qualifier Botic Van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-0, 4-6,
7-5 at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
“I just want to do a little bit better than the last two
times and get this extra step, which is the toughest one, actually,” Medvedev
said.
Medvedev moved one victory from a possible championship
match against history-chasing Novak Djokovic.
The 25-year-old from Moscow was a 2019 US Open runner-up and
lost this year’s Australian Open final to top-ranked Djokovic, who seeks his
fourth US Open title to complete the first men’s singles calendar-year Grand
Slam since Rod Laver in 1969.
“I don’t think about him, because as we saw, anybody can
beat anybody,” Medvedev said. “If he’s in the final, and if I’m there, I’m
happy. He’s also happy, I guess.”
Fernandez, who had already ousted defending champion Naomi
Osaka and three-time Slam winner Angelique Kerber, defeated Ukraine’s
fifth-seeded Elina Svitolina 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (7/5).
“I told myself to trust my shots,” Fernandez said. “Even if
I lose, I’ve got to go for it. And I’m glad I did.”
Fernandez, ranked 73rd, was inspired by pre-match strategy
from her father/coach Jorge, a former Ecuadoran football player.
“He told me to go out and have fun, fight for every point,”
she said. “It’s your first Grand Slam quarter-final. Don’t make it your last.
Don’t make it your last match over here. Fight for your dream.”
Medvedev will next face Canadian 12th seed Felix
Auger-Aliassime, 21, who reached his first Slam semi-final when 55th-ranked
Spanish 18-year-old Carlos Alcaraz retired trailing 6-3, 3-1 with a leg injury.
“It’s an amazing milestone,” said Auger-Aliassime. “It’s a
weird way to end but I’ll have a chance to play one of the best players in the
world.
“I’m happy I’m through and I’ll try to win the next one.”
Medvedev won his only meeting with Auger-Aliassime in Canada
in 2018.
Nadal’s uncle and former coach, Toni Nadal, guides
Auger-Aliassime.
“The communication has been great, the work is good and the
results are coming,” Auger-Aliassime said.
Van de Zandschulp hoped to become the first qualifier to
reach the US Open semi-finals and only the sixth to do so at any Grand Slam
event.
But the Russian dominated the first two sets before the
Dutchman fought back to take the third, Medvedev’s first lost set of the Open.
“First two sets he was missing. I was controling the game,”
Medvedev said. “Third set he started missing less.”
Medvedev took the only break of the final set on match point
when the Dutchman netted a forehand drop volley to end matters after two hours
and 23 minutes.
“In the fourth, he served amazing,” Van de Zandschulp said.
“He’s the guy who deserved to win.”
Fernandez shocks again
Left-hander Fernandez, who turned 19 on Monday, snapped the
Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist’s nine-match win streak with clutch shotmaking,
firing 42 winners, as spectators roared their delight.
“Throughout the whole match, I was so nervous,” Fernandez
told the crowd. “Thanks to you, I was able to push through.”
Fernandez broke for a 4-2 lead and captured the first set in
38 minutes, the first Svitolina surrendered at the Open.
In the second set, Svitolina broke twice to lead 5-1 but
Fernandez broke in the seventh game and forced three break points in the last
game before a Svitolina ace mandated a third set.
Fernandez and Svitolina exchanged four breaks on the way to
the tie-breaker, in which the teenager never trailed, advancing after two hours
and 24 minutes with a service winner.
Fernandez booked a semi-final matchup against second seed
Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus, who defeated Czech eighth seed and reigning French
Open champion Barbora Krejcikova 6-1, 6-4.
“She’s playing well,” Sabalenka said of Fernandez. “She’s
moving well and the crowd cheers for her. I’d say nothing to lose for this
one.”
Sabalenka matched her deepest Slam run from July at
Wimbledon with a WTA-best 43rd match win of 2021.
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