(Wimbledon) Ons Jabeur (6e world) took revenge for the last Wimbledon final on the Kazakh Elena Rybakina (3e), which the Tunisian beat 6-7 (5/7), 6-4, 6-1 in the quarter-finals of the London Grand Slam on Wednesday.
“If I could swap this game with last year’s…”, commented Jabeur, 28, who lost this 2022 final after winning the first leg.
“I am very happy with this performance. The match was very emotionally charged, especially because she serves really well. It’s frustrating when you play back, but I’m glad I did everything: scream, get angry, calm down, refocus. I hope to be able to control my emotions like that in the next games,” she added.
She will try Thursday against Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka (2e) to qualify again for the final on the London grass. If she succeeds, she would become the first player to chain two finals at Wimbledon since Serena Williams (2018-2019).
But if she played two Grand Slam finals (Wimbledon and United States Open 2022), the Tunisian has not yet been crowned.
First player in the Arab world to have reached the quarters of a Major (Australia 2020), and at Wimbledon (2021), she could become the second woman from the African continent to have played three Grand Slam finals after South African Amanda Coezter .
Wednesday against Rybakina, his first task was to tame the service of the great Kazakh (1.84 m).
She started this quarter with the record of 342 aces since the start of the season, including 26 at Wimbledon in four games.
PHOTO HANNAH MCKAY, REUTERS
Elena Rybakina (right)
Since losing the very first set of the tournament, Rybakina had never been broken again and only had to defend seven break points.
Jabeur shattered these statistics by taking his serve five times and allowing himself a total of nine break points.
In the first set, the Kazakh broke to take a 3-1 lead, but immediately conceded her face-off without earning a single point.
Very few points were also played during the first eleven games: six of them were won blank (including a break for Rybakina and one for Jabeur) and in the other five, only five points were played.
Trailing 6-5 after being broken for the second time in the set, Rybakina saved a set point before leveling at 6-6 to take the set to the tiebreaker.
There, she broke away 6-3 and pocketed the set on her third set point.
“The first round should have worked in my favour! launched Jabeur. But I doubted a little, I yelled at my coach saying to him “you told me to play like that and look!” But I believed in this game plan and I continued to apply it, ”commented Jabeur who, faced with the power of Rybakina, notably opposed his demonic touch of the ball.
In the second set, only one break was achieved, in the final game by Jabeur who thus equalized at one set everywhere.
As in the 2022 final, the duel between the two players would be decided in three rounds.
Last year, Jabeur won the first before losing the next two. This year, the opposite happened.
Sabalenka victory against Keys
Sabalenka qualified earlier on Wednesday by beating American Madison Keys (18e) 6-2, 6-4.
Semi-finalist at the last United States Open, winner at the Australian Open and semi-finalist at Roland-Garros, Sabalenka confirms her status as the main and perhaps only real rival for the time of the number one WTA, Iga Swiatek, eliminated Tuesday in the quarter-finals by the Ukrainian Elina Svitolina.
PHOTO ALASTAIR GRANT, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Aryna Sabalenka
With her powerful style, this match also confirmed that the Belarusian’s worst enemy is none other than herself.
She had taken the initiative from the start of the first set, with a break on the first game, never to release her grip on her opponent, overwhelmed.
Keys arched her back and, taking advantage of a slump on serve from Sabalenka, whose first serve went from 62% in the first set to 50% early in the second, the American broke to lead 4- 2.
PHOTO GLYN KIRK, FRANCE-PRESSE AGENCY
Madison Keys
A semi-finalist at the French Open and the US Open in 2018 and at the Australian Open last year, Keys then led 40-0 on his commitment, Sabalenka being too imprecise and sometimes too impatient in the exchange.
But the Belarusian eventually set the sights again, winning 13 of the next 14 points to lead 5-4 serve to go.
With a low backhand that caught the tape of the net, Sabalenka missed her first match point, but she concluded on the next one by once again pushing her opponent to the fault with her powerful shots.
The semi-final clashes
Thursday July 13
- Elina Svitolina (UKR) – Marketa Vondrousova (CZE)
- Aryna Sabalenka (BLR/seed N.2) – Ons Jabeur (TUN/N.6)
