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Swiatek recovers against Keys to reach Madrid Open semis

football30 April 2025 13:25| © AFP
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Iga Swiatek © Getty Images

Swiatek recovers against Keys to reach Madrid Open semis

Iga Swiatek kept her Madrid Open title defence alive, as she avenged her Australian Open defeat to Madison Keys with a 0-6, 6-3, 6-2 win against the American in the quarterfinals on Wednesday.

The second seed will next square off with Coco Gauff, who beat 18-year-old Mirra Andreeva for the third time in as many meetings, 7-5, 6-1.

Searching for her first title of the season, the second-seeded Swiatek recovered from a poor opening set to improve her clean record on clay against Keys to 4-0 and reach a third consecutive Madrid semifinal.

Keys knocked out the Pole on her way to a maiden Grand Slam title in Melbourne three months ago and seemed to have cracked the Swiatek code when she handed her a bagel in the first set on Wednesday.

 

But Swiatek, who was contesting a 17th consecutive quarterfinal on clay, cut down on her errors and struck back to book a last-four clash with Gauff.

"It was one of the weirdest matches I played," said Swiatek on court.

"Madi was playing perfectly at the beginning. I just tried to play a bit shorter, put the ball in. I just stayed in there."

Swiatek is famous for dishing out 6-0 sets and it was unusual for the five-time Grand Slam champion to be on the receiving end of one.

"It didn't feel good. At least it's fast, you know, but that's the only positive thing," she said.

'GO ALL THE WAY'

On court in the Arantxa Sanchez Stadium, Gauff saved two set points while receiving at 4-5 before seizing a one-set lead after 63 minutes of play against Andreeva.

Gauff cruised in the second set to dismiss the seventh-seeded Russian and reach her first semifinal of the year – outside of the mixed team United Cup event.

The fourth-seeded American gave herself a 9/10 grade for her performance, adding: "I think I played really well and stayed composed, even when facing those set points.

"I had that tough match in the first round (against Dayana Yastremska), even though it was tough, it kind of woke me up and hopefully I can keep going all the way into the end."

Elsewhere, Elina Svitolina extended her winning streak to 11 consecutive matches with a swift 6-2, 6-1 rout of Japan's Moyuka Uchijima in just 52 minutes.

A champion in Rouen last week, Svitolina is undefeated on clay this season and is the first Ukrainian woman to reach the semifinals in Madrid.

The 30-year-old has won her last 22 consecutive sets on the red dirt and awaits her compatriot Marta Kostyuk or top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka in the last-four stage.

Svitolina has a three-year-old daughter, is running a foundation that has taken over the responsibilities of the Ukrainian national tennis team both financially and from a managerial side, and is on an incredible run that will see her re-enter the top 15 in the rankings.

"I have a lot on my plate, but I draw energy and motivation from my people," said the former world No 3.

"When I go back to Ukraine, I just get so much energy from all the people that are right now over there having a tough time. I'm just trying to keep it up and bring some wins for Ukraine."

In ATP action, Novak Djokovic's conqueror Matteo Arnaldi earned multiple top-20 wins in one event for the first time by knocking out 16th-seeded Frances Tiafoe 6-3, 7-5 to move into the Madrid quarterfinals.

The Italian world number 44 will take on Jack Draper, who reached his first Masters 1000 quarterfinal on clay with a 6-2, 6-2 result against world number 12 Tommy Paul.

"I know it's just been a matter of time until I do something good on the clay," said the British fifth seed.

"Whenever I practised back home on it and when I was younger, I always felt good on this surface. It feels good to try and keep on proving myself, to myself and everyone else, that I'm a good player on this surface and I'm dangerous."

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