Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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Jelena Ostapenko claps her racquet to the US Open crowd after beating Iga Swiatek
Ostapenko, who won the 2017 French Open as an unseeded 20-year-old, is into the US Open quarter-finals for the first time
Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 28 August-10 September
Coverage: Daily live text and radio commentaries across the BBC Sport website, app, BBC Radio 5 Live and 5 Sports Extra

Iga Swiatek’s defence of the US Open title was ended by an inspired performance from the huge-hitting Jelena Ostapenko in the last 16.

Polish top seed Swiatek lost 3-6 6-3 6-1 to Latvian 20th seed Ostapenko during Sunday’s night session in New York.

With her fearless and aggressive approach, Ostapenko hit 31 winners and forced Swiatek into a host of mistakes.

Ostapenko, who won her sole major at the 2017 French Open, will face American sixth seed Coco Gauff next.

Swiatek’s 75-week streak as the women’s world number one has been ended by the defeat, with Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka guaranteed to replace her after the US Open.

“I always expect a tough battle against Iga, she is such a great player and very consistent,” said 26-year-old Ostapenko.

“But I just went for it. I know I had to play my game and be aggressive because that is not what she likes.”

Swiatek had lost all three of her previous meetings against Ostapenko, but the pair had not played since February 2021 – after which the Pole embarked on a transformational 37-match winning streak.

The run led to Swiatek taking over at the top of the WTA rankings, a place she had not relinquished since as her dominance increased.

How could she cope with Ostapenko’s powerful hitting was a key question in an intriguing match-up.

Iga Swiatek covers her face during a US Open defeat by Jelena Ostapenko
Swiatek lost after letting an opening-set lead slip for the first time since October 2022, snapping a 56-match streak

After falling an early break behind, Swiatek began to soak up the groundstrokes and quickly turned an entertaining set around.

But she lost serve again early in the second set and this time was unable to rescue the situation.

Hurried by the pace of Ostapenko’s returns, Swiatek continued to make errors in the rallies and quickly became completely overwhelmed in an extraordinary deciding set.

Ostapenko landed a flurry of winners as she moved 5-0 ahead and had the opportunity to inflict a rare 6-0 scoreline on Swiatek, who has become known herself for winning ‘bagels’ against her opponents.

While Swiatek avoided that fate by holding serve, Ostapenko was not to be denied and fittingly secured victory with another inch-perfect forehand winner.

On closing out victory, she said: “I was just thinking I have to play until the very last point.

“When I was 5-0 up she was missing more but I thought I was playing better and not giving her any chances.”

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