Jessica Pegula reached a major career milestone by defeating world No. 1 Iga Swiatek in the US Open quarterfinals, securing her first-ever Grand Slam semifinal appearance with a commanding 6-2 6-4 victory. Her win ensured the first occurrence of two American Grand Slam semifinalists in both the men’s and women’s singles since the 2003 US Open.
Wednesday’s US Open victory was particularly meaningful for Pegula, who had previously gone 0-6 in Grand Slam quarterfinals. With the pressure mounting and constant questions about her inability to break past this stage, she finally got her breakthrough in New York. “Finally, I can say, ‘Semifinalist,’” the sixth seed exclaimed, addressing the crowd with visible relief after securing the win. Her victory ends Swiatek’s dominance, who had not lost a single service game in her previous three matches.
In the quarterfinal, Swiatek struggled from the outset, as Pegula broke her serve two times for a 4-0 early lead. Swiatek’s forehand, usually a weapon, became her downfall, contributing to an astonishing 41 unforced errors, 22 of which came from that side. Pegula, on the other hand, played an exceptionally clean match, committing only 22 unforced errors and using her sharp defense to make Swiatek work for every point….