Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Venus Williams rolls back the years to beat Petra Kvitova and seal US Open semi-final place

The five-times Wimbledon champion beat the two-times Wimbledon champion 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 in a pulsating heavyweight contest between two of the game’s biggest hitters

Paul Newman
New York
Wednesday 06 September 2017 07:32 BST
Comments
Venus Williams is two wins away from what would be a remarkable Grand Slam title
Venus Williams is two wins away from what would be a remarkable Grand Slam title (Getty)

Sixteen years after winning the last of her two titles here at the US Open, Venus Williams is within two wins of securing the most remarkable Grand Slam triumph of her career. The 37-year-old American, already a runner-up at the Australian Open and Wimbledon in 2017, is through to her first Flushing Meadows semi-final for seven years thanks to a stunning victory over Petra Kvitova.

The five-times Wimbledon champion beat the two-times Wimbledon champion 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 on Tuesday in a pulsating heavyweight contest between two of the game’s biggest hitters. Kvitova led 3-1 in the deciding set before Williams fought back and then played a superb tie-break to secure a place in her 23rd Grand Slam semi-final.

“It definitely felt like a special match,” Williams said afterwards. “There were no easy moments. It wasn’t easy to hold serve or break serve. This match meant a lot to me, obviously, playing at home and of course it being a major.”

At 37 years and three months Williams beat her own record, which she had set at Wimbledon this summer, as the oldest player to make the semi-finals of a Grand Slam event since 1994, when Martina Navratilova was Wimbledon runner-up at the age of 37 years and eight months.

Williams will be competing in her third Grand Slam semi-final of the season for the first time since 2002. It has been an extraordinary year for the world No 9, who until the Australian Open in January had not appeared in a Grand Slam final since 2009.

The American will rise to No 2 in the world rankings if she wins the title on Saturday and is already guaranteed to return to the top five for the first time since 2011. That was the year when she revealed that she had been diagnosed with Sjogren’s syndrome, an incurable auto-immune disease that causes fatigue and joint pain.

In her 19th US Open and in her 76th appearance in the main draw of a Grand Slam event - which is a record for the Open era - Williams faces a semi-final on Thursday against 24-year-old Sloane Stephens, who as a black American has long been considered a natural successor to the Williams sisters.


 Williams is set for her first US Open semi-final in seven years 
 (Getty)

Despite the absence of Serena Williams, the year’s concluding Grand Slam tournament could yet produce an all-American semi-final line-up. In Wednesday’s remaining quarter-finals Madison Keys and Coco Vandeweghe will take on Kaia Kanepi and Karolina Pliskova respectively.

“It's been a great two weeks for American tennis, seeing all the American players in the draw and all of them advancing so deep and competing so well,” Williams said. “All I have known all my life was great American players, so it’s great to see this resurgence. I hope it can continue.”

Only eight weeks ago Williams played so poorly in the latter stages of the Wimbledon final against Garbine Muguruza that there were fears that it might be her last appearance on such a big stage, but she has shown here that she has every intention of continuing to compete for major honours.

Kvitova, who had knocked out Muguruza, the tournament favourite, in the previous round, pushed Williams hard as the 27-year-old Czech continued her own remarkable comeback since suffering horrific injuries to her left hand in a knife attack by an intruder in her home last December.

The two women fought a thrilling toe-to-battle in the opening match of the night session in Arthur Ashe Stadium. With both women hitting huge ground strokes and crunching serves as they attempted to dictate the rallies at the first opportunity, most of the exchanges were short.

Williams dropped serve in the third game of the first set after making three double faults, but from 1-3 down the American won five games in a row as Kvitova struggled to find her timing. Williams won the first set in just 33 minutes, finishing the job with an unreturned serve.


 Williams beat Kvitova in three sets 
 (Getty)

Kvitova’s response was excellent. She broke in the second game of the second set with a big backhand winner down the line and then saved two break points in holding serve for a 3-0 lead.

At that point play was held up for several minutes while the roof was closed because of rain, but the break did not change the pattern of the match as Kvitova steadfastly held on to her serve in the face of almost unrelenting attack from Williams. Kvitova took three of her four break points in the match while Williams converted just three of her 11.

Kvitova had saved five break points in the second set before she levelled the match, going to set point with a bold volley and converting it with a service winner. Each of their previous five meetings – four of which had been won by Kvitova - had also gone to a third set.

The Czech drew first blood in the decider, breaking serve in the third game by winning the last two points with thumping backhands. However, Williams broke back in the sixth game as Kvitova missed two backhands and then double-faulted.

Although the match had been close throughout, the tie-break was mostly one-way traffic. Williams won it 7-2 after winning six of the last seven points.


 Defeat brings to an end Kvitova's brilliant run in New York 
 (Getty)

"Tie-breakers, you have to play smart but you have to be aggressive,” Williams said afterwards. “You can’t just sit back and hope. I didn’t want to hope. I wanted to be doing something about my future."

Kvitova said the match had been decided by just a few points. She added: “I'm glad that I am still able to compete at a high level against the top players, which I hope will give me some confidence to work hard again and continue to play well, to know that it’s still there somewhere.”

Williams paid tribute to Kvitova. “Everything that she’s gone through, to go through that is unbelievable,” Williams said. “You don’t imagine that you’re going to wake up one day and that’s going to happen, so it’s wonderful to see her back.”

Asked about some of the remarkable comeback stories which this tournament has produced, Williams said: “I think sport is a little microcosm of life. It shows the human spirit, just being out there on the court, fighting against all odds. If you’re down, you keep going. Great champions came back from injuries or circumstances they could never have planned for. It’s very encouraging for people to watch.”

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in