Pegula Breaks Through to Maiden Australian Open Semifinal

Jessica Pegula defeated fellow American Amanda Anisimova in straight sets to reach the Australian Open semifinals for the first time. The victory ends her run of four previous quarterfinal losses at Melbourne Park. Pegula dominated the tiebreak to close out a match where she controlled play with depth and precision. She will next face Elena Rybakina for a place in the final.

Key Points: Jessica Pegula Reaches First Australian Open Semifinal

  • Pegula wins all-American quarterfinal
  • Ends streak of four AO quarterfinal losses
  • Faces Elena Rybakina next
  • First American woman in 30+ years to beat three compatriots at AO
3 min read

Pegula powers past Anisimova to reach maiden Aus Open semifinal

Jessica Pegula defeats Amanda Anisimova to reach her first Australian Open semifinal, ending a run of quarterfinal losses in Melbourne.

"I've been waiting for the time where I could kind of break through. - Jessica Pegula"

Melbourne, Jan 28

Jessica Pegula finally broke her Melbourne ceiling on Wednesday, defeating fellow American Amanda Anisimova 6-2, 7-6 at Rod Laver Arena to secure a first-ever Australian Open semifinal berth.

The World No. 6 delivered an authoritative performance in the all-American quarterfinal, prevailing in an hour and 35 minutes to continue her strong run against compatriots at the Grand Slam level. The victory sends Pegula into the last four of a major for the third time in her career and for the first time outside the US Open, where she will next face Elena Rybakina.

She also became the first American woman in more than three decades to defeat three compatriots at a single Australian Open, following wins over McCartney Kessler and defending champion Madison Keys earlier in the tournament.

"It's awesome. I've been able to go deeper at the US Open the last couple years, but here was the first Slam that I really broke through at. And I was a three, and then this year, four-time quarterfinalist. I was like, 'It's got to be coming, you know.

"The next round, I've got to get to the semi.' Because I feel like I play some really good tennis here and I like the conditions. And I've always felt like, even matches I've lost here, that I've played well. So I've been waiting for the time where I could kind of break through," Pegula said in her on-court interview.

Pegula, who had previously fallen short in four Australian Open quarterfinal appearances, wasted little time asserting control. She dictated play early with depth and accuracy off both wings, breaking Anisimova twice to take the opening set.

Although the scoreline suggested comfort, the final game of the set told a different story: Pegula was forced to fend off two break points before closing it out with a well-placed ace after an extended exchange.

The second set proved far more turbulent. Anisimova raised her level, leaning into her aggressive baseline game and refusing to let Pegula pull away. The No. 4 seed showed resilience, staying level and saving match points to force the set into a tiebreak. But once there, Pegula was untouchable.

The Buffalo native dominated the breaker from the outset, stringing together seven straight points behind fearless serving and penetrating returns. Anisimova, under mounting pressure, leaked errors as Pegula's pace and precision proved decisive.

The win extended Pegula's unbeaten record against Anisimova to 4-0 on the WTA Tour and marked her eighth consecutive Grand Slam victory over an American opponent.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see her persistence pay off. It's a lesson for all athletes - keep knocking on the door and eventually it opens. The mental strength to save match points and then dominate the tiebreak was top class.
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Aman W
While I'm happy for Pegula, I do feel a bit for Anisimova. She fought hard in that second set. The American women's tennis scene is so strong right now, it's like a mini-tournament within the tournament for them!
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Sarah B
Watching from India, it's inspiring to see such dedication. Makes me wish we had more Indian players going deep into the second week of majors. Our players need this kind of self-belief to break through.
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Vikram M
That stat about being the first American in 30+ years to beat three compatriots is wild! Speaks volumes about her game and mental fortitude. The semifinal against Rybakina will be a cracker. Hope it's a late-night match for us in India!
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Karthik V
Respectfully, while the win is great, the article focuses a lot on the 'American vs American' narrative. As a global sport, I'd love to see more analysis of her technique and strategy that can be appreciated by fans worldwide, not just nationality-based stats.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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