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Updated Jan 27, 2026 · 09:46
Sports World News Updated Jan 27, 2026

Sabalenka Crushes Teen Jovic, Powers Into 4th Straight Aus Open Semifinal

Aryna Sabalenka decisively ended the impressive run of 18-year-old American Iva Jovic with a 6-3, 6-0 victory. The world number one dominated the match, striking 31 winners and capitalizing on Jovic's second serve. With this win, Sabalenka advances to her fourth consecutive Australian Open semifinal and her 14th Grand Slam semifinal overall. She remains the only former champion left in the women's draw and has yet to drop a set in the tournament.

Sabalenka ends Jovic's dream run, reaches fourth straight Aus Open semifinal

Melbourne, Jan 27

World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka ended the 18-year-old American Iva Jovic's dream run, securing a 6-3, 6-0 win to reach her fourth consecutive Australian Open semifinal on Tuesday.

Sabalenka is the only player still standing in the women's field to have previously lifted the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup. With her place in a fourth consecutive Melbourne semifinal, the top seed has reached the last four at a major for the 14th time.

In a dominant display, the top seed struck 31 winners to Jovic's 12 and won 61 per cent of points on the 29th seed's second serve.

Jovic at 18 was the youngest player to reach the last eight at the Australian Open without dropping a set since Venus Williams in 1998.

Sabalenka, who is yet to drop a set, will face either No. 3 seed Coco Gauff or No. 12 seed Elina Svitolina next.

In the pair's first-ever meeting, Sabalenka immediately exerted her authority by pouncing on Jovic's second serves to break and quickly consolidated for a 3-0 lead.

Jovic prevented herself from falling to an even bigger deficit. Her stunning ball-striking troubled Sabalenka.

Serving for the set at 5-3, the top seed saved one break point before Jovic fended off a first set point. The four-time major champion saved another two break points with her trusty serve and set up a second set point with a cracking forehand winner down the line, only to be denied when Jovic returned her serve, the Australian Open reports.

Sabalenka then struck a brilliant backhand to earn a third set point and pummelled another backhand down the line to claim the set.

In the second set, Sabalenka surged to an early lead, placing yet another backhand winner, leading her to break in the 29th seed's opening service game.

Sabalenka then gained an insurance break and a 3-0 lead, then held to love to put the match within two games of its conclusion. The 29th seed, Jovic, benefited from a double fault donation from Sabalenka and produced winners off both wings to earn a pair of break points as the top-seeded rival served for the match.

Sabalenka saved the two serves and seconds later claimed victory and a semifinal berth with an ace out wide on match point.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

As an Indian tennis fan, I love watching these dominant athletes. Makes you wish we had a player of this caliber coming through our system. Sabalenka's serve is a weapon!

Ananya R

Respect to Jovic for reaching the quarters at 18 without dropping a set! That's an incredible achievement. She'll learn from this loss. Sabalenka was just in a different league today.

David E

The scoreline looks brutal, but Jovic showed some fight with those break points. Sabalenka's mental strength to save them and close it out with an ace is what separates the champions.

Karthik V

Four consecutive semifinals in Melbourne is no joke. She's the clear favourite now. Hoping for a Sabalenka vs Gauff semifinal, that would be a proper blockbuster! 🎾

Sarah B

While Sabalenka was dominant, I feel the article could have highlighted Jovic's potential a bit more. The second set was a bagel, but the first set had some competitive moments. The future of women's tennis looks bright with such young talent.

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

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