Rybakina beats Halep to set Wimbledon final with Jabeur

Rybakina, the 17th seed who represents Kazakhstan, broke the 2019 champion four times in the match in a dominant display on Centre Court.

Published : Jul 07, 2022 21:51 IST

Elena Rybakina overpowered former champion Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 in the semifinal on Thursday.
Elena Rybakina overpowered former champion Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 in the semifinal on Thursday.
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Elena Rybakina overpowered former champion Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 in the semifinal on Thursday.

Elena Rybakina powered into the Wimbledon final by dismantling former champion Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 on Thursday with a clinical display to reach her maiden Grand Slam showpiece.

Halep was caught in the crosshairs of an onslaught from the Russian-born Kazakh, who pummelled her Romanian opponent with rasping serves and savage forehands to set up a Saturday showdown with Tunisian Ons Jabeur.

Halep, the champion in 2019 who had not dropped a set at the All England Club since the second round of that tournament, did not help her cause with a string of double faults to hand Rybakina chances at key moments.

Yet the 17th seed needed little assistance, as she became the first player from Kazakhstan to reach a Grand Slam final.

“I don’t know how to describe it but it was really, really good,” the 23-year-old said after wrapping up victory to become the youngest Wimbledon finalist since Garbine Muguruza in 2015.

“Usually, of course, I have ups and downs and it comes from the nerves. But I think today I was mentally prepared and I did everything that I could and it was an amazing match.”

The Centre Court crowd had willed Halep to get into the contest but the 16th seed was a clear second best from the start as she attempted to go toe-to-toe from the back of the court.

Rybakina just had too much power and aggression for the Romanian, who seemingly wilted under the pressure.

CONSTANT MENACE

The opening point of the match had set the tone for remainder of the clash as Rybakina powered down a 113 mph service winner, before holding serve to love and immediately breaking to take control.

Halep looked under pressure throughout the opening set, failing to create a break point while Rybakina pounced on a series of tame second serves from the 30-year-old Romanian and looked a constant menace.

Cool as ice, Rybakina, who would not have been allowed to play at this year’s Wimbledon had she not switched allegiance from Russia in 2018, brought up three set points with another searing 118 mph ace and took the opener when Halep sent a forehand wide.

The All England Club (AELTC), which organises the Grand Slam, and the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) banned players from Russia and Belarus at tournaments in Britain following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a ‘special operation’.

Halep, who had missed the 2020 edition of Wimbledon due to injury and contemplated retirement last year, had looked like a player rejuvenated as she stormed into the semi-finals.

But after her run of winning 21 consecutive sets at Wimbledon was brought to an end, she never really looked like fighting back.

Halep’s three double faults in the first game of the second set saw Rybakina snatch an immediate break and while the Romanian fought back to level the contest at 2-2, parity was short lived.

Another double fault allowed Rybakina to break again for 3-2 and four games later the Romanian was at it again as her ninth double fault opened the door for the Kazakh to seal the deal with a backhand return down the line on match point.

“Simona’s a great champion and we had many tough matches before,” Rybakina said. “I was really focused today and I’m really happy with my performance because I think that I played really solid.”

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