Radwanska beats Li to set up Lisicki semi
POLAND'S Agnieszka Radwanska downed China's Li Na yesterday to set up a Wimbledon semifinal against Sabine Lisicki, the slayer of Serena Williams.
Fourth-seeded Radwanska, the highest seed left following the exit of defending champion Williams, Victoria Azarenka and Maria Sharapova, beat Li, the sixth seed, 7-6 (5), 4-6, 6-2 in a gripping two-hour, 43-minute contest which was completed under the Centre Court roof.
Radwanska, the runner-up in 2012, took victory on an eighth match point.
The 24-year-old Pole, who had gone into the quarterfinal with a 4-6 losing record against Li, also overcame an injury scare when she needed her right thigh tightly-strapped at the start of the deciding set.
"Li played unbelievable tennis. I was just happy to get through after struggling in the final set," said Radwanska who had also needed three sets to beat Bulgaria's Tsvetana Pironkova in the fourth round.
"I have played so much tennis in the last few days, that's why I have the problem."
Radwanksa and Lisicki have played twice on the WTA Tour, winning a match apiece.
"We have known each other since our junior days ? it'll be a great challenge on grass," said the slender Pole.
Li fired 58 winners in yesterday's quarterfinal but was undone by 40 unforced errors.
Lisicki followed up her shock defeat of Williams with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Estonia's Kaia Kanepi to reach her second Wimbledon semifinal. The German 23rd seed also made the last-four as a wildcard in 2011, three months after her world ranking had slumped to 218.
"It was an amazing match yesterday, but I had to make sure that I had calmed down and was ready for today," said Lisicki, who completed victory in her fourth Wimbledon quarterfinal just before rain began to fall.
Lisicki, who was defeated by Sharapova in the semifinals two years ago, insisted that she felt no pressure coming into yesterday's match at the All England Club having downed Williams in the fourth round.
"There's no pressure. I just keep playing the game that I love," she added.
It's also a surface she loves ? the German's record at Wimbledon stands at 18 wins and just four losses while she is only 16-15 at the three other slams.
Kanepi has now played and lost six quarterfinals at the majors. "I hit winners in previous matches and did well, but today I was missing a lot," she said.
Lisicki showed no signs of a hangover from her three-set triumph over Williams 24 hours earlier as the 23-year-old Florida-based German broke the world No. 46 Kanepi, 28, in the opening game.
She backed it up with another solid break in the ninth game to take the opening set.
Lisicki, who has rebuilt her career after a serious ankle injury three years ago, suffered a brief wobble when she was broken for the first time in the third game of the second set.
But she leveled immediately before going on to claim five of the next six games to clinch victory inside just 65 minutes on the back of 23 solid winners.
Later, 2011 champion Petra Kvitova, the highest seed left in the bottom half of the draw, was taking on Belgium's Kirsten Flipkens.
Czech eighth seed Kvitova, the only player born in the 1990s to win a major, is bidding for a third Wimbledon semifinal.
Flipkens, the 27-year-old 20th seed, is playing in her first grand slam quarterfinal.
The winner of that tie will face either French 15th seed Marion Bartoli, the 2007 runner-up, or American 17th seed Sloane Stephens, a semifinalist at the Australian Open this year.
Today, the men's quarterfinals in the draw's top half features No. 1 Novak Djokovic of Serbia, a six-time grand slam titlist and the only remaining past Wimbledon winner, against No. 7 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, the 2010 runner-up; and No. 4 David Ferrer of Spain against No. 8 Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina, the 2009 US Open champion.
In the bottom half, it will be No. 2 Andy Murray of Britain, the London Olympic gold medalist and 2012 US Open winner, against 54th-ranked Fernando Verdasco of Spain; and No. 24 Jerzy Janowicz against his Davis Cup teammate, 130th-ranked Lukasz Kubot, in a match between the first two Polish men to reach a grand slam quarterfinal since 1980.
Fourth-seeded Radwanska, the highest seed left following the exit of defending champion Williams, Victoria Azarenka and Maria Sharapova, beat Li, the sixth seed, 7-6 (5), 4-6, 6-2 in a gripping two-hour, 43-minute contest which was completed under the Centre Court roof.
Radwanska, the runner-up in 2012, took victory on an eighth match point.
The 24-year-old Pole, who had gone into the quarterfinal with a 4-6 losing record against Li, also overcame an injury scare when she needed her right thigh tightly-strapped at the start of the deciding set.
"Li played unbelievable tennis. I was just happy to get through after struggling in the final set," said Radwanska who had also needed three sets to beat Bulgaria's Tsvetana Pironkova in the fourth round.
"I have played so much tennis in the last few days, that's why I have the problem."
Radwanksa and Lisicki have played twice on the WTA Tour, winning a match apiece.
"We have known each other since our junior days ? it'll be a great challenge on grass," said the slender Pole.
Li fired 58 winners in yesterday's quarterfinal but was undone by 40 unforced errors.
Lisicki followed up her shock defeat of Williams with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Estonia's Kaia Kanepi to reach her second Wimbledon semifinal. The German 23rd seed also made the last-four as a wildcard in 2011, three months after her world ranking had slumped to 218.
"It was an amazing match yesterday, but I had to make sure that I had calmed down and was ready for today," said Lisicki, who completed victory in her fourth Wimbledon quarterfinal just before rain began to fall.
Lisicki, who was defeated by Sharapova in the semifinals two years ago, insisted that she felt no pressure coming into yesterday's match at the All England Club having downed Williams in the fourth round.
"There's no pressure. I just keep playing the game that I love," she added.
It's also a surface she loves ? the German's record at Wimbledon stands at 18 wins and just four losses while she is only 16-15 at the three other slams.
Kanepi has now played and lost six quarterfinals at the majors. "I hit winners in previous matches and did well, but today I was missing a lot," she said.
Lisicki showed no signs of a hangover from her three-set triumph over Williams 24 hours earlier as the 23-year-old Florida-based German broke the world No. 46 Kanepi, 28, in the opening game.
She backed it up with another solid break in the ninth game to take the opening set.
Lisicki, who has rebuilt her career after a serious ankle injury three years ago, suffered a brief wobble when she was broken for the first time in the third game of the second set.
But she leveled immediately before going on to claim five of the next six games to clinch victory inside just 65 minutes on the back of 23 solid winners.
Later, 2011 champion Petra Kvitova, the highest seed left in the bottom half of the draw, was taking on Belgium's Kirsten Flipkens.
Czech eighth seed Kvitova, the only player born in the 1990s to win a major, is bidding for a third Wimbledon semifinal.
Flipkens, the 27-year-old 20th seed, is playing in her first grand slam quarterfinal.
The winner of that tie will face either French 15th seed Marion Bartoli, the 2007 runner-up, or American 17th seed Sloane Stephens, a semifinalist at the Australian Open this year.
Today, the men's quarterfinals in the draw's top half features No. 1 Novak Djokovic of Serbia, a six-time grand slam titlist and the only remaining past Wimbledon winner, against No. 7 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, the 2010 runner-up; and No. 4 David Ferrer of Spain against No. 8 Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina, the 2009 US Open champion.
In the bottom half, it will be No. 2 Andy Murray of Britain, the London Olympic gold medalist and 2012 US Open winner, against 54th-ranked Fernando Verdasco of Spain; and No. 24 Jerzy Janowicz against his Davis Cup teammate, 130th-ranked Lukasz Kubot, in a match between the first two Polish men to reach a grand slam quarterfinal since 1980.
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