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PIX: Qualifier Raducanu wins US Open women's singles crown

September 12, 2021

18-year-old Emma Raducanu defeats Leylah Fernandez to become the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam title. 

IMAGE: Great Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates with the trophy after defeating Canada's Leylah Annie Fernandez in the US Open women's singles final on Saturday. Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

Britain's Emma Raducanu completed a Grand Slam fairytale on Saturday by beating Canada's Leylah Fernandez 6-4, 6-3 in the battle of the teens to be crowned US Open women's singles champion.

 

The 18-year-old became the first ever qualifier to win a Grand Slam title and the first British woman to hoist a major trophy since Virginia Wade triumphed at Wimbledon in 1977.

IMAGE: Great Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates victory over Canada's Leylah Annie Fernandez in the women's singles final. Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

The first Grand Slam final -- men or women -- to be contested by two unseeded players was an improbable matchup that no one could have predicted, featuring 150th-ranked qualifier Raducanu and little-known Fernandez who is 73rd in the standings.

One unseeded player making a major final would be considered remarkable, two enters the realm of unbelievable.

All the more remarkable was that Raducanu's march to the title required 10 matches, including three wins in qualifying, and she did it without dropping a single set along the way. She swatted aside more experienced opponents with the same ease as she hammered winners.

IMAGE: Leylah Fernandez reacts after breaking Emma Raducanu in the second set. Photograph: Al Bello/Getty Images

Fernandez left a graveyard of seeds and champions in her trail to the final, her victims including second seeded Aryna Sabalenka, four-time Grand Slam winner and defending champion Naomi Osaka, fifth seed Elina Svitolina and three-time Grand Slam winner Angelique Kerber.

For the first time during the Flushing Meadows fortnight, the 19-year-old Canadian faced a younger opponent, if only by a couple of months. But she had no answers for the icy cool Raducanu.

Both players walked out onto a frothing Arthur Ashe Stadium court with looks that suggested 'I can't believe I am here' and with ear-to-ear grins but they quickly had their game faces on.

The charismatic teens had charmed the New York crowds with their fearless play and contagious enthusiasm, leaving excited fans a difficult choice over who to back in the final which in the end was evenly split.

IMAGE: Emma Raducanu, left, and Leylah Fernandez embrace at the end of the final. Photograph: Al Bello/Getty Images

While the scoreline might hint at a one-sided affair, the near two-hour contest featured plenty of jaw-dropping tennis and more than a dash of drama, particularly in a second set that Raducanu threatened to runaway with when at 5-2 up, she earned two match points on Fernandez's serve.

The battling Canadian mounted a fightback to stay alive and when the Briton went out to serve for the match in the next game, Raducanu bent down so low to retrieve the ball, she ended up with blood pouring down her left leg after dragging her knee across the court surface and needed a medical time out -- much to the frustration of Fernandez who had just earned a break point.

In the end, however, nothing was going to prevent Raducanu from realising her destiny and she returned with a bandaged knee to finish off her opponent with an ace.

Source: REUTERS
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