Halep outlasts Kerber in thriller
World number one Simona Halep quelled a tenacious Angelique Kerber fightback and saved two match points to reach her first Australian Open final with a 6-3, 4-6, 9-7 victory in a compelling scrap on Rod Laver Arena on Thursday.
A wildly unpredictable match veered one way, then the other, before Romanian Halep ended Kerber's resistance on her fourth match point in a spellbinding deciding set that pushed both players to the limit of their endurance.
Former champion Kerber, who won only five points in losing the opening five games, was jelly-legged at times but fought off two match points in the 10th game of the third set before seeing two of her own go begging two games later.
Halep's insatiable desire for a maiden Grand Slam title proved the key ingredient in the end as an exhausted Kerber struck a backhand over the baseline.
She will now face Denmark's Caroline Wozniacki in the first Australian Open final between two players still chasing one of the four majors since 1980. To add spice to the showdown between the top two seeds, the number one ranking is also on the line.
"I had confidence in myself. I said to myself 'I will fight for every point and have a big rest after the tournament'," Halep, who also saved match points in a three-hour marathon against Lauren Davis in round three, said on court.
"I tried to be calm but today I was like a roller-coaster, up and down. If you don't give up, you can win the match in the end. I'm really proud of myself actually."
She will need to dredge the depths of her energy reserves against Wozniacki if she is to join the Grand Slam winners' circle after losing two heart-breaking French Open finals.
"If it's going to come, it's going to come," added the 26-year-old.
Wozniacki survives scare
Caroline Wozniacki came through a late bout of nerves to reach the Australian Open final for a first time with a 6-3, 7-6(2) victory over Belgian Elise Mertens on Thursday, giving herself another shot at winning a maiden Grand Slam title.
The Dane had dominated her second Melbourne Park semi-final until she was 5-4, 30-0 up and serving for the match but suddenly faltered with a pair of double faults to allow her 22-year-old opponent back into the contest.
Mertens, playing only her fifth Grand Slam, took full advantage and, unleashing a string of winners, broke the former world number one and racked up two set points.
Unlike in her 2011 semi-final against Li Na, when she blew a match point, Wozniacki was able to recover her composure and saved them both on the back of a couple of booming serves.
After four deuces, the 27-year-old held with a thumping forehand then raced away with the ensuing tiebreak to seal a title-decider against either Simona Halep or Angelique Kerber.
"I got really tired at 5-4," she said on court. "After the two first good serves, I thought, 'Calm down, it's all good', then it kind of wasn't good any more.
"I felt like my legs were shaking a little bit. I was like okay 'This is not normal, I'm not sure what I'm supposed to do now', I just took a few deep breaths and once she had set point, I said, 'Well, I guess it is the third set. I guess now you just need to go for it'.
"(The 2011 match) was definitely on my mind out there today -- Li Na. I tried to stay calm and I was lucky to get a win."
Wozniacki has yet to win a Grand Slam title despite spending 67 weeks as world number one and is the only player to have won more than 25 WTA titles without claiming a major title.
She lost six successive tour finals in 2017 but showed a more aggressive edge to her game when she saved two match points to battle back from 5-1 down in the third set to win her second round match against Jana Fett last week.
Victory over Halep or Kerber on Saturday would take her back to the top of the world rankings but, having lost both her previous Grand Slam finals at the US Open, clearly finally landing a major title would mean far more.
"That is a nice thing about being first on," she said.
"You win, you can relax and you can see the other ones play it out and obviously they are both amazing players, incredible fighters and athletes. It is going to be really difficult, but I'm in the finals and at that point it's the last match."
Ex-USA Gymnastics doctor sentenced to 175 years for sexual abuse
Real Madrid humbled by Leganes in King's Cup
Arsenal rally to down Chelsea and make League Cup final
Sports Shorts: Saina, Sindhu enter second round in Indonesia
Veteran Federer welcomes new faces in Australian Open semis