Alexander Zverev, Stan Wawrinka, Australian Open, Semi finals, Novak Djokovic, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Dominic Thiem
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The young gun will now face the winner of the starlit clash between world number one Rafael Nadal and Austrian fifth seed Dominic Thiem on Thursday (January 30). Photo: @AusOpen/Twitter

Zverev sweeps past Wawrinka to enter first Australian Open semis

In an unexpected twist to the Australian Open, German youngster Alexander Zverev stormed into his first Grand Slam semi-final on Wednesday after defeating veteran Stan Wawrinka at the Rod Laver Arena.


In an unexpected twist to the Australian Open, German youngster Alexander Zverev stormed into his first Grand Slam semi-final on Wednesday (January 29) after defeating veteran Stan Wawrinka at the Rod Laver Arena.

The seventh seed gave away the first set but recovered stronger to stun the 2014 champion 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2.

The young gun will now face the winner of the starlit clash between world number one Rafael Nadal and Austrian fifth seed Dominic Thiem on Thursday (January 30).

If he manages to surpass his counterpart in the semis, he will eye the title against one of the tennis biggies Novak Djokovic or Roger Federer.

“It feels awesome,” said Zverev who has been donating $10,000 for each win at Melbourne Park to Australian bushfire relief, and will even hand over the Aus$4.12 million ($2.78 million) winner’s cheque if he clinches the title.

Also read: Djokovic stuns Raonic to set up Federer clash in Australian Open semis

“I’ve done well at other tournaments and in other matches but could never break that barrier in Grand Slams. You can’t imagine what this means to me. I hope it will be the first of many,” he added.

Big things have been tipped for Zverev since he burst into the top 10 in 2017, but until now the 22-year-old has not fully delivered, slipping down the rankings last year to seven from four at the start of the season.

But after a poor build-up to the year’s opening Major at the ATP Cup, where he lost all three matches, he worked hard on the practice court and has been in fine touch to finally make a Grand Slam last four at his 19th attempt.

His serve, a key focus of his extended practices, was a weapon once again against 34-year-old three-time Grand Slam champion Wawrinka.

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He fired 13 aces against just one double fault, with a first-serve percentage of 80 percent.

Crunching groundstrokes

It was Wawrinka who came out of the blocks firing, putting immediate pressure on the Zverev serve, getting his returns back to break straight away when the German netted a half-volley.

Zverev won just four points in the opening three games as he struggled to get the measure of Wawrinka, and he was broken again when he shanked a forehand high into the crowd.

The German finally held to get himself on the scoreboard but the Swiss was moving and serving well, unleashing some crunching groundstrokes to take the set in just 24 minutes.

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Zverev needed to hold his opening serve in the second set to halt the Wawrinka juggernaut and he rose to the occasion, with his court coverage and groundstrokes raising a level.

It went with serve until game eight when Wawrinka drilled a forehand into the net and Zverev screamed ‘C’mon’ after his first break of the match, serving out for the set.

A resurgent Zverev rammed home his advantage with an early break in the third set before the wily Swiss hit back. But a poorly executed drop shot again handed the 22-year-old another break and he raced to a two sets to one lead.

Wawrinka, who beat Rafael Nadal in the 2014 Melbourne final, was out of fight and Zverev had him dancing to his tune as he raced to victory, ending the popular Swiss star’s bid for a first Slam semi since Roland Garros in 2017.

(With inputs from agencies)

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