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BELINDA BENCIC

Teenager Bencic scores upset Indian Wells win

Plucky Swiss teenager Belinda Bencic pulled off the biggest win of her young tennis career on Monday at Indian Wells, California by upsetting world number five Caroline Wozniacki in straight sets.

Teenager Bencic scores upset Indian Wells win
Belinda Bencic in winning form. Photo: Matthew Stockman/Getty Images North America/AFP

The 18-year-old Bencic, who had never beaten a top-five player, won 6-4, 6-4 in the third round of the WTA and ATP hardcourt tournament.
   
"I am very happy. I'm really excited," Bencic said.

"I always watched her on TV or when I was a small girl she was my idol and a role model for me and for my game."
   
Wozniacki, a former Indian Wells champion who is seeded fourth, won her 23rd career singles title just two weeks ago in Kuala Lumpur.
   
Bencic had played Wozniacki, from Denmark, just once before in Istanbul, Turkey last year where she was crushed 6-0, 6-0.
   
Asked Monday what the biggest difference between the two matches was, Bencic joked, "I won a game."
   
"I played more solid," she added.

"In Istanbul I had too much respect and I was nervous. Today I really had a good game plan. I did what I had to do."
   
It is the first time in three attempts that the world number 37 Bencic has beaten a top five player but this is now her third career win over a top ten opponent.
   
Bencic, who was named the WTA Tour's Newcomer of the Year last year, beat world number seven Angelique Kerber and world number ten Jelena Jankovic during a brilliant run at the 2014 US Open before losing in the quarterfinals.

'It's unreal' 

"It's all I was dreaming for and wishing for when I was a small kid," Bencic said.

"It's unreal I beat a top five player."
   
Bencic blasted two aces, broke Wozniacki three times and had just one double fault in the one hour, 40 minute match.
   
She said the key to beating the two-time US Open finalist was to limit her errors.
   
"What she wants is for you to make many mistakes, because she's really trying to play the rallies," Bencic said.
   
"That's what I tried to do today, to hold the rallies with her and wait for my chances. Just be patient and then don't look for the winner too early."
   
Wozniacki hit more aces (five) but made eight double faults and won just 11 points in total on her second serve.
   
Wozniacki has been playing some of her best tennis in a long time lately.
   
She won Indian Wells in 2011 and reached the final in 2010 and again three years later, but only reached the final in one other tournament the rest of 2013.
   
Following an exit in the round of 16 in last year's Indian Wells event, she went five months without making it to a final.

She began to turn things around in the 2014 US Open, where she lost in the final to Serena Williams.
   
Bencic next faces another former Indian Wells champ, Jankovic, who beat Wozniacki in the final five years ago.

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TENNIS

Will Belinda Bencic be the first Swiss woman to win a Grand Slam in 20 years?

No Swiss woman has won a Grand Slam singles title since Martina Hingis captured the 1999 Australian Open, but Belinda Bencic hopes to end that two-decade drought at the US Open.

Will Belinda Bencic be the first Swiss woman to win a Grand Slam in 20 years?
Bencic, seeded 13th, has battled back from 2017 left wrist surgery. Photo: Mike Stobe / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP

And with Swiss legend Roger Federer and his three-time Grand Slam-winning countryman Stan Wawrinka ousted in the men's quarter-finals, Bencic has extra motivation entering Thursday's semi-finals at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“This is not a good thing. I'm not happy about this actually,” Bencic said of the Federer and Wawrinka losses. “I'm kind of surprised, like I think everyone is.

“It would be really nice if the boys could also make it to semi-finals but I'm happy I can kind of do it for them and don't let them down.”

This year's showdown at Flushing Meadows is the 83rd Slam since Hingis won the last of her five major singles titles.

Bencic will face Canadian teen 15th seed Bianca Andreescu, a fellow Slam semi debutante, for the first time Thursday at Arthur Ashe Stadium. She's trying to become the first Canadian singles Grand Slam champion.

“That would be pretty awesome,” said Andreescu. “If it happens, then I think I can pave way for many other athletes, the next generation, not only for Canadian tennis but I think for many people.”

Ukraine's fifth-seeded Elina Svitolina meets Serena Williams, seeking her 24th Slam title to match Margaret Court's all-time record, in the other semi-final.

Bencic, seeded 13th, has battled back from 2017 left wrist surgery and other injuries that slowed her career for most of two seasons, winning her third WTA title in February at Dubai.

“She likes to be very aggressive,” Andreescu said. “She has a very good serve. She moves pretty well, too.”

The is Bencic's deepest Slam run, surpassing her 2014 US Open debut last-eight appearance, but it comes after having had to battle adversity.

“It's there like a dream always. Even when you are playing bad, you want to come back to this feeling. I think that's the motivation enough to keep going,” Bencic said.

“For sure being number one in the world or winning a Grand Slam is always a dream. But I think it's still a long way to that. Of course, I think you can see it there.

“The work and staying in the moment is more important right now. Just taking it step by step.”

Bencic has tried to stay calm on the court but has found that venting her frustrations can help her focus.

“I'm trying to work on my staying emotionally calm in the matches, but I have no trouble focusing after being angry a little bit,” she said.

“I think sometimes I need to get frustrated. I feel like I let it out. I feel a little bit better after. I start to play better I'm more pumped.”

Teen's best yet to come

Andreescu warns she hasn't reached her peak so far at Flushing Meadows.

“I don't think I've played my best tennis,” she said. “I just fought really well with what I had every single day. I think that's the most important thing for me.

“I just try to play every point like it's the last.”

The Canadian hopes to become the fourth first-time Slam champion in five years to win the US Open women's title.

“All of us dream of this moment ever since we're kids, ever since we picked up a racquet,” she said. “I definitely think I've fought really hard to get to this point, so I think I do deserve to be here and hopefully I can go all the way.”
 

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