US Open: Serena holds off Halep to seal semifinal spot
New York: Serena Williams fended off a determined challenge from Simona Halep, downing the fifth-seeded Romanian 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 on Wednesday to reach the US Open semifinals.
World number one Williams, seeking a record seventh US Open title and 23rd Grand Slam crown, fired 18 aces en route to the triumph, which set up a Thursday meeting with first-time Grand Slam semifinalist Karolina Pliskova for a place in Saturday's championship match.
But she made her task against the 2014 French Open finalist harder with 43 unforced errors and Halep, firing on all cylinders from the baseline took advantage.
The Romanian became the first player in the tournament to break Williams's serve, and the first to take a set off the top seed.
But after failing to convert any of a dozen break points in the second set, Williams regained control in the third with a break for 3-1 and steamed home from there.
"I knew I could play a lot better," Williams said of her frustration in a second set that lasted 65 minutes. "She kept going for her shots -- she stepped it up."
Williams's semifinal against Pliskova promises more fireworks. The 10th-seeded Czech leads the WTA tour in aces this year.
After surviving a match point en route to a fourth-round victory over Venus Williams, Pliskova beat 18-year-old Croatian Ana Konjuh 6-2, 6-2.
"I'm so excited to be in my first semi-final," said Pliskova, who had failed to make it out of the third round in 17 prior Grand Slam appearances.
Having broken through to the quarters she didn't waste her opportunity.
With a quick break under her belt in the opening game she was able to swing freely and needed just 57 minutes to subdue Konjuh, who upset fourth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska in the fourth round.
"I think it was the serve," said Pliskova, who finished off the match with two of her three aces. "My serve was very good today."
Konjuh, the 18-year-old who is projected to rise from 92nd in the world to 51, couldn't be disappointed with her fortnight's work.
"I cannot be sad after all of this," she said. "When I came here I could only imagine playing the quarters. I think it's been a great tournament."
Despite her dearth of Grand Slam success, Pliskova is playing with confidence after winning her biggest title to date on the hard courts of Cincinnati.
She beat Angelique Kerber in the final to deny the German world number two's bid to supplant Serena atop the world rankings.
Kerber, who booked her semifinal slot on Tuesday with a 7-5, 6-0 victory over 2015 finalist Roberta Vinci, can still nudge Serena from the summit.
No matter the outcome of Kerber's semifinal clash with former world number one Caroline Wozniacki, Serena must now reach the final to stretch her reign to a record-breaking 187 weeks.
If Kerber advances to the title match, Serena will have to beat her for a seventh US Open trophy to stay number one.