World number 11 Paula Badosa made history in Melbourne by advancing to the semifinals of a major for the first time after defeating an erratic Coco Gauff in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open by 7-5 and 6-4. Her opponent will be the winner of the match between world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
One of the most promising matches in a day full of emotions was the one between the world number 3, Coco Gauff, and Paula Badosa. Both opponents were evenly matched in the quarterfinals, with Gauff having won the last two matches.
The American has shown more consistency in the tournament, only suffering some complications against Belinda Bencic.
Badosa, on the other hand, suffered for too much in the third round against Marta Kostyuk, but comes to this instance with a lot of confidence and knowing that her tennis has complicated Gauff in the past.
The first set got off to a spicy start from the very first point, with both players being very aggressive from the back court, hitting more than they missed. As expected, the battle centered on who managed to take the initiative of the point. The Spaniard has a forehand that is frightening when she hits her forehand. Gauff used her mobility to her advantage.
After wasting two break points in the American's second service game, neither Badosa nor Gauff managed to break serve.
The Spaniard, knowing she was better in the forehand game, tried to attack her opponent on that shot and it paid off. In the eleventh game Badosa pressured the American and broke her serve. With the advantage 6-5 and her serve, the Spaniard did not hesitate, looked for every point, had depth and closed the first set 7-5 in 51 minutes of play.
Gauff had finished the first set with many errors and started the second set in the same way, both from the service and in her strokes. The Iberian on the other hand continued to hit the ball hard and to the lines. You could really feel that Badosa was highly motivated to achieve that coveted pass to the semis and got an important break on her rival after a long service game of the American, who committed 7 unforced errors in that game alone.
However, the joy would not last long as Gauff slowly began to straighten up his tennis and regained the break in the fourth game.
Knowing the recent history between the two, Badosa did not want complications and immediately put pressure on the American in the next service game, breaking her again.
Gauff was unknown, registering 41 unforced errors in the match, almost twice as many as her opponent. Taking advantage of this, the Spaniard got a new break and served to win 5-2.
At that moment the tenacity of the former US Open champion came to the fore and she recovered one of the two breaks quickly. The tension was palpable, both players had to fight against the pressure. Badosa had to close the match and Gauff had to stay alive and raise her level.
Paula Badosa hits an OUTRAGEOUS volley against Coco Gauff at the Australian Open.
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) January 21, 2025
Exhausting rally.
Finished off perfectly at the net with perfect touch.
A great talent. 🇪🇸
pic.twitter.com/YOWggJkS2B
With all the pressure on her, Paula Badosa served again for the match 5-4, but this time she managed to leave the ghosts of the past behind, served like never before and finally won the match 6-4.