- 2021-09-13 00:02:40
- LAST MODIFIED: 2025-01-22 02:58:21
Qualifier to champion: UK's Raducanu wins US Open
Photo Collected:
Sports Desk: Dhaka,
Sept-13,
British teenager Emma
Raducanu arrived in New York last month with a ranking of 150th, just one Grand
Slam appearance to her name and a flight booked to head out of town after the
US Open's preliminary rounds in case she failed to win her way into the main
tournament.
And there she was in
Arthur Ashe Stadium Saturday, cradling the silver trophy to complete an
unlikely – indeed, unprecedented – and surprisingly dominant journey from
qualifier to major champion by beating Canadian teenager Leylah Fernandez 6-4,
6-3 in the final.
Until three months ago,
Raducanu had never played in a professional tour-level event, in part because
she took 18 months off for a combination of reasons: the pandemic and her
parents' insistence that she complete her high school degree.
She is the first female
qualifier to reach a Grand Slam final, let alone win one. She captured 10
matches in a row at Flushing Meadows – three in qualifying, seven in the main
draw – and is the first woman to win the US Open title without dropping a set
since Serena Williams in 2014.
Raducanu, who was born
in Toronto and moved to the UK with her family at age 2, also is the first
British woman to win a Grand Slam singles trophy since Virginia Wade at
Wimbledon in 1977. Queen Elizabeth II sent a congratulatory note, hailing the
victory as a "remarkable achievement at such a young age."
There were more firsts,
too, emblematic of what a rapid rise this was. For example, Raducanu is the
youngest female Grand Slam champion since Maria Sharapova was 17 at Wimbledon
in 2004.
This was the first
major final between two teens since Williams, 17, beat Martina Hingis, 18, at
the 1999 US Open; and the first between two unseeded women in the professional
era, which began in 1968.
Fernandez, whose 19th
birthday was Monday and who is ranked 73rd, had not made it past the third
round before. This was only her seventh major tournament.
As tears welled in her
eyes after the final, she told the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd: "I hope to
be back here in the finals and this time with a trophy – the right one."
Both she and Raducanu
displayed the poise and shot-making of veterans at the US Open – not two relative newcomers whose previous
head-to-head match came in the second round of the Wimbledon juniors event just
three years ago.
Raducanu's only previous
Grand Slam tournament came at Wimbledon, where she stopped playing during the
fourth round because of trouble breathing. That was in July when Raducanu was
ranked outside the top 300 and unknown.
And now? She will rise into the WTA's top 25. She earned $2.5 million. She is famous in the UK and the world over. She is now, and forever, a Grand Slam champion.
How quickly everything
has changed
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