British 18-year-old sensation Emma Raducanu became the first qualifier to reach the US Open women's semi-finals by defeating Tokyo Olympic champion Belinda Bencic 6-3, 6-4 on Wednesday.

World number 150 Raducanu, only the fourth qualifier to reach a Grand Slam semi-final, made the Swiss 11th seed the highest-rated victim of her young career in making history on the New York hardcourts.
"It was a really tough match," Raducanu said. "I'm really glad to have come through."
On Thursday, Raducanu will face the winner of a later match between Czech fourth seed Karolina Pliskova, this year's Wimbledon runner-up, and Greek 17th seed Maria Sakkari to decide a berth in Saturday's final at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Raducanu, who would be the first qualifier to ever reach a Grand Slam final, made her Slam debut this year at Wimbledon and reached the fourth round.
She is trying to become the first British woman to win a Grand Slam title since Virginia Wade at Wimbledon in 1977 and the first British woman to win the US Open since Wade in 1968.
Raducanu became the youngest US Open women's semi-finalist since Maria Sharapova in 2005, although she is only a couple of months younger than Canadian 19-year-old Leylah Fernandez, who will face second-seeded Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus in the other semi-final.
"To have so many young players here doing so well, it shows how strong the next generation is," Raducanu said.
"I'm just here taking care of what I can control and it's my own journey at the end of the day."
A first-time Grand Slam champion at this US Open has already been assured.
Only unranked Billie Jean King in 1979 and Kim Clijsters in her 2009 title run have reached a US Open semi-final with a lower ranking than Raducanu, who has not dropped a set at the US Open.
Bencic broke Raducanu to start the first set but an errant Bencic backhand allowed the British teen to break back for 3-3.
"She's such a terrific opponent," Raducanu said of Bencic. "She caught me off guard. She hits the ball so hard. I had to adjust."
Raducanu smacked a forehand winner past Bencic to break again for a 5-3 edge, then held to take the first set in 36 minutes.
In the second set, Raducanu broke to lead 3-2 when Bencic netted a forehand and the Briton held three times to claim the match after 82 minutes.
"I was down love-30 in the last two service games so to hold was pretty big," Raducanu said. "Getting one point at a time, focusing on what I could control, landing first serves.
"She was going to be tough to the end."
Raducanu fired 23 winners against only 12 unforced errors.
Thursday would mark Raducanu's first match against either Pliskova, whose only major final before July at Wimbledon was at the 2016 US Open, or Sakkari, whose first Slam quarter-final came in June at the French Open.
SOURCE: AFP

Who is the “trad husband”?
- an hour ago

Winners, losers of a wild NFL trade deadline: Solak weighs in on the Jets, Cowboys and Jakobi Meyers
- 16 minutes ago

Films from YouTube and Google Play are no longer available on Movies Anywhere
- 3 hours ago

New-look New York: Can this version of the Knicks win the East?
- 15 minutes ago
Google’s entire Pixel 10 lineup is up to 25 percent off for the first time
- 3 hours ago

Instagram slapped with cease and desist over its use of ‘PG-13’ teen accounts
- 3 hours ago

How the high-contact, high-octane Blue Jays nearly took down a baseball superpower -- and how it could change MLB
- 15 minutes ago

Lyft CEO David Risher on paying drivers more and the shift to robotaxis
- 3 hours ago

Predator: Badlands is a lighthearted twist on the brutal sci-fi series
- 3 hours ago

Why Zohran Mamdani’s victory will resonate beyond New York City
- an hour ago

The Verge’s guide to Black Friday 2025
- 3 hours ago

Google Maps can tell Polestar 4 drivers when to merge lanes
- 3 hours ago













