Sam Querrey of the United States prepares to return a shot
against Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland. (AP Photo/Mike
Groll)
Stanislas Wawrinka beat Sam Querrey in five sets to put
two Swiss men in a Grand Slam quarterfinals for the first time
in the Open era - and keep the Americans out of the US Open
quarters for the second straight year.
After waiting out that nearly 4 1/2-hour match, Venus
Williams defeated French Open champion Francesca Schiavone of
Italy 7-6 (5), 6-4 to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal
since last year's Wimbledon.
Wawrinka won 7-6 (9), 6-7 (5), 7-5, 4-6, 6-4 on Tuesday to
join a countryman whose presence this deep in a major
tournament is just assumed: Roger Federer. Not so for
Wawrinka. The 25-year-old had been 0-5 in the round of 16 at
Grand Slams.
"Roger, he's always in quarterfinals since many years, so
that's not something different," Wawrinka said. "But for me,
it's my first time, so it's something important for my
career."
The US men, meanwhile, had at least one quarterfinalist at
their home major each of the first 41 years of the Open era.
That changed in 2009, and now it's happened again.
Querrey himself is still searching for his first Grand Slam
quarterfinal berth. He had his chances. So did the
25th-seeded Wawrinka, as momentum swung back and forth as
quickly as the wind whipped around Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Williams, seeded third, and the sixth-seeded Schiavone
struggled to hold serve: There were nine breaks in 23 games.
Williams failed to serve out the match in the second set,
then proceeded to break the Italian to clinch the victory.
"It's not easy to play in these conditions," Williams said.
"It's hard to know what decisions to make."
No. 20 Querrey wasted three break points in the third game of
the final set, which seemed headed to another tiebreaker
until Wawrinka made one final push leading 5-4.
Querrey fought off one match point with a lob that was just
high enough to force deuce. But after Querrey hit a forehand
into the net, Wawrinka made the most of his second chance.
This goes down as the worst year for American men in Grand
Slam events. They had only one quarterfinalist at the four
major tournaments: Andy Roddick at the Australian Open.
In the first two sets, each player went up 3-0 to start a
tiebreaker only to go on to lose it.
Querrey was fortunate to even be in that second tiebreaker
after saving four set points at 4-5. He appeared to be in
control in the third set, going up a break, but Wawrinka
rallied to break him twice and close out the set.
The youngest man left in the draw, the 22-year-old Querrey
was in the midst of a breakthrough season, reaching the
fourth round at a second straight Grand Slam. He entered the
top 20 in the rankings for the first time in July and had won
four titles this year; only No. 1 Rafael Nadal has more.
With Wawrinka upsetting fourth-seeded Andy Murray in the
third round, the draw seemed to be opening up for Querrey to
make a deep run. His quarter of the bracket didn't have a
top-10 seed left.
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