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Roger Federer accounted for a long-time rival to set up a semi-final against Hyeon Chung at the Australian Open.
Defending champion Federer's 7-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over Tomas Berdych on Wednesday extended his winning streak to 14 in Australian Open quarter-finals and to nine in that personal duel. The 19-time major winner leads that head-to-head contest 20-6, including all five meetings at Melbourne Park.
The 36-year-old Swiss star overcame a shaky start, dropping his opening service game and uncharacteristically challenging the chair umpire because of a technological fault.
Chung became the first Korean to make a Grand Slam semi-final when he beat Number 97-ranked Tennys Sandgren 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-3 in the afternoon match on Rod Laver Arena.
The 21-year-old Chung hadn't let up when upsetting Number 4 Alexander Zverev or six-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic en route to the quarter-finals, but he let his guard down in the last game and needed six match points and to fend off two break points to hold off Sandgren.
"In the last game, I think at 40-love, if I win one more point, I make history in Korea. I have to think about the ceremony, something," he said, explaining how he got slightly ahead of himself. "After deuce, break point. I was like, no, nothing to do with ceremony. But just keep playing – keep focused."
Then he fully embraced the moment, joking in an on-court TV interview, introducing the audience to his parents and his coach, and taking the microphone to speak in Korean to millions of new tennis fans back home.
"I think all the people is watching Australian Open now because we make history in Korea," he said.
The Number 58-ranked Chung is the lowest-ranked man to reach the Australian Open semi-finals since Marat Safin in 2004. He's also the youngest to reach the last four at a major since Marin Cilic (Australian Open) in 2010.
With Chung already through, and Kyle Edmund playing against Cilic in the other half of the draw, it's the first time since 1999 that multiple unseeded players have reached the Australian Open semi-finals.
Federer said he has been impressed with the way the two unseeded players have progressed, particularly Chung's run.
Chung's big wins over Zverev and Djokovic have drawn extra attention to a player who last November won the inaugural Next Gen ATP Finals title.
Two women who have been to this stage at a Grand Slam before will meet in the last four. One has two major titles, the other still seeks a breakthrough. Top-ranked Simona Halep recovered from an early break to win nine straight games in a 6-3, 6-2 win over Number 6 Karolina Pliskova and set up a semi-final match on Thursday against 2016 champion Angelique Kerber, who routed US Open finalist Madison Keys 6-1, 6-2.
In the other semi-final, Number 2 Caroline Wozniacki will play 22-year-old Elise Mertens.
Kerber has been the only Grand Slam singles champion in the women's draw since her third-round win over Maria Sharapova. Two-time French Open finalist Halep has had a tougher road – having to save match points in a third-round win over Lauren Davis that finished 15-13 in the third – to reach the semi-finals at Melbourne Park for the first time.
Kerber has had no serious distractions on a 14-match winning streak, and is hoping to emulate her breakout year in 2016.
She won the Australian and US Open titles two years ago and reached the Number 1 ranking, but slipped into the 20s last year. She didn't win a title between the 2016 US Open and the Sydney International earlier this month.
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