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Dylan Alcott reaches Wimbledon quad wheelchair final with win over David Wagner, keeping alive his chances of a 'golden slam'

Dylan Alcott has a chance to win his second Wimbledon quad wheelchair singles title after beating David Wagner in the semi-final.  (Getty Images: Julian Finney)

Australian wheelchair tennis phenomenon Dylan Alcott has powered into Wimbledon's quad singles final, continuing his quest to win a "golden slam" of all four major titles and the Paralympics.

The Melbourne champion, who has already won his home Australian Open and French Open titles, is hot favourite to successfully defend his Wimbledon crown after beating American wildcard David Wagner 6-2, 6-2 in the semis on Thursday.

The 13-times singles champion Alcott took just 73 minutes to defeat his 47-year-old US rival — a six-times grand slam winner himself — in an impressive display that featured 11 aces and 43 winners.

It won't be easy in the final, though.

Young Dutch riser Sam Schroder, who beat Alcott in the 2020 US Open final and also at last month's French Riviera Open — and who is also Alcott's partner in the quad wheelchair doubles — defeated Briton Andy Lapthorne 7-5, 6-7 (5/7), 6-3 in the other semi.

Yet the irrepressible Aussie character is hoping to get his revenge on the outside courts at Wimbledon, with half an eye on the calendar slam.

"I'd have a thousand beers and be the happiest guy in the world if I did the golden slam — so I'm gonna try and do it but all I can do is give it my best," Alcott said.

"But my self-worth, my worth to my community and my country is not dependent on me winning the 'golden slam'. I used to think it was and then I'd fail and think, 'I'm not worth it' and 'I've let everyone down'.

"But I can still be an ambassador for my sport if I lose a match and help my community — people with disability around the world."

Alcott had to spend five days in quarantine after coming into England and is still unsure of what will happen with his Paralympic bid.

"I haven't even been thinking about Tokyo to be honest. I'd love the opportunity to play there as long as we can do it safely — I'll be there with bells on if it goes ahead," he said.

AAP/ABC 

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