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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Daniel Harris

Wimbledon 2021 semi-finals: Barty to play Pliskova in final after Kerber win –as it happened!

Karolina Pliskova celebrates winning her semi final.
Karolina Pliskova celebrates winning her semi final. Photograph: Paul Childs/Reuters

It has been a few decades since Björn Borg walked tall on these courts, the Swede followed round by hordes of young fans in a manner that would be impossible in these days of heightened security. Yesterday, though, the photographers were on the lookout for the great man as his son, Leo, continued his quest in the juniors.

Unfortunately for the snappers, there was no sign of Björn. Unfortunately for Leo, he was beaten handily 6-1, 6-2 by Petr Vojtech, of the Czech Republic. The 18-year-old Borg, who is just beginning to make the transition to the senior tour, was reportedly suffering with a leg injury, which didn't help matters.

The Borg name goes a long way though and fitness permitting, the teenager will soon make his first forays onto the ATP Tour. Next week, he will try to qualify for the Nordea Open on home soil in Bastad; two weeks later, he will play in the Challenger Tour event in Poznan, Poland, having been given a wildcard into the main draw.

There was disappointment for Joe Salisbury, the Briton losing his semi final of the men's doubles with Rajeev Ram as they were beaten 7-6 (6), 6-3, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (5) by the No 1 seeds, Nikola Mektic and Mate Pavic of Croatia.

There was a fine win for Jordanne Whiley in the women's wheelchair singles event, beating the 2019 champion Aniek van Koot from the Netherlands, 6-2, 6-0. "I was getting a bit fed up with losing in the first round of grand slams," she said. Whiley meets top seed Diede de Groot in the semi-finals today.

And 18-year-old Briton Alicia Dudeney showed there is more talent coming on the women's side as she won back to back matches to reach the quarter-finals of the girls singles. Simon Cambers

So there we go. Both those matches were excellent – not quite as good as they could’ve been, because Kerber wasn’t quite at her best and Sabalenka’s return-game wasn’t quite there – but the standard and power in both was intense. I can’t wait to see how Barty’s forehand copes with Pliskova’s serve in the final, and whatever happens, we’ll have a new champion at the end of it.

Congratulated by Rishi Persad, she convulses with joy, then says she was annoyed to lose the first set but Sabalenka served well. Asked if she enjoyed the match, she laughs and says that Sabalenka plays so fast she barely had time – her demeanour is not Barty’s. Asked hwo she’s made it to here, given her poor form, she says she stayed positive and her team are super-positive, reminding her that she might lose in two consecutive first rounds but that doesn’t mean she’s forgotten to play tennis. It’s great to see her in the final.

I’ve never seen Pliskova play as well as that, and she served ridiculously! I am so pleased for her – she must’ve feared this day would never come – and here she is!

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Pliskova [8] beats Sabalenka [2] 5-7 6-4 6-4! She'll play Barty in the final!

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 6-4 Sabalenka Pliskova is four points away form the final: what does she have? Or more properly, what does Sabalenka have? Er, nothing! Pliskova drills an ace down the middle then a service winner out wide, as serene as we all wish we were, but then Sabalenka muscles a forehand winner down the line – down the lifeline – but a fine forehand, though followed by a fine get, eventually leads her to send a backhand long. It’s really close, and Martina says it was in, but she doesn’t challenge! Oh Aryna! Here comes match point - Pliskova has shown no hint of nerves, but this is different, a moment from her first Wimbledon final ... and boom! Down comes an ace!

Karolina Pliskova celebrates her win.
Karolina Pliskova celebrates her win. Photograph: Paul Childs/Reuters

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Pliskova 5-7 6-4 5-4 Sabalenka* Another ace gives Sabalenka 30-0, another ace gives Sabalenka 40-0, then Pliskova hooks a return wide and will have to serve for it. Hold on to your tatts!

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 5-3 Sabalenka Consecutive errors from Sabalenka hand Pliskova 30-15 – in fairness, Pliskova pushes her into uncomfortable positions to elicit them – and two aces make a joke of the pressure she should be feeling. Sabalenka will now serve to stay in the competition.

Pliskova 5-7 6-4 4-3 Sabalenka* At 40-0, Pliskova hooks back a superb forehand return, but her next one goes wide, and we’re getting to the nub of this. Sabalenka has two more chances, and but for the fact that she’s her, there’s no reason to think she’ll take either. But she is her, so who knows?

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 4-2 Sabalenka Again, Pliskova makes 15-0 but then nets a backhand; the way the match has gone and is going, Sabalenka should consider this a chance. But she nets a forehand when well in the rally ... but Pliskova nets a forehand! 30-all, only the second of the match, and this is getting AV Dicey! It really is! A brilliant get from Sabalenka coaxes a weak forehand out of Pliskova, but it moves away a little, enticing the shank, then concussive forehands secure the game. Pliskova is two away!

Karolina Pliskova serves in the deciding set.
Karolina Pliskova serves in the deciding set. Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images

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Pliskova 5-7 6-4 3-2 Sabalenka* At 30-0, a beautiful point, Sabelenka running one down, then adjusting at the net when Pliskova clips the cord to clip a winner cross-court. She holds to 15, and perhaps there are signs of a late charge – it’s not saying much, but she did a little better in Pliskova’s last service game and is holding more easily.

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 3-1 Sabalenka Here we go. Sabalenka gets a return in play – no more – but plays a really good second stroke, sidespinning away from Pliskova as she advances to the net. She can only flick her response long, but the elusive 0-15 is not long for this world and in no time at all, four points disappear. Even when Pliskova frames one, in lops nicely onto the baseline and Sabalenka can only net, yowling in frustration.

Pliskova 5-7 6-4 2-1 Sabalenka* Now a love hold for Sabalenka, but if she can’t find some returns, it’s not going to matter.

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 2-0 Sabalenka Sabalenka has only earned one break point the whole match, and her inability to make any impression on Pliskova’s serve is, so far, the defining aspect of this match. On the other hand, you can only save so many with winners and aces before it gets too much, and Pliskova consolidates to love. Martina reckons Sabalenka needs to change her returning position and just get the ball into play, because at the moment she’s disbursing a lot of free points.

Pliskova 5-7 6-4 1-0 Sabalenka* Pliskova makes Sabalenka play an extra ball and then another, guessing right and slapping the clean-up cross court for a bazzing winner. Sabalenka retaliates with one of her own, then a rare sliced ace into deuce court – and onto its outermost fibre too; 30-15. But two errors and suddenly she’s facing another break point, the pressure intensifying when her favourite serve out wide goes wide. Pliskova meets her second go well, and Sabalenka nets a backhand! Might that be the crucial blow?

Pliskova wins the second set 6-4 to level the match at 1-1!

*Pliskova 5-7 6-4 Sabalenka I can’t recall a single game in this match in which Sabalenka has 0-15, and when Pliskova nets a forehand, Martina lets us know that it is indeed the first time. And have a look! Sabalenka runs down a tentative ball into the corner and hurls a forehand winner down the line! Pliskova, though, cannily takes the pace off her serve to control the next point, then a big serve allows her to do similar and in seconds, it’s 30-all. Sabalenka is in the next point, hammering away, but a netted backhand means Pliskova needs just one more ... and there it is! A forehand winner earns Pliskova, the match and us the third set we deserve!

Game on.
Game on. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

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Pliskova 5-7 5-4 Sabalenka* The serving in this match has been so, so good – Sabalenka hits two aces for 30-15 – then Pliskova shanks a return – that aspect of the game has not. We wind up at 40-30, then Pliskova goes long on the return and will have to serve for it.

*Pliskova 5-7 5-3 Sabalenka Sabalenka has barely put Pliskova’s serve under any pressure at all, which does not bode well for a game against Barty, should she earn one. I’m surprised she hasn’t adjusted anything – in this set, she’s only made 7/18 – but a double hands Sabalenka some hope. At 40-30, though, she can only net a backhand, and will now serve to stay in the set.

Pliskova 5-7 4-3 Sabalenka* Pliskova is in the flow! She skips into a fractionally short one, coaxing a forehand winner down the line, making 15-all in the process. A service winner followed by an ace follow ... but a careless putaway from Sabalenka, sent right at Plislkova with the whole court to aim at, allows a brilliant forehand winner cross-court! Pliskova is seeing it, so she’s taking the ball early, and another fine forehand earns her deuce. Sabalenka, though, simply turns up the volume, closing out in short order.

*Pliskova 5-7 4-2 Sabalenka OH YES! Pliskova opens her consolidation game with three aces! Sabalenka then sends a return long, and that was extremely swift.

Pliskova 5-7 3-2 Sabalenka* Oooh yeah! Plisova makes 0-15 then guides a sumptuous backhand winner down the line! Sabalenka then goes long; can she find her aces yet again? No she cannot! Pliskova sends a second serve to her toes, and rather than make room she opts to play a French cricket shot, only able to net.

*Pliskova 5-7 2-2 Sabalenka At 15-0, Pliskova makes a dash to the net and outsmarts Sabalenka there for the first time, easing a winner from above her shoulder and saluting the crowd. Then at 40-15, she does the same but in grander style, laying a drop that Sabalenka charges to the net to flick back, only to see a winner deflected back past her! Here we go!

Pliskova 5-7 1-2 Sabalenka* At 30-0, Pliskova makes room to slot a forehand return down the line for a winner, so Sabalenka fires another serve wide to the backhand side – she’s so good at the flat ones, which is helpful when you have to defend a lot of break points at advantage. I said before that Sabelanka’s serve was where the drama was, but she’s actually holding more comfortably this set.

centre court

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*Pliskova 5-7 1-1 Sabalenka Pliskova holds to 15, and we’ve resumed the pattern: drama when Sabalenka serves, relaxation when she doesn’t.

“Is there any prospect of players not being allowed to make so much noise when hitting the ball?” asks Marily Power. “Currently Sabalenka is ruining the tv experience. Frequently cant hear if a ball is called out.”

They’re working out there; it’s hard, and if it helps them, gezundheit. As it goes, I enjoy it because it makes me laugh, but in answer to your question, I’d say there’s no prospect of it stopping whatsoever.

Pliskova 5-7 0-1 Sabalenka* Ultimately that set was decided by break-point behaviour: Sabalenka served aces, Pliskova served a double. Sabalenka embraced the pressure moments! I know! And when a brilliant return gives Pliskova a sniff at 30-15, down screeches another ace! Pliskova, though, not only prevents another but turns it into a fine, error-inducing return, stepping right in on the next point, a second serve, to force deuce. So Sabalenka devastates a body-serve to make advantage – the ease of her power is almost as disquieting as the power itself – and another serve-forehand combo seals the deal. Gevaldig.

Sabalenka [2] wins the first set against Pliskova [8] 7-5!

*Pliskova 5-7 Sabalenka At 15-0, Pliskova goes long on the return and challenges though she must’ve been able to see – she’s not happy out there, all of a sudden. Can Sabalenka make her play? Yes she can! She hurls herself at a beautiful forehand into the corner, but at the net, Pliskova feels all of it, whacking out with the whole court awaiting her! She makes 30-all, though ... only for Sabalenka to direct her about the court, beautiful touch opening the space for a backhand winner! Set point! And oh dear, after five straightforward holds, she slings down a double! Ach, that’s a lot to divest in the next 90 seconds.

Aryna Sabalenka takes the first set.
Aryna Sabalenka takes the first set. Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images

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Pliskova 5-6 Sabalenka* Now then. Consecutive errors from Sabalenka, the second forehand extremely poor, and Plikova has 0-30; another, and it’s 0-40! So Sabalenka mullers an ace out wide, then Pliskova nets on the forehand return, then a backhand returns flies wide too. For someone not exactly renowned for thriving under pressure, Sabalenka has been really good in this tournament, and when she notches another backhand, she retaliates with an ace. More or less, Pliskova is just waiting to see what happens with the rest of us. And oh my days! Sabalenka sticks a serve onto the very final fibre of the outside edge of the box! It’s called out, she challenges, she takes the point, and when Pliskova nets a return, it’s her racket introduced to the turf. Like Ramos and Marley, it’s getting lively.

*Pliskova 5-5 Sabalenka At 15-0, a rare rally, Sabalenka just unable to flick over the net from close to it, on the run. Pliskova’s serve really is firing – she’s not hitting many aces, but she’s not offering many easy balls or second serves either. Another hold to love, and the pressure ratchets up.

Pliskova 4-5 Sabalenka* I’ve not a scooby who’ll win the breaker towards which we seem inexorably headed, but this is much better from Sabalenka, holding to 15 and finishing things with an ace.

*Pliskova 4-4 Sabalenka In comms, Martina wonders if Pliskova is rueing her missed break points and she probably is, but the reality is that they were handed to her, then taken from her. But Sabalenka is struggling to make an impression on her serve, and she holds easily, to 15.

Pliskova 3-4 Sabalenka* Neither player is playing well enough to trouble Barty at this point, and at 30-all, Sabalenka advances to clatter a simple backhand putaway, only to net! Naturally, she addresses the break point with characteristic reserve, serving out wide then roasting a backhand winner down the line. But she’s not hitting consistently at the moment, netting again for advantage ... and HAVE A LOOK! She absolutely annihilates a serve out wide, then delicately thinks and feathers her way to advantage when the players meet at the net. An ace down the T follows, and whether she wins or loses, this match is on Sabalenka’s racket and I don’t think there’s much Pliskova can do about it.

*Pliskova 3-3 Sabalenka At 30-15, Sabalenka slips as Pliskova serves, handing her an ace, but a barrage of forehands claw her back to 40-30. But given a look at a second serve, she can only clout a forehand into the net, howling in furstration because that was a chance.

Aryna Sabalenka slips.
Aryna Sabalenka slips. Photograph: John Walton/PA

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Pliskova 2-3 Sabalenka* A double hands Pliskova a leg-up – gosh, it’s a while since I’ve needed or given one of them, what a sign of being past your best that is – and though a netted return shoves it down, a forehand error restores the advantage. Sabalenka is really shmicing the cover off it now, but at 30-all another error hands Pliskova a break point for which she’s not really had to work. A violent serve follows, but then a return off the frame finds a beautiful oblique angle just over the net; Sabalenka makes a good effort at flicking back, but hits the cord. Again, though, Pliskova can’t convert and this time it’s on her, a poor return rather than a booming delivery the problem, and Sabalenka closes out from there. She clinches the game at the net with a wrong-footing put away and is thinking her way through points really well now.

*Pliskova 2-2 Sabalenka At 30-0, Pliskova sends down a double and Martina reckons she’s tossing the ball further in front than usual. She gets a first serve next though, but Sabalenka takes control of it nonetheless, opening the court for a forehand winner only to net. But Pliskova makes 40-15, then sews up the game with an ace.

Pliskova 1-2 Sabalenka* But now look! Consecutive errors from Sabalenka and she’s facing 0-30, but a brutal forehand, from centre to backhand corner, halves the deficit. A serve down the middle that Pliskova might do more with than hook wide comes next, and a clever forehand that earns 40-30 has Martina noting that she always had power but now she’s got more “touchy-feely shots”. She closes out, and will be hunting the break after change of ends because she might not be catching it as she is now for the duration of the match.

Updated

*Pliskova 1-1 Sabalenka At 30-15, Martina notes that Pliskova catches a toss, something she seldom does, and files it under nerves. But she holds to 15 – not looking as impressive as Sabalenka but we’re only just getting going.

Updated

Pliskova 0-1 Sabalenka* Sablenka opens with an ace, then follows it with two forehand winners, the second a simple pat-away after a colossal serve down the T. Another ace follows, and get a load of that Kaz, old mate.

Sabalenka to serve, and ... play!

Martina reckons Sablenka is the better player but Pliskova is the better grass-court player, and who am I to argue with that. I just wonder if Pliskova moves well enough to retrieve the barrage of shots that are coming her way.

“Pliskova has more of them but Sabalenka’s is meaner,” says Martina of their respective tatt games. Both of their mothers gave them gyp when they came home with them, you’ll be flabbergasted to learn.

Pliskova.
Pliskova. Photograph: Dean Lewins/EPA
Sabalenka.
Sabalenka. Photograph: Javier García/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

Here come Sabalenka and Pliskova!

“In Melbourne, Australia,” says Peta Colebatch. “Was in UK on PhD all those years ago in 1971 watching Evonne Goolagong on TV, so would be such a dream if Ash can go all the way on Saturday. And in NAIDOC week here too. My heart is in my mouth at times, but such a lovely person.”

“Over on Court 14, GB’s Jordanne Whiley cruised past old rival Anniek Van Kout, 6-2 6-0,” emails Chris Page. “She was in imperious form.”

I caught a bit of that earlier. I’m in absolute awe of those guys.

In some ways, Barty reminds me of Berrettini, in that her two biggest weapons – the serve and the forehand – can destroy whatever else their opponent has planned. She’s defter than him too, but ultimately, that last match went her way because of those two shots.

Pliskova and Sabalenka will be with us in 10 minutes...

Ultimately, whoever meets Barty on Saturday will have to play like God’s mum to win, and even that might not be sufficient.

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I missed the hug the players exchanged at the net, but that was great to see too. Kerber knew she’d given it all she could, and was beaten by the better player; that can be hard to take, given Barty, at 25, is eight years younger than her, at 33. But she’s only starting on the road back – this was the best she could give today, but a bit more time and a few more matches, and she’ll have more to show us.

hug

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Barty is such a pleasure, saying that that was as good a match as she’ll ever play. She knew she’d have to be good to beat Kerber, is really proud of herself and her team, and is looking forward to Saturday. She says that she makes sure to have fun on the court and getting to share what she does with people she loves is amazing; there’s nothing better than coming out on court and having fun, but she also has fun and laughter in practise. She wouldn’t change anything about her journey here, and it’s so moving to hear someone so utterly at one with themselves and in thrall to life. Well played her, not just today but every day.

Updated

Barty [1] beats Kerber [25] 6-3 7-6(3)

That is brilliant performance from Barty, who wasn’t perfect but only because she wasn’t allowed to be. Kerber gave her plenty, but in the end the concussive majesty of that forehand was too much; whoever she meets next will have a lot about which to think.

Ashleigh Barty celebrates getting to her first Wimbledon final.
Ashleigh Barty celebrates getting to her first Wimbledon final. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

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Barty 6-3 6-6 (6-3) Kerber* Kerber isn’t going anywhere. She unloads her suitcase and soul at the next point, a forehand allowing her to monster a decisive backhand – though Barty has a damn good go at getting it back. And when Kerber schleps her to the net, she nets her pick-up! Surely not! Well, Barty then nets a forehand, and suddenly this is dicey as Riley ... but Barty is serving next!

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*Barty 6-3 6-6 (6-0) Kerber Oh, this is brilliant from Barty! She’s looked to have just that bit more all the way through this match, and more forehand cruelty, followed by an ace, gives her six match points! As Alex Ferguson once said, when it goes, it goes fast, and this has been devastating.

Barty

Updated

Barty 6-3 6-6 (4-0) Kerber* Kerber should take the first point when offered a short forehand begging to be tumped, but she can only net, ceding the mini-break instead. And it’s quickly 3-0, another hooked forehand opening the court for the mop-up! Crucial times for Kerber now ... and she can only offer-up a double!

*Barty 6-3 6-6 Kerber Barty goes wide with a forehand and Kerber is up, but Barty remains unflustered – her temperament is perfect – and another hooked forehand, but from close to the line it goes down, gives her two points for a breaker. And she only needs one, that serve-forehand combo doing the trick yet again.

Barty 6-3 5-6 Kerber* And that’s why. She knows Barty is hot, she knows she’s given it her best, and she goes long on the backhand to open the game. Barty then misses with a forehand, just, then can’t get after a tame second serve, netting a forehand shortly afterwards; 30-15. She does likewise next point, but a return to the body sees Kerber net before a net cord dribbles over for deuce. Might that be the key moment? No! Kerber gets her forehand working again, closes out, and I think this is the highest-level match I’ve seen so far. It’s not necessarily the most exciting, but in terms of two brilliant players hurling everything at each other while you watch their brains ticking and firing, this is way out in front.

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*Barty 6-3 5-5 Kerber Kerber will still fancy herself to break again, but Barty might be coming onto something, whipping a forehand onto the sideline for 15-0. An ace onto the outside of the T then gives her 40-0 – Kerber challenges, but you could see – then a serve out wide elicits a fine return, except Barty simply crouches to deflect a backhand winner into the opposite corner. I’m worried for Kerber.

Barty 6-3 4-5 Kerber* Eeesh! Barty leaps directly into the game, an overhead from the back of the court hit with intense venom and sending up a puff after landing on the line – that is colossal shot, and definitely Barty’s best of the set. Two backhand errors from Kerber follow, and this might be the match right here! And ... oh yes! Kerber plays a belting point but Barty just plays a better one, her slice keeping her in it until she sees a lobbing opportunity. Kerbert gets to it, but she hands Barty the chance to play that hooked, oblique forehand, and she doesn’t need asking twice. She breaks to love, and we’re back on serve!

*Barty 6-3 3-5 Kerber Kerber crouches to land a fabulous return deep and about Barty’s ankles; Barty can’t respond. Yes she can, she just saves it for the aces that comes next, giving her 30-15, and a terrific backhand cross-court follows – that might be her best shot of the set. But a double gives Kerber a sniff, and a monstrous forehand return onto the line makes deuce! Can she force the break that’ll seal the set? No she cannot, a service winner and wide return demanding that Kerber serve it out.

Barty 6-3 2-5 Kerber* Barty bangs a return to fault into a ballboy; the crowd chuckle knowingly, of course they do. Then, at 15-0, Barty opens her stance to send a forehand into the corner only to hook one wide just as she’d struggled into a rally dictated by Kerber’s forehand. More of this please! But just as I’m typing that Kerber is playing a perfect set here, not because she’s hitting loads of winners but because she’s dominating a player as good as Barty playing as well as Barty, consecutive unforced errors gift Barty deuce ... so Kerber closes out authoritatively, a definitive forehand down the line underlining her superiority. Barty will have to serve to stay in the set, and a third one would be an absolute treat.

Kerber

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*Barty 6-3 2-4 Kerber After the first-set comedown, Barty is back, but a brilliant backhand return cross-court gives Kerber a sniff at 30-15. But Barty isn’t fussed, an ace sealing the game shortly afterwards.

Barty 6-3 1-4 Kerber* Much better form Barty at 15-0, taking control of the rally with her forehand and finishing with an inside-outer into the corner. She does likewise with the next point too, then dashes to the net and look to have netted the simple putaway ... but clips the cord, doing well to see it drop over. Suddenly, things are changing again, and Kerber is visibly nauseated to stick a backhand into the net and hand over two break-back points. She saves the first with a backhand that clips the baseline and dies, then the second with a drop and composed winner, from close to the net and with Barty tanking in. And Kerber then closes out quickly, her forehand working beautifully to spirit a one-legged winner down the line, and we are cooking!

*Barty 6-3 1-3 Kerber Barty is only a break down but will know that momentum has shifted; as well as a hold here, she’ll want some winners – and she gets them, her serve back firing again too.

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Barty 6-3 0-3 Kerber* Kerber must’ve eaten a mushroom at change of ends because she’s grown – suddenly, her side of the court looks small and Barty’s looks cavernous – and she sends her scuttling about the baseline before despatching the winner which secures a love hold.

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*Barty 6-3 0-2 Kerber Yes Angie! Playing the first point of the game she takes it to Kerber, setting up the rally with a lob and finishing it with a forehand. She’s starting to feel this, hollering when she takes the next point too, outlasting Barty from the baseline but playing far less passively than before, and when Barty sticks a backhand out, just, she has three break points! Barty saves two and is well set to do likewise with the third, controlling the rally ... but then she swipes a forehand wide! We got ourselves a ball-game!

Barty 6-3 0-1 Kerber* It’s tight because Kerber is good, but Barty’s forehand is dominating this match and in general, she looks to have just that bit more. Kerber needs to get hers going because at the moment, any point that goes beyond a few shots is inviting that shot to take control. At 15-0, she finds a beauty down the line, which is much more like it, and secures her hold to 30.

Barty [1] wins the first set against Kerber [25] 6-3!

*Barty 6-3 Kerber Here we go, and Kerber gets 0-30 when she pins Barty on her backhand and the error follows. Barty’s won a few service games from behind so won’t be fazed by this and makes light of a fine return to a serve out wide, clumping a forehand winner towards the opposite corner and onto the line. The next rally features a battle of backhand slices, controlled and won by Barty, but a double hands Kerber break-back point. No matter, a fine second serve backed by that ruinous forehand – is there currently a better shot in tennis? – earns her deuce, and seconds later, a bousting serve out wide is enough for the set!

Barty 5-3 Kerber* It feels like Barty is reading Kerber better than Kerber is reading her, though Kerber is hitting the ball well now. It means to win points, she has to hit winners past her or wait for errors, while Barty is able to work the spaces and use the court. But Kerber holds to love, forcing Barty to serve for the set.

*Barty 5-2 Kerber I love Barty’s forehand cross-court – the one she plays from inside the court that’s almost a table tennis shot, hit obliquely and with bare whip and spin, to bounce just inside the sideline. It gets her 30-0 in this game, and she’s soon sat down again, one game away from the sey.

Barty 4-2 Kerber* There we go! At 15-all, Kerber locates her crouching forehand down the line and closes out from there. That’s her easiest hold so far, and came because she turned up the power, risk and conviction on her groundstrokes and serve.

*Barty 4-1 Kerber Here we go, Kerber finds her range, and a forehand down the line brings her 0-30. We might be reaching that elusive point at which both players are playing well – Barty certainly is, quickly reasserting for 30-all, reading Kerber’s intentions very well indeed. An ace follows ... then a double, taking us to deuce ... then another ace. Barty’s action is just so easy and loose, though in commentary, Sam Smith wonders if Kerber has done her homework and knows that under pressure, the ball usually goes down the T as that one did. Anyhow, a further service-winner follows, and this is terrific from Barty.

Barty 3-1 Kerber* Lovely from Kerber, who hauls Barty to the net then lobs her when the approach falls into the slot. But she finds herself at 30-15, and if Barty gets into this next point, she’s in trouble ... which is what happens, that forehand dictating till a backhand goes into the net. Kerber, though, cleans up well from there and is on the board.

*Barty 3-0 Kerber Barty’s forehand is there now, and after Kerber comes into punish a backhand winner she dispenses one for 15-all. But Kerber is warm now too, finding a beautiful angle off a return to send the ball spinning across the face of the net before bouncing just inside the sideline. Barty, though, isn’t bothered and a gorgeously disguised drop gets her 30-all. This is warming up and Barty can’t close out, so we go to deuce, whereupon she rapidly finishes things courtesy of that glorious, prodigious forehand. Kerber should be worried, but only figuratively speaking because what good would it actually do her?

Barty

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Barty 2-0 Kerber* Now it’s Kerber’s turn to start nervously, going long on the forehand before redeeming herself with a canny body-serve. She then hands Barty 15-30 with a careless backhand that drops wide, and though she finds a forehand winner next, a netted backhand means she’s now facing break point. And she can’t save it! Kerber dominates the rally thanks to a booming forehand, but when Barty moon-balls back an overhead, she guesses right and is waiting to return the next, hammering a forehand winner down the line!

*Barty 1-0 Kerber Barty begins with a double, then redeems herself with a service winner. But this is a tentative start, and she goes long with a forehand, Kerber into the game having done almost nothing. Oh gosh, Barty goes long again near the start of the next rally for 15-40, only to save the first break point with an ace and the second with a whipped forehand describing an oblique angle. That’s more like it, and she closes out from there, Kerber yet to win a point off her own racket.

Barty to serve and ... play!

We’re about to find out!

I imagine Kerber will want to keep the ball on Barty’s backhand, while Barty might want to yank Kerber in.

And here they come!

I guess it’s also the case that Kerber has had to play well to win, and given three hours 19 minutes against Sorribes Tormo – my match of the tournament so far – her needle should be hitting the groove.

Tracy Austin notes that Kerber knows how to win semis and finals and Wimbledon and Barty doesn’t, which is true. I don’t think the occasion will get big on Barty, but if it gives Kerber the composure and confidence to play her best, it’s still a huge advantage.

On the other hand, if Kerber loses the first set she won’t panic and Barty hasn’t faced a grass-courter of her calibre to this point – she even called her “the ultimate test”. Kerber tells BBC that Barty pushes her to play at her limits, which is a lovely notion, and credits the fans with giving her the motivation to play her best.

But let’s look at our first match. Barty was terrific against Tomljanovic, and I think she might just be too consistent for Kerber, who’s had to fight her way to this point. Her best level, and I’ve not a clue who takes this, but her level this fortnight and it’s Barty in two.

Pliskova reckons she’s playing good tennis and is pleased she’s completed her set of Grand Slam semis. She calls Sabalenka “all or nothing” but says she has her weapons and shots too, so is expecting a good match.

I hope that Sabalenka doesn’t second-guess herself and plays as she always plays, going for her shots. It’d be extremely easy to play percentages, but that’s exactly what Pliskova will want.

Pliskova has served ridiculously so far, and she’ll have to today. Once the rally’s away I think she’ll struggle to match Sabalenka’s strokemaking, power and invention. Unless it all get too much which, let’s be honest, is extremely understandable; how players keep themselves together is a mystery to me, I’d be sobbing with joy and delight every time I tried to compete.

I’m watching VT with Sabalenka, who laughs that Pliskova is serving well and hitting balls hard. She is so much fun, and I can’t wait to see her today; I think she’ll win, but not having a clue is part of it.

On BBC, Chrissy and Martina are enjoying a chinwag, so earlier than anticipated, here’s today’s life-enhancer bit: Unmatched, the 30 for 30 on them, is a beautiful evocation of sport, competition, friendship and womanhood; The Fall: Decker v Budd, is currently available on Sky, and a stunning insight into a grief, pain and healing, set in a very specific time and place; and Akosua Larbi-Mensah is a 12-year-old girl who moved from Enfield to Brugera tennis academy only for it to close because of corona, so she’s now raising funds to attend Rials.

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Also sustaining us today:

What an absurdly wonderful state of affairs. I wish I had eight eyes and four brains.

alien
This Island Earth [1955], apparently. Photograph: THE RONALD GRANT ARCHIVE

Order of play

Centre Court

Ashleigh Barty [1] v Angelique Kerber [25] (1.30pm)

Karolina Pliskova [8] v Aryna Sabalenka [2] (2.45pm)

Preamble

More or less, elite sportsfolk are made up of three elements: ability, mentality and personality. The absolute best have large helpings of all three – when you see them compete, you see all of them, and they suffuse whatever it is they play with their life-force. But it’s possible to be brilliant without quite having the lot, as it is to gradually build on apparently deficient raw materials.

Looking at today’s matches, it’s not especially hard to tick and cross the relevant boxes for each of our four competitors. But the thrill of it is that come Saturday evening, things might have changed.

However, Ash Barty and Angelique Kerber, who contest our first semi, can legitimately claim a clean sweep, which is why both have already won majors. Barty is just a freak of nature, brilliant at everything including being sound, while Kerber has rediscovered her love for the game and dug to the deepest recesses of her soul to reach this point. As such, whichever of them makes the final will be favourite for it.

On the other hand, our second semi features two players still trying to prove themselves. Karolina Pliskova might’ve thought her time had passed, having failed to win a slam when she was number one in the world, most likely because she was pitting her ability – which is immense – against others whose ability is immenser. But she has a new coach this season and might just have improved enough to finally get there.

Aryna Sabalenka, meanwhile, is a curious case, a player whose ability and personality are so lively that they might have hampered her mentality. Until this week, she had never made the last eight of the big four, an absolutely ridiculous state of affairs, but the calm and devastating way in which she dismissed Ons Jabeur in the quarter-final suggested that, at last, she’s at one. Welcome to Wimbledon day 10!

Play: 1.30pm BST

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