St. Catharines Standard e-edition

On the edge of a dream

Fernandez and U.S. partner Townsend advance to doubles final

STEPHANIE MYLES

PARIS Leylah Fernandez’s dream of a Grand Slam title is now within reach.

Fernandez and American partner Taylor Townsend blew away the second-seeded Coco Gauff and Jessica Pegula, 6-0, 6-4, in the French Open women’s doubles semifinals on Friday. They next face the unseeded duo of Hsieh Su-wei of Taiwan and Wang Xinyu of China in Sunday’s final.

The women’s doubles title would be the first Grand Slam victory of any kind for Fernandez of Laval, Que., who won the girls’ junior singles championship at Roland Garros in 2019.

“It’s a dream, no matter if it’s in singles, doubles or mixed doubles,” Fernandez said. “Everyone here, all the players taking part in the tournament, have a dream — to play and win a Grand Slam, to bring the trophy home. So, to have the opportunity to play Sunday on (Court Philippe) Chatrier, is exciting, and I can’t wait to play and share the court with Taylor once again.” Townsend was equally excited. “I’m just honestly so proud of how we were able to play and perform,” she said. “I told Leylah after the match that this is what we’ve been building towards over the past couple of months … just figuring each other out to now understanding each other so well and being able to play such great, consistent tennis against the (No. 2) seeds.

“And I’m really proud of how we were able to kind of put our last result behind us. We lost to Jess and Coco in the finals in Miami and we were able to kind of learn from it, detach from the result, and then just understand and take what we learned in that match and apply it into this one.”

The duo reached the Miami Open final in just their second tournament together in April. Fernandez has now turned the tears of a second-round defeat in women’s singles into cheers as she and Townsend, 27, look to win the Simonnemathieu Cup.

Their opponents in Sunday’s final are playing just their second tournament together.

Hsieh, at 37 and back from an 18month sabbatical, has 30 career doubles titles including the 2014 French Open. Wang, 21, isn’t even ranked in the top 100 in doubles and has two minor titles to her credit.

Fernandez believes they can be victorious. “We’re a very good team, and we’re improving with every tournament — our results show it. We keep reducing the errors, and we communicate a lot,” she said.

To say Townsend and Fernandez were dominant against one of the best women’s doubles teams in the world would be an understatement.

Townsend, in particular, was seemingly everywhere during the 24-minute first set. And Fernandez more than held her own.

Townsend also hit the fastest serve of her career, clocked at 201 km/hour.

Gauff and Pegula, who reached the final a year ago, had a lot on the line. Had they won the title, Pegula would become the No. 1 doubles player in the world for the first time.

Instead, it is their countrywoman Townsend who will be ranked in the top five in doubles for the first time, by virtue of reaching the final.

Fernandez’s singles ranking will drop significantly with the updated list on Monday, from No. 49 to about No. 94.

Fernandez is already near the top 20 in doubles with the effort in Paris. If she and Townsend take the crown, Fernandez would stand at No. 12.

And, in the all-important doubles race to the year-end finals in Shenzhen, China, Townsend and Fernandez would rocket from No. 9 to No. 2, just five tournaments into their partnership.

SPORTS

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2023-06-10T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-06-10T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://stcatharinesstandard.pressreader.com/article/281925957416199

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