Sabalenka claws past Siegemund to reach semi-finals

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Aryna Sabalenka roars in celebration after beating Laura Siegemund at WimbledonImage source, Getty Images

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Aryna Sabalenka is into a third Wimbledon semi-final

Amy Lofthouse

BBC Sport senior journalist at Wimbledon

Wimbledon 2025

Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club

Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide.

World number one Aryna Sabalenka narrowly avoided a seismic shock as she fought back to beat veteran Laura Siegemund and claw her way into the Wimbledon semi-finals.

The Belarusian, the heavy favourite for the title, had to twice come back from a break down in the deciding set to beat the 37-year-old German 4-6 6-2 6-4.

Sabalenka has reached the final of the past three majors and, with most of her rivals falling in the first week of SW19, she has an incredible chance of reaching Saturday's showpiece.

But few would have predicted the scare that Siegemund - who had previously never gone beyond the second round in singles here - came within touching distance of completing.

Siegemund, more noted for her doubles prowess, drove Sabalenka to distraction with her slices, brilliant returning and generally slow pace of play.

It took all of Sabalenka's grit and determination to hang in and eventually advance after two hours and 54 minutes.

"After the first set I was looking at my box and thinking, 'book the tickets, we are about to leave'," Sabalenka, 27, said afterwards.

"I had to make sure I didn't show I was annoyed by her - even if I was slightly, I didn't want to give her that energy."

Sabalenka will face either 13th seed Amanda Anisimova or Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova for a place in a first Wimbledon singles final.

There was barely any part of the match on a sun-drenched Centre Court that was enjoyable for Sabalenka.

Siegemund previously described her own game style as annoying, and the frustration was written all over Sabalenka's face as she spent nearly three hours chasing down drop shots and slices.

There were helpless looks towards her box, chuntering when she missed a vital point and a huge roar when she finally got the best of her opponent.

But Sabalenka has said she is making a conscious effort to stay calmer on court - and it is credit to her that she never lost control or gave up.

"That is one of the most uncomfortable, painful matches Sabalenka has ever had to play in her life," former British number one Annabel Croft said on BBC 5 Live.

"Siegemund played that match so well to make Sabalenka play some of the worst tennis of her career."

'Tough but beautiful' win for Sabalenka

Nothing should take away from how brilliant Siegemund was. She stepped forward to the Sabalenka serve, taking it on early, and chopped her way through her opponent's huge groundstrokes.

Sabalenka held serve just once in the opening set - and even that required three deuce games - and quickly found herself a double break down.

She rescued one as Siegemund served for the first set at 5-2 but slapped a return into the net to concede the opener in 57 minutes.

Sabalenka immediately left the court to reset herself and it seemed to have worked. She broke straight away for a 2-0 lead but, visibly unsettled, conceded it in the next game.

The match could have slipped away in Sabalenka's next service game as she was taken from 40-0 to deuce - but roared on by the crowd, she held, then won four games in a row to force a decider.

An early break to love in the third set - secured on a brilliant passing winner from Siegemund - looked to have rattled Sabalenka.

She should have broken back in the next game but ended up falling to her knees at the net, arms outstretched as she sent the passing shot wide to go 3-1 down.

A nervy ending saw Sabalenka break back, immediately concede it and then capitalise as Siegemund served to stay in the match, ultimately securing victory with a relieved-looking winner at the net.

"It doesn't matter if you are a big-hitter or a big server - you have to work, run and earn the victory," Sabalenka added.

"It is tough, but beautiful."

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