Elina Svitolina humbles Coco Gauff to set up Sabalenka semi in Australian Open

A picture


Coco Gauff is known across her sport for her mental toughness and problem-solving abilities, her tendency to grind out victories from unenviable positions.However, down 1-6, 0-3, 0-30 on Tuesday night and sinking quickly, the 21-year-old has rarely looked as helpless on a tennis court as when she expressed her despair to her support team: “She’s outdoing me in everything,” she said.This time, there was no way back for the third seed as Elina Svitolina ended a courageous, focused performance by securing the most significant result of the Australian Open so far, completely dismantling Gauff 6-1, 6-2 to reach her first semi-final in Melbourne.Svitolina, the 12th seed, will next face Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1 and two-time Australian Open champion.Earlier on Tuesday, Sabalenka dismantled the 29th seed Iva Jovic 6-3, 6-0 to reach her fourth consecutive semi-final here.

A former world No 3, Svitolina is one of the most accomplished players of her generation and the 31-year-old has now reached four major semi-finals from 14 quarter-finals.This victory is particularly special, however, as it means she will return to the top 10 for the first time since returning to competition in 2023 after giving birth to her daughter, Skaï.Svitolina has started the 2026 season supremely well, winning the Auckland Open and now 10 matches in a row.This is her second consecutive win over a top-10 player after defeating No 7 Mirra Andreeva in the previous round, and she still has not dropped a set.“After maternity leave, it was my dream to come back into the top 10,” she said.

“Always been my goal.Unfortunately, it didn’t happen last year, I stopped after September [due to injury] and then when we were training in the off-season, I told my coach: ‘I want to come back to top 10 this year,’ so this was my goal this year.”This was an excruciating performance from Gauff, who struggled badly from the first game.After her defeat, Gauff walked off the court and destroyed her racket, smashing it more than five times on the floor in the tunnel that connects Rod Laver Arena to the stadium.She later criticised the Australian Open organisers for broadcasting such a private moment.

“I don’t think it’s a bad thing,” said Gauff.“I don’t try to do it on court in front of kids and things like that, but I do know I need to let out that emotion.Otherwise, I’m just going to be snappy with the people around me, and I don’t want to do that, because like they don’t deserve it.They did their best.I did mine.

Just need to let the frustration out.”From the beginning, Gauff navigated familiar difficulties with her serve and forehand, double-faulting five times in the opening set.However, no part of Gauff’s game was functional, not even her trustworthy two-handed backhand.She haemorrhaged unforced errors from all parts of the court, finishing with 26 to only three winners.“I credit it to her because she forced me to play like that,” said Gauff.

“It’s not like I just woke up and, yeah, today was a bad day, but bad days are often caused by your opponent.So she did well.”While Gauff looked like a shadow of herself, this result was a testament to the significant improvements Svitolina has made in the second half of her career.She did not put a foot wrong.During the early days of her career, the 31-year-old would have played passively and prayed for her opponents to miss, particularly in the grand slam tournaments when she often struggled.

Here, she planted herself on top of the baseline and robbed time from Gauff by taking the ball early, putting the American under constant pressure with her bold aggression,Svitolina also served well, hitting her spots on her first delivery and she continually looked for chances to attack on her forehand, which averaged an immense 78mph halfway through the second set and guided her to a well-deserved victory,“I tried to trust myself, and my coach always tells me that I have to trust myself,” said Svitolina,“When I’m fresh, when I’m mentally ready to face difficult situations, then I can play well,I can be tough on the court.

”Earlier, Sabalenka bulldozed the 18-year-old Jovic to continue her run through the draw.She continues to extend one of the great grand slam records of this century.She has now reached the semi-finals in 12 of her last 13 majors, the one anomaly being her grim experience at the French Open in 2024 where she was desperately struggling with food poisoning during her quarter-final loss to Mirra Andreeva.Even then, she only narrowly fell, losing in three tight sets.“When I’m in the tournament, I’m not thinking about that, but sometimes we all stop for a second and we think the level we were able to reach, it sounds really incredible and tough to believe,” Sabalenka said.

“For sure, sometimes I just think that it’s unbelievable what I was able to achieve.”
recentSee all
A picture

Treasury announces business rate support package worth more than £80m a year – as it happened

The Treasury has unveiled a support package worth more than £80m a year for pubs and live music venues in England and Wales, in a climbdown that follows a fierce backlash against plans to overhaul business rates.Trade bodies had warned that Rachel Reeves’s changes to business rates, announced at the chancellor’s November budget, would trigger widespread closures and job losses in the hospitality sector, particularly in pubs.On Tuesday, the government announced financial support to mitigate the effect of the rates shake-up, after officials admitted that they had not foreseen its total financial impact.The package, final details of which were still being hammered out on Monday night, is expected to be worth more than £80m a year, over three years, for pubs and gig venues.Dan Tomlinson, the exchequer secretary to the Treasury, said every pub in England and Wales would get 15% off its new business rates bill from 1 April, worth an average of £1,650 for each

A picture

Pubs and live music venues to get support after business rates backlash

The Treasury has unveiled a support package worth tens of millions of pounds for pubs and live music venues in England and Wales, in a climbdown that follows a fierce backlash against plans to overhaul business rates.Trade bodies had warned that Rachel Reeves’s changes to business rates, announced at the chancellor’s November budget, would trigger widespread closures and job losses in the hospitality sector, particularly in pubs.On Tuesday, the government announced financial support to mitigate the effect of the rates shake-up, after officials admitted that they had not foreseen its total financial impact.The package, final details of which were still being hammered out on Monday night, is expected to be worth nearly £100m for pubs and gig venues.Dan Tomlinson, the exchequer secretary to the Treasury, said every pub in England and Wales would get 15% off its new business rates bill from 1 April, worth an average of £1,650 for each

A picture

How ICE is using facial recognition in Minnesota

Immigration enforcement agents across the US are increasingly relying on a new smartphone app with facial recognition technology.The app is named Mobile Fortify. Simply pointing a phone’s camera at their intended target and scanning the person’s face allows Mobile Fortify to pull data on an individual from multiple federal and state databases, some of which federal courts have deemed too inaccurate for arrest warrants.The US Department of Homeland Security has used Mobile Fortify to scan faces and fingerprints in the field more than 100,000 times, according to a lawsuit brought by Illinois and Chicago against the federal agency, earlier this month. That’s a drastic shift from immigration enforcement’s earlier use of facial recognition technology, which was otherwise limited largely to investigations and ports of entry and exit, legal experts say

A picture

UK ministers accept $1m from Meta amid social media ban consultation

Ministers have accepted $1m (£728,000) from Meta, the US tech and social media company, to build AI systems for defence, national security and transport, sparking warnings about the UK government’s “alarmingly close relationship with Trump-supporting US tech giants”.The money from Mark Zuckerberg’s company will be used to pay experts to “develop cutting-edge AI solutions … to support national security and defence teams”, the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) announced on Tuesday.The money will pay for four British AI experts, coordinated by the government-funded Alan Turing Institute, to “play a pivotal role in rewiring our healthcare, police, transport systems and more”, said Ian Murray, the minister for data and digital government.The move comes after Meta executives had 50 meetings with ministers in the last two years for which data was available, one of the highest levels of direct access of any technology company, a Guardian investigation found.The government is consulting on a ban on social media use by under-16s, which would have a major effect on Meta’s Instagram platform

A picture

Sri Lanka v England: third men’s cricket one-day international – live

Gone! Rashid lures Hasaranga into a chip which just isn’t timed. Duckett takes the catch as if he’d never dropped one a few minutes ago.41st over: Sri Lanka 263-7 (Rathnayake 94, Hasaranga 9) Hasaranga fancies this. Facing Curran, he plays himself in for two balls, then strokes a gorgeous off-drive on the up for four, folowed by a pull for four more. Eleven off the over!40th over: Sri Lanka 252-7 (Rathnayake 92, Hasaranga 0) Meanwhile Rathnayake motors on into the 90s

A picture

Elina Svitolina humbles Coco Gauff to set up Sabalenka semi in Australian Open

Coco Gauff is known across her sport for her mental toughness and problem-solving abilities, her tendency to grind out victories from unenviable positions. However, down 1-6, 0-3, 0-30 on Tuesday night and sinking quickly, the 21-year-old has rarely looked as helpless on a tennis court as when she expressed her despair to her support team: “She’s outdoing me in everything,” she said.This time, there was no way back for the third seed as Elina Svitolina ended a courageous, focused performance by securing the most significant result of the Australian Open so far, completely dismantling Gauff 6-1, 6-2 to reach her first semi-final in Melbourne.Svitolina, the 12th seed, will next face Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1 and two-time Australian Open champion. Earlier on Tuesday, Sabalenka dismantled the 29th seed Iva Jovic 6-3, 6-0 to reach her fourth consecutive semi-final here