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No. 1 Barty to face Pliskova in 1st Wimbledon final for both

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Australia's Ashleigh Barty celebrates after defeating Germany's Angelique Kerber in the women's singles semifinals match on day ten of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Thursday, July 8, 2021. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

WIMBLEDON ā€“ It was difficult for Ash Barty to imagine that a trip to her first Wimbledon final was just around the corner when she stopped playing at last month's French Open with a hip injury.

Or even when she was two points from being pushed to a third set by Angelique Kerber in their semifinal at the All England Club.

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Barty does not let obstacles trouble her for too long. She figures out a way and pushes forward. That's why she's ranked No. 1 and it's why she stands one win from a second Grand Slam title after beating 2018 champion Kerber 6-3, 7-6 (3) on Thursday.

ā€œI've had ups and downs and everything in between and I wouldn't change one day or one moment or one, kind of, road that we've taken in my path and my journey,ā€ said Barty, who was the 2011 junior champion at the All England Club and stepped away from tennis for almost two years starting in 2014 because of burnout. ā€œIt's been unique. It's been incredible. It's been tough. There have been so many things that led to this point."

Her opponent in Saturday's final will be No. 8 seed Karolina Pliskova, who emerged from a power-hitting and serving display to come back to defeat No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka 5-7, 6-4, 6-4.

ā€œSuper proud about the way how I handled the situation out there," Pliskova said.

Pliskova produced 14 aces, Sabalenka 18, and the combined total was the most in a women's match at Wimbledon since they started keeping such stats in 1977. The difference in this match, ultimately: Pliskova was broken just once, Sabalenka twice.

After going 0 for 8 on break points in the first set, the first set she dropped in six matches, Pliskova ā€œgot a bit frustrated," she acknowledged afterward.

But she went 1 for 1 in that category in each of the last two sets.

ā€œShe just returned like crazy ā€” like, really good ā€” and I couldnā€™t do anything,ā€ said Sabalenka, the only top-20 seed in the draw without a major quarterfinal appearance until now.

Neither Pliskova ā€” whose coach, Sascha Bajin, used to work with Naomi Osaka and was Serena Williams' hitting partner ā€” nor Barty had ever been past the fourth round at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament.

ā€œComing into this tournament, the dream was to make the second week. ... Sascha was super confident in me,ā€ said Pliskova, a 29-year-old from the Czech Republic who was the runner-up at the 2016 U.S. Open to Kerber and used to be ranked No. 1. ā€œHe said, ā€˜I told you, you were going to make the final.ā€™ā€

The 25-year-old Barty won the 2019 French Open and has been atop the WTA rankings for 1 1/2 years.

She is the first woman from Australia to reach the title match at Wimbledon since Evonne Goolagong won the trophy 1980; Barty has been wearing an outfit intended as a tribute to Goolagong this fortnight.

ā€œNow to kind of give myself a chance to create some history, almost in a way thatā€™s a tribute to her, is really exciting,ā€ Barty said.

She arrived in England not having competed since June 3, when she withdrew during her second-round match in Paris, her left hip in too much pain to continue.

ā€œTo be honest, it was going to be touch and go. Everything had to be spot on to give myself a chance to play pain-free and to play knowing that I could trust my body,ā€ Barty said. ā€œIf you told me a month ago weā€™d be sitting in this position, I really wouldnā€™t have thought that we would even get close.ā€

On Thursday, she faced a big test in the second set, which Kerber was two points from owning when Barty served at deuce while trailing 5-2. The full-capacity crowd was backing the comeback effort for the 33-year-old German, too, with shouts of ā€œCome on, Angie!ā€ and ā€œGo on, Kerber!ā€

But Barty steeled herself to hold there, then broke to get within 5-4 with a cross-court forehand passing winner.

That was part of a 38-16 advantage in total winners for Barty, responsible more than anything else for her triumph. And this was remarkable: She compiled that many point-ending shots while making only 16 unforced errors.

ā€œA great level, the best level Iā€™ve played in quite some time,ā€ Barty said. ā€œAngie is an incredible competitor. She brought out the best in me today.ā€

It was a rather entertaining and, from point to point, rather even contest, two talented baseliners willing to try a volley, drop shot or lob when required. They were each other's equal for long exchanges ā€” in all, 22 points lasted at least nine strokes, with Kerber winning a dozen.

Their approaches are different, though. Kerber is a left-hander who hits flat groundstrokes and is just fine with handling foesā€™ low shots, often dropping a knee onto the turf to get leverage.

Barty is a righty who relies on heavy topspin for a forehand packed with power, and her slice backhand can produce tricky bounces on the grass.

She ended up with an 8-0 edge in aces and 18-9 in forehand winners.

ā€œI was trying to playing my game,ā€ Kerber said. ā€œBut she had always a good answer.ā€

___

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