The American specialist: Pegula wins 8th straight slam match vs compatriots to reach her first Australian Open Semi-finals The Bridge Chronicle
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The American specialist: Pegula wins 8th straight slam match vs compatriots to reach her first Australian Open Semi-finals

The 31-year-old continues her dominance over her compatriots, marking her 14th win in 15 matches against Americans, securing a spot in the semi-finals against Rybakina.

Ashutosh Sahoo

After three consecutive heartbreaks in the final eight between 2021 and 2023, Jessica Pegula has finally broken through the "quarter-final wall" at Melbourne Park. In an all-American showdown on Rod Laver Arena, the 6th-seeded Pegula dismantled the 4th-seeded Amanda Anisimova 6-2, 7-6(1) in 1 hour and 35 minutes.

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The stats: Precision vs. Unforced errors

While both players entered the match without having dropped a set in the tournament, the statistical gulf on Wednesday was vast. Pegula’s "keep it clean" philosophy triumphed over Anisimova’s high-risk, high-error output.

Match StatisticsJessica Pegula (6)Amanda Anisimova (4)
Winners2018
Unforced Errors2144
Aces62
Double Faults27
1st Serve Points Won70%58%
2nd Serve Points Won64%39%

Match breakdown: Flipping the switch

Pegula dominated the first set, racing to a 5-1 lead in just 20 minutes and closed it out with an ace. However, the second set tested her resolve as Anisimova began to play with nothing to lose.

  • The second set: Anisimova earned her first break for a 5-3 lead, threatening to push the match to a decider.

  • The response: Pegula immediately broke back, eventually forcing a tiebreak.

  • The tiebreak clinic: Pegula flipped the switch, reeling off seven straight points after an early 3-1 lead. A frustrated Anisimova was seen striking the court with her racquet as her unforced error count mounted to 44.

I’ve been waiting for the time where I could kind of break through. I’ve always felt like, even matches I’ve lost here, that I’ve played well. I just told myself to gear right back up; I really didn't want to go to a third set
Jessica Pegula

A historic "American" run

Pegula is not just winning; she is rewriting the history of domestic dominance in Melbourne. She is the first American woman since Gigi Fernandez in 1993 to defeat three compatriots in a single Australian Open:

  1. 2nd Round: McCartney Kessler

  2. 4th Round: Madison Keys (Defending Champion)

  3. Quarter-Final: Amanda Anisimova

Semi-Final outlook: Cracking Rybakina

The road to a maiden Grand Slam title now goes through the 5th seed, Elena Rybakina, who earlier stunned world No. 2 Iga Swiatek. The head-to-head record between Pegula and Rybakina is perfectly split at 3-3 (or 6 total meetings), promising a "cool as a cucumber" clash of styles.

She has a massive serve, big groundies... she’s been playing some great tennis. I’m going to do my best to hopefully crack the code on her
Jessica Pegula

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