
Battle of the teenagers: the us open final | thearticle
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19-year-old Canadian Leylah Fernandez versus the 18-year-old British player Emma Raducanu in the US Open Women’s singles final. To say it’s an unlikely scenario is an understatement. The
Men’s final will be contested between Novak Djokovic and Daniil Medvedev, the number one versus the number two seed. Yet in the Women’s we are talking about Fernandez, world number 73 vs
Emma Raducanu, the world number 150. It’s almost unimaginable. Which means, on paper, Fernandez is the favourite. She’s also beaten four high seeds in consecutive matches. But they’ve each
been three-set nailbiters and one would think she must be mentally exhausted. Raducanu, despite having had to qualify, hasn’t lost a single set throughout and will surely be the fresher of
the two. As complete underdogs they’ve both traded on the nerves of their far more experienced opponents. The second-seeded Aryna Sabalenka more or less imploded in her final service game
with a couple of wild double faults and splayed groundshots, finally handing the semi-final to Fernandez. Against Raducanu in the other semis, Maria Sakkari repeatedly sent forehands sailing
over the baseline, her elbow tight with nerves. So it’ll be fascinating to see who deals better with the situation in the final. Will it be the left-handed Canadian or the right-handed
Brit? A leftie vs rightie usually makes for an interesting contest and this could be an intriguing future rivalry – think Navratilova vs Evert, Lendl vs Connors, Borg vs McEnroe. The
swinging leftie serve can be a nightmare for opponents but Raducanu has the benefit of a left-handed coach in Andrew Richardson, so she will have had plenty of practice. Brits are rubbing
their eyes in disbelief at the rise and rise of Emma Raducanu. Just a few months ago, prior to Wimbledon, she was ranked 343 in the world. If she loses in the final, she will be ranked
number 32. Should she win, she is projected to reach number 23 and guaranteed a seeding at the Aussie Open in January. No more qualifying or scrabbling around at minor tournaments for Emma
Raducanu. And consider some of these statistics. Emma Raducanu is the: * first qualifier, male or female, to reach a Grand Slam final * youngest British Grand Slam finalist in 62 years *
first British woman to reach a Grand Slam final in 44 years * and the first British woman to reach a US Open final in 53 years. One wonders when she’ll wake up to the enormity of what she’s
achieving. In the meantime, it’s one hell of a story. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to
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