Alexander Zverev makes his way to the US Open final and meets his friend Thiem



[ad_1]

The first Grand Slam title is within his grasp, Alexander Zverev follows in Boris Becker’s footsteps after a nervous race to catch up: the 23-year-old from Hamburg reached the final of one of the four major tennis tournaments for the first time at the US Open.

In the semifinals, Zverev returned from an almost desperate situation and defeated the Spanish Pablo Carreño Busta at 3:22 am with 3: 6, 2: 6, 6: 3, 6: 4, 6: 3. Zverev still lacks one victory in New York to become the first German since Becker was crowned Grand Slam champion in men’s singles at the 1996 Australian Open.

“I couldn’t be happier, but there is still another step to take,” said Zverev, who became the first German since Rainer Schüttler to reach a Grand Slam final at the Australian Open in 2003: “I could hardly believe it: I play in a Grand Slam semi-final as a favorite and I’m 0-2 behind. But I’m in my first Grand Slam final, that’s the most important thing. “

For the first time in his career, Zverev reached two sets behind, for which Becker praised him as Eurosport-Expert: “It’s incredible what a mentality monster Sascha Zverev has become.”

On Sunday (starting at 10pm live on DAZN), the youngest grand finalist in ten years will face world number three Dominic Thiem of Austria, who beat last year’s finalist Daniil Medvedev (Russia) 6: 2 , 7: 6 (9: 7), 7: 6 (7: 5) defeated. Zverev is good friends with Thiem, but the world number seven had lost his first Grand Slam semi-final in Melbourne in January. In nine comparisons, Zverev was a loser seven times.



[ad_2]