MELBOURNE, Australia — Jessica Pegula‘s Australian Open marketing campaign via the primary three rounds had been constructed on unequalled composure and sensible tennis. On Monday, she added one thing else: an announcement.
The world No. 6 didn’t just defeat defending champion and shut good friend Madison Keys in Rod Laver Area, she utterly dismantled her recreation with intelligence and self-discipline, exhibiting a stage of tactical nous that feels each bit like a participant who is able to win a Grand Slam.
The 31-year-old superior to the quarterfinals with a 6-3, 6-4 victory over ninth-seeded Keys to increase her flawless run — and continues to be but to drop a set.
This was already probably the most intriguing matchup of the day. It was arrange as a conflict between Keys’ explosive, highly effective shotmaking versus Pegula’s effectivity. What unfolded was, nicely, that, but additionally one thing a bit extra telling. It was a lesson in easy methods to fight an opponent’s strengths with form, selection and strain.
“[I’m] proud of the best way I used to be capable of serve I believe on some actually massive, key factors, execute my technique,” Pegula stated after the match.
“I’ve been seeing, hitting, transferring, I really feel like very nicely this complete match, and to have the ability to hold that up towards such an excellent participant as Madi and defending champion was going to be lots harder of a process right this moment, however I believe I used to be nonetheless ready to try this rather well.”
From the opening video games of the primary set, Pegula’s intent was clear. She was at all times on the entrance foot, stepping ahead on Keys’ serve to interrupt early, and had service video games with impeccable placement to continuously drive motion in her opponent, reasonably than permitting Keys to plant herself and get the higher hand in factors with aggressive returns.
Extensive serves, angled groundstrokes, looping forehands, slices, after which a flat cross-court strike. Something that prevented the 2025 winner from discovering rhythm, Pegula did.
Keys nonetheless produced the spectacular, after all. There have been massive serves, and moments of brilliance, together with a number of massive backhand winners down the road that reminded everybody why her ceiling stays as excessive as anybody’s on tour — and Pegula that she’d want to remain constant and never drop her stage or the specter of a Keys comeback would at all times be there.
However the issue for Keys was her personal consistency. Too typically she ended a degree with a winner, or Pegula’s selection and depth pressured an error.
The numbers instructed the story in a very brutal manner.
After 10 video games, with Pegula holding a 6-3, 1-0 lead, Keys had hit 14 winners but additionally 20 unforced errors. Pegula? 5 and 5. By the tip of the match, Keys completed with a whopping 26 winners however 28 unforced errors. Pegula? Twelve and 13.
It was high-risk, highly effective, ballstriking tennis clashing towards a high-IQ, regular recreation, and the latter is what prevailed.
The second set adopted a lot the identical sample with Pegula holding a slight lead the entire manner. It was a bodily edge, but additionally a psychological one. She continued to soak up the Keys serve, she would not blink, she pressured the additional balls, hit the angles, and her execution underneath fourth-round strain was immense.
Even on serve, the place an argument may very well be made that Pegula may be barely weak, there was a transparent distinction. Only one double fault in contrast with six.
“It was actually necessary to give attention to my serve,” Pegula stated. “It was very powerful on that one facet serving into the solar. I misplaced that recreation. And I used to be sort of, like, you understand what … she hit a pair good photographs, no matter. Simply do not dwell on it that a lot.
“I wanted to essentially keep centered. I believe simply hold my ft transferring, hold my physique weight going ahead. Typically while you get a bit of nervous or enjoying rather well, generally you sort of simply calm down, and it is onerous to try this towards somebody like Madi who can flip matches actually rapidly by hitting a few massive forehands and winners, and unexpectedly she hits a pair good serves, and it is already again to even.”
There was a lot added curiosity on this matchup. The 2 co-host “The Participant’s Field” podcast and are shut pals. It was the primary ladies’s Australian Open match between prime 10-seeded People since Serena Williams and Lindsay Davenport performed within the 2005 remaining.
Pegula now strikes into quarterfinals, enjoying extremely environment friendly tennis that may unravel most rivals. No units dropped and solely 17 video games misplaced.
For years her consistency has been admired and rightly so, however the critics had typically labeled her the nice quarterfinal common. Perhaps that is honest — she hadn’t damaged via that stage of a Slam till 2024.
She arrived in Melbourne nonetheless chasing that main title and those self same questions nonetheless lingered. When will she lastly break via? When will she lastly declare the last word? Is she “too constant”? Are there sufficient weapons? Is she nice with out being a champion?
For Pegula, it is all simply outdoors noise that she would not take into consideration.
“I felt like if I am making quarters of a Slam, that is fairly good,” she stated. “So I by no means actually understood the negativity in direction of it, or I assume simply the headline of, you understand, how does she get previous the quarters?
“I imply, the truth that I am placing myself in that many positions I really feel like is a feat in itself. … [At the] US Open, I [made] finals, made semis, and that felt like regular. So to me it would not actually really feel that a lot totally different. I believe possibly even now I am much more comfy realizing that I’ve gotten additional, it would not really feel, I do not know, as massive of a deal to be within the quarters.”
It is performances like this, towards the defending champion no much less, that supply the very best counter-argument. It is performances like this that additionally recommend possibly that breakthrough is not coming, possibly it is really already in play. And possibly it is time to shift the narratives.
Pegula’s process would not get any simpler: She’ll face No. 4 seed Amanda Anisimova within the quarterfinal. Although Pegula is 3-0 towards her, this would be the first time they’ve performed on the Grand Slam stage.

















































