Emma Navarro reaches first Grand Slam semifinal at U.S. Open
Sept 3, 2024; Flushing, NY, USA; Emma Navarro (USA) celebrates her victory over Paula Badosa (ESP) on day nine of the 2024 U.S. Open tennis tournament at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Frey-Imagn Images Emma Navarro reversed momentum by winning the last six games to defeat Spain's Paula Badosa 6-2, 7-5 and reach her first Grand Slam semifinal at the U.S. Open on Tuesday in New York.
The 13th-seeded Navarro, who had upset defending champion and third-seeded Coco Gauff to advance to the quarterfinals, took the first set on Tuesday only to see 26th-seeded Badosa stake a 5-1 advantage in the second set at Arthur Ashe Stadium.
"After I got it back to 5-2, I had a little bit of inkling that it might be two sets," Navarro said in her on-court interview after the match. "I just wanted to stay really tough and stick in there. I can't see the future, but maybe today I could a little bit. Even if I did lose the second set, I wanted to set the tone for the third set."
Navarro, 23, broke Badosa using a variety of slices, volleys and angles to close to 5-3. Badosa twice double-faulted when serving at 5-4.
After winning 12 of 14 points to even the set at 5-5, Navarro won every point on serve to go up 6-5.
A former NCAA champion at Virginia who was born in New York, Navarro used her forehand drop shot effectively to score winners, including the first point and match point.
She had won the first set in 29 minutes with the help of six winners (to five for Badosa) and putting 69 percent of her first serves in play. Badosa, a former World No. 2, had 16 unforced errors.
By the end of the match lasting one hour and 12 minutes, Navarro converted 5 of her 8 break points, to 2 of 6 for Badosa, and 59 percent of points on her second serve, to 26 percent for her opponent.
"I never had the momentum in this match," said Badosa, who was trying to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal and had won 24 of her last 30 matches. "I played four or five games OK. It was 5-1, but I never felt myself on the court.
"I lost, I don't know, 20 points almost in a row," she said. "It's very weird for me because I'm quite a consistent player, so I wasn't expecting that, either."
Navarro, who was ranked No. 61 in the world last September, is guaranteed a top-10 debut next week. She captured her first WTA Tour title in January in Hobart, Australia, and made her first major quarterfinal at Wimbledon.
Badosa was 1-0 in her career against Navarro, a 1-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory in the first round at Rome in May.
Navarro will play either No. 2 seed Aryna Sabalenka or No. 7 seed and Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen in the semifinals.
Six women's singles players in the last 40 years have reached the U.S. Open semifinals without a previous win in the main draw: Navarro, Steffi Graf (1985), Venus Williams (1997), Yanina Wickmayer (2009), Bianca Andreescu (2019) and Emma Raducanu (2021).
--Field Level Media
2026 Home Run Derby Props: Three Best Bets for Monday Night
Ranking Three No. 2 Wide Receivers Better Than Stefon Diggs
Why MLB's Move of the Home Run Derby to Netflix Hurts Fans
Conor McGregor Lets UFC Momentum Slip Away at UFC 329
Why the Trail Blazers’ Ja Morant Gamble Could Pay Off
- UFC 329 predictions: Best bets for Conor McGregor vs. Max Holloway
- Spain vs. Belgium Best Bets: Three Picks for Friday's World Cup Quarterfinal
- MLB Picks Today: Jack Flaherty, Aaron Nola Strikeout Props for Phillies vs. Tigers
- France vs. Morocco Best Bets: Top Picks for World Cup Quarterfinal Clash
- Big 12 Sleeper Picks: Three Teams That Could Win the Conference in 2026
- Scottish Open Predictions: Top Bets, Longshots and First-Round Picks
- MLB Picks for Today: Why the Marlins and Yankees Offer Betting Value

