Tatiana Golovin ended the run of China's Zheng Jie at the
Nasdaq-100 Open with a scrappy 3-6 6-3 6-2 victory in the
quarter-finals on Wednesday.
Men's sixth seed Ivan Ljubicic had an easier outing after he
produced 34 winners to sweep past Argentine Agustin Calleri 7-6
6-3.
The win kept the Croatian second behind Roger Federer in match
victories this season. While the world number one boasts a 25-1
record in 2006, Ljubicic stands at 24-3.
"Finally, I'm happy with how I played, Ljubicic told reporters.
"I served amazingly and dominated my service games.
"I'm number two in points earned this year, I feel like number
two in the world."
Ljubicic broke once per set to notch up his fourth successive win
over the 65th-ranked Calleri.
The Croatian could face his Davis Cup team mate in the
semi-finals if Mario Ancic defeats Argentine third seed David
Nalbandian later on Wednesday.
French teenager Golovin needed over two hours to claim victory
on Zheng's fourth double fault. Zheng was the first Chinese woman
reach the last eight at Miami.
The match was plagued by 27 break points as holding serve became
a chore. Golovin converted eight of her 14 chances, while Jie was
successful on six of 13.
The 18-year-old Florida-based Golovin next plays the winner of
the all-Russian showdown between fourth seed Maria Sharapova and
2004 Roland Garros winner Anastasia Myskina.
With Golovin yet to beat either of the Russians, the Frenchwoman
knows she will have her work cut out.
"It is good to get to the semi-final," Golovin told reporters.
"It will be a different situation and atmosphere.
"I want to go out and play my best, I have nothing to lose."
Golovin was caught off-guard by the game of Zheng. "I was
surprised at how well she played.
"She was taking the ball early and going for her shots.
"It took me time to find my rhythm but then it go better. "I'm
happy to be in the semi-finals, it will be great."
Golovin struck 25 winners and was helped by 45 unforced errors
from Jie.
(Reuters via China Daily March 30, 2006)