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++[WatchLive]!]* Iga Swiatek vs Jessica Pegula LIVE Broadcast ON TV Channel 4,September 2024
++[WatchLive]!]* Iga Swiatek vs Jessica Pegula LIVE Broadcast ON TV Channel 4,September 2024
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The U.S. Open, a grand slam tennis tournament which features some of the greatest tennis players in the world, continues on Wednesday, September 4, 2024 with the quarterfinal round of competition at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens, New York. Follow the article to watch the US OPEN match live stream online.
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There are two matches at the US Open today, highlighted by No. 1-ranked Iga Swiatek against No. 6 Jessica Pegula. If you're looking to keep up with the action, then tune in to the Tennis Channel. It carries live coverage and features the biggest highlights from the world of tennis on Center Court and Center Court Live.
Iga Swiatek vs. Jessica Pegula
Looking at the paths these two women took to get here, it seems as if their collision was pre-ordained. Neither has lost a set, or been pushed past 6-4 more than once. Now Swiatek and Pegula will meet for the second time in three years in a US Open quarterfinal.
Will they pick up where they left off that day, when Swiatek won 6-3, 7-6 (4)? Pegula might hope so. In the second set, she raised her game significantly and chased Swiatek all the way to a match-ending tiebreaker.
In the two years since, the Pole and the American have played four times, and each has won twice. When Swiatek wins, she wins big: 6-3, 6-0 in Doha; and 6-1, 6-0 in Cancun. In Canada last year, Pegula edged Swiatek 6-4 in the third on a hard court, that should be a close approximation of what they’ll play on this time.
“I know you don't want the cliche answer,” Pegula said of her upcoming quarterfinal, “but it’s just kind of one match at a time, and every day kind of feels different.”
Pegula likes a fairly quick court for a couple of reasons: It lets her use her opponents’ pace against them, and it helps speed her own low-lining shots through the surface. Since the start of the summer hard-court season in Toronto, she’s 13-1 with a title and a runner-up finish.
“Against Jessie, it’s never easy,” Swiatek says. “It’s going to be, for sure, a tough one, because she plays really flat ball with no spin. You have to really work low on your legs. For sure she’s in a good rhythm right now, and she won so many matches past weeks, that for sure it’s going to be a challenge.”
Swiatek knows that Pegula will likely aim the majority of those flat shots toward her forehand, which can be rushed. But the history of their Grand Slam performances says she’ll be ready. She has five major titles, including one at the US Open, while Pegula is 0-6 in Slam quarterfinals.