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Daniil Medvedev outlasts Andrey Rublev, heat to advance to U.S. Open semis
Danielle Parhizkaran-USA TODAY Sports

Former champion Daniil Medvedev defeated fellow Russian Andrey Rublev 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 to move into the semifinals at the U.S. Open, surviving a searing September day in New York on Wednesday.

The players managed to endure 2 hours, 48 minutes of competition in the scorching afternoon sun, with a heat index that reached as high as 106 degrees. Both Medvedev, the No. 3 seed, and Rublev, seeded No. 8, gritted out the match but clearly felt the effects of the heat as they sometimes looked dazed as they sat on their respective sides with ice wraps, towels and water.

"You cannot imagine. One player gonna die and they're gonna see," Medvedev said loudly enough for the television cameras to pick up as he toweled off in the third set.

Medvedev needed two medical timeouts for inhaler treatment.

Despite the brutal conditions, Rublev didn't fall easily to his longtime friend. Rublev, with Medvedev up 5-4 in the final set, fought off four match points before finally hitting the ball into the net to end the game, and the match.

The two met at midcourt for a brief hug, clearly too exhausted and too overheated for much more interaction.

"It was brutal. The only good thing I see in these conditions is that both suffer. Usually there's one that suffers. It was tough for both of us," said Medvedev, who won the 2021 title and will play in his fourth U.S. Open semifinal on Friday.

The match was much closer than the final line score indicated. Medvedev won only eight more points than his opponent -- 103 to 95 -- but Rublev couldn't come up with the key points when he needed them. Despite the close points differential, Medvedev won 62 percent of the total games compared to 38 percent for Rublev.

Rublev also hit 32 winners and 37 unforced errors, compared to 26 and 40, respectively, for Medvedev.

Rublev fell to 0-9 in quarterfinals of Grand Slam tournaments. He jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first set and was up at least one break point in each set but couldn't capitalize. While Rublev broke Medvedev's serve five times, Medvedev converted nine of his 19 chances, providing the difference.

The conditions made it difficult to execute a game plan.

"I tried to go for it, tried to run and he did the same," Medvedev said. "Before points I was like, ‘Wow, he can't run anymore', so I tried to go and make him run and run and run, but he was there all the time. But we were tired all the time. Brutal conditions and super tough to win."

Medvedev will play the winner of Wednesday night's match between No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz of Spain and No. 12 Alexander Zverev of Germany.

When asked at center court about his level of play in New York, Medvedev clearly was confident.

"Ten out of 10," he said.

This article first appeared on Field Level Media and was syndicated with permission.

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