Emma Raducanu is one match away from winning the US Open after making history as the first qualifier to reach a Grand Slam final.
Raducanu, 18, earned a place in the record books by defeating 17th-seeded Maria Sakkari 6-1, 6-4 in straight sets during a stunning semi-finalon Thursday night.
Now the British tennis sensation, ranked 150th in the world, will face Canadian rival, Leylah Fernandez, 19, in the fight for the title at Arthur Ashe Stadium on Saturday.
Image: Raducanu hits a forehand on day 11 of the 2021 U.S. Open
It will be the first major final between two teens since the 1999 US Open, which saw Serena Williams, 17, thrash 18-year-old Martina Hingis.
Here’s 10 reasons why Raducanu can claim victory in tonight’s match.
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The Duchess of Cambridge has wished the teenage British tennis ace the ‘best of luck’ ahead of the US Open final
She hasn’t dropped a single set
Raducanu became the first player this century to make the second week of her first two Grand Slam main draw appearances.
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Over nine matches, including three qualifying games, to reach the main draw, Raducanu has yet to concede a single set at Flushing Meadows.
Meanwhile, Fernandez has been forced to play three sets in her last four matches.
Image: Both Leylah Fernandez and Emma Raducanu have never reached a Grand Slam final before
No pressure
Both Raducanu and Fernandez are unseeded at the US Open, and appear unflustered by better-known and more successful challengers.
But when asked about expectation to win the final, Raducanu joked: “I’m a qualifier so there’s no pressure on me!”
Image: Emma Raducanu joked: “I’m a qualifier so there’s no pressure on me!” ahead of the US Open final.
“Fearless” youth
Raducanu is the youngest Slam finalist since Maria Sharapova won Wimbledon, aged 17, in 2004.
Sakkari, 26, said of both US Open finalists: “They are both young. They play fearless.
“They have nothing to lose playing against us.”
And Raducanu agrees: “Being young, there is an element of you do play completely free.”
Evenly matched
Neither has reached a Grand Slam final, meaning it will be an equally new experience for both.
Fernandez’s best past performance at a Slam was reaching the third round at Roland Garros last year.
Image: Fernandez’s best performance was reaching the third round of Roland Garros last year
Previous victory
Both women first met when they were playing in under-12 tournaments – before clashing in the Wimbledon junior tournament’s second round in 2018.
Raducanu won three years ago – with fans believing she can do the same again when they share a court for the first time in a tour-level match, albeit with much more at stake.
Stamina
Raducanu has already proved she is fresher than Fernandez.
Despite playing nine games compared to her opponent’s six, the Brit has spent less time on court – beating all of her competitors in less time than the Canadian’s shortest win, one hour and 45 minutes, over Croatian Ana Konjuh in the opening round.
Image: Raducanu shakes hands with Sakkari after their match
Raducanu obliterated Sakkari, a highly experienced rival, in 84 minutes in what has been hailed a “gladiatorial” performance.
Star quality
Virginia Wade, the last British woman to reach this stage of the US Open 53 years ago, is in no doubt of Raducanu’s talent.
“She is a star, no question,” Wade told Sky News.
“I think that she’s one of the people who looks good young and will always be one of the top contenders.”
Pride of Britain
Raducanu, the youngest British major finalist in 62 years, can count on the nation’s support, with Kate Middleton, Boris Johnson, Liam Gallagher and Marcus Rashford congratulating the teen on her semi-final win.
The Duchess of Cambridge praised Raducanu’s “incredible achievement”, tweeting: “We will all be rooting for you.”
Image: Emma Raducanu in her debut in British Vogue magazine Pic: Scott Trindle
Self-belief
Raducanu told Sky News how she was “feeling good” when she arrived for a practice session ahead of the US Open final on Friday.
But despite her extraordinary achievements, Raducanu remains extremely humble.
Speaking on court after her win, she said: “I knew I had some sort of level inside of me that was similar to these girls, but I didn’t know if I was able to maintain it over a set or over two sets.
“To be able to do it and play the best players in the world and beat them, I honestly can’t believe it.”
And she has credited her “amazing” team in New York for her incredible success.
Image: The teen’s success on the court has earned her a spread in Vogue magazine. Pic: Scott Trindle
Fame and fortune
Before reaching the US Open, Raducanu’s career winnings totalled around £219,591.
But her place in the final has guaranteed her a runners up prize of at least £900,000 – while winning the title would earn her £1.8m.
Now she is on course to eclipse the popularity of many fellow sports stars, with some tipping her to be as “famous and well-known as Rihanna” – while her success has already earned her a feature in British Vogue.
The Boston and Skegness MP also acknowledged the need to update infrastructure in Britain so that it can cope with a changing climate.
In an interview in London ahead of the COP30 climate summit, he said: “Climate change is real, right? Everything changes, you have to adapt to it, you have to maintain and update sea level defences.”
Image: Richard Tice gave up leadership of Reform to Nigel Farage before the election last year. Pic: Reuters
He said he has “sea level issues”, in his constituency on the east coast, though would not specify whether they were rising.
Mr Tice maintained the sun and volcanoes were the “two main drivers” of climate change, and the climate has been changing for “millions of years, always will be”.
While the climate does consistently change, what worries scientists is that it is currently doing so at its fastest rate in at least a million years, making it hard for the natural world to adapt.
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‘They’ve not got a clue’
Mr Tice would not be drawn on whether he accepted the climate was warming at an unprecedented rate.
“From the data that I’ve seen, from previous ice core data, I think the answer to that is questionable,” he said.
He said “thousands of scientists” agreed with him, and cited a statistical analysis published by Statistics Norway, the country’s statistics bureau, that concluded the impact of emissions from human activity “does not appear to be strong enough to cause systematic changes in the temperature fluctuations during the last 200 years”.
However, 99.9% of climate-related studies agree climate change is mainly caused by humans, according to a 2021 survey of 88,125 peer-reviewed papers in the IOP Science journal.
Science and space body NASA says “human activity is the principal cause” of unprecedentedly fast warming, while 234 UN scientists (the IPCC) call it “unequivocal” that humans have caused “widespread and rapid changes” – in a report signed off by 195 governments.
Mr Tice said: “The IPCC accepts that sea level rise will continue for between 200 and 1,000 years. In other words, they’ve not got a clue what they’re talking about.”
One of Britain’s most versatile and acclaimed character actors has said new performers now need to be backed by the “bank of mummy and daddy” to reach the big time.
Eddie Marsan, star of major blockbusters such as the Sherlock Holmes films and Mission: Impossible III, as well as TV series Ray Donovan, and Supacell, said one thing he’s come to notice a lot over the years is how few of his castmates tend to share his working-class roots.
“If you want to be an actor in this country, and you come from a disadvantaged background, you have to be exceptional to have a hope of a career,” he says. “If you come from a privileged background, you can be mediocre.”
Speaking after being named one of the new vice presidents of drama school Mountview, and meeting students at the establishment where he too first trained, Marsan is keen to stress why it’s so necessary to support young actors who can’t fund their careers.
Image: Eddie Marsan at Mountview. Pic: Steve Gregson
“I came here when I was in my 20s… I was a bit lost, to be honest… I was serving an apprenticeship as a printer when Mountview offered me a place,” he says.
“There were no kinds of grants then, so for the first year an East End bookmaker paid my fees, then my mum and him got together and paid the second year, then Mountview gave me a scholarship for the third year, so I owe them everything.
“I didn’t earn a living as an actor for like six, seven years… years ago, actors could sign on and basically go on the dole while doing plays… now, in order to become an actor, you have to have the bank of mummy and daddy to bankroll you for those seven or eight years when you’re not going to earn a living.”
Marsan, Dame Elaine Paige and Hamilton actor Giles Terera are all taking on ambassadorial roles to mark Mountview’s 80th anniversary, joining Dame Judi Dench, who has been president of the school since 2006.
“The parties are fantastic,” he jokes. “The two dames, they get so half-cut, honestly, you have to get an Uber to get them home!”
But he’s rather more serious about TV and film’s “fashion for posh boys”.
Image: ‘If you come from a privileged background you can be mediocre’ in the TV and film industry, says Marsan. Pic: Steve Gregson
“When I went to America and I did 21 Grams and Vera Drake. I remember thinking, ‘great I’m going to have a career now,’ but I wasn’t the idea of what Britain was selling of itself.
“Coming back from Hollywood, a publicist said to me ‘when we get to London and do publicity for the film 21 Grams we’re going to come to you’… but no one was interested… I remember coming to Waterloo station and looking up and seeing all these posh actors selling Burberry coats and posters, and they hadn’t done anything compared to what I’d done, and yet they were the image that we were pushing as a country.”
A 2024 Creative Industries, Policy, and Evidence Centre report found 8% of British actors come from working class backgrounds, compared to 20% in the 70s and 80s.
“Even a gangster movie now, 40 years ago you would have something like The Long Good Friday or Get Carter with people like Michael Caine or Bob Hoskins who were real working-class actors playing those parts, now you have posh boys playing working-class characters.”
Within the last five or six years, he says there has at least been “more of an effort to include people of colour”.
Image: Pic: Steve Gregson
‘They’re scared of a level-playing field’
“What I find really interesting is, I’ve been an actor for 34 years, and I remember for the first 20 years going on a set and very rarely within the crew and within the cast would you see a black face, very rarely.
“One of the saving graces really are things now like Top Boy and Supacell, where you have members of the black community making dramas about their communities, that can’t be co-opted by the middle classes.”
“People like Laurence Fox complaining that it’s unfair, I never heard them complain when you never saw a black face, never once did they say anything. Now that people are trying to address it, they think it’s unfair…because they’re scared of a level playing field.”
Now, more than ever, Marsan says he feels compelled to point out what needs to change within the industry he works in.
“Look, social media is destroying cultural discourse. It’s making people become very binary… acting and drama is an exercise in empathy and if there’s one thing that we need more of at the moment it’s that.”
The chief executive of Israeli football team Maccabi Tel Aviv has denounced “falsehoods” and hatred being spewed about their supporters, leading to them being banned from Aston Villa, while accepting there is work to do to eradicate racism in the fan base.
Jack Angelides told Sky News there is a need for “toning down the incitement” ahead of tomorrow’s Europa League match at Villa Park, which will see more than 700 police officers deployed with protests anticipated outside by Palestinian and Israeli groups.
“We feared for the safety of our fans and it’s a huge responsibility,” Mr Angelides said in an interview at Villa Park.
“[With] a lot of incitement, we didn’t feel comfortable in taking that allocation and that’s a sad day in football because things like that shouldn’t happen.
“People have the right to freedom of speech, absolutely, but people don’t have the right to spew hatred.”
Birmingham’s Safety Advisory Group (SAG) announced last month that visiting fans will be barred from attending the game at Villa Park amid public safety concerns.
West Midlands Police also classified the Europa League match “high risk” and said the ban was necessary due to “current intelligence and previous incidents”.
That was a reference to Maccabi’s match at Ajax last November when their fans were attacked by locals, leading to five convictions.
No Maccabi fans were prosecuted. They were seen tearing down Palestinian flags and chanting anti-Arab abuse.
Image: ‘I’ve seen people coming up with all sorts of stories about our fans’ – Jack Angelides
Mr Angelides said: “We have not been given a clear reason [for the ban], but I have seen people coming up with all sorts of stories of our fans, especially in Amsterdam, where there was, what the Amsterdam authorities themselves classified as ‘a Jew hunt’, being portrayed as organised fighters, soldiers, etc, etc.
“It’s just blatant falsehoods, and people who say those things know that they’re false and shame on them.”
Image: Pro-Palestinian supporters protest ahead of Aston Villa’s UEFA Europa League match. Pic: Reuters
Mr Angelides believes the decision has been kept private to leave open for people to form a conclusion and characterise his club as racist.
Ayoub Khan, the independent pro-Gaza MP whose constituency covers Villa Park, called for the ban because the club has “hooligans who have a long history of violence and vile racism”.
“Any club that tries to suggest that they don’t have any issues, whatever that may be, it’s untrue,” Mr Angelides said.
“We know we’ve got a long road ahead. There are elements in the club that are not in line with our values, our morals, and we do expend a lot of energy and have been for many, many years in trying to… eradicate that.
“But to malign thousands and thousands of good fans with the actions of a few, it’s a dangerous game because I think that’s something that is not conducive to toning down the incitement that’s actually going on now. It’s manipulation to my mind.”
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Football focus
Mr Angelides did not discuss whether there was fear among the players going into a potentially hostile environment.
“We have Jewish players; we have Christian players; we have Muslim players – we’re a club that’s quite diverse,” he said.
“There is an understandable excitement of playing. They’re aware, … the last two years have taken a toll on Israeli society because of what’s been going on. So they’re very aware of the situation, but I think they’re prepared to focus on their football.”
The game is going ahead, after moves in European football to ban Israeli teams over the war in Gaza faded, as a peace deal was implemented.