MELBOURNE—Hyeon Chung continued his incredible run through the Australian Open, at 21 years old becoming the first Korean to reach the semifinals of a Grand Slam tournament, courtesy of a 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-3 win over another Australian Open Cinderella, Tennys Sandgren.
This major tournament bills itself as the Grand Slam of Asia Pacific. When asked if the Australian Open was the Slam he dreamed of most as a child, the 58th-ranked Chung concurred, citing the final that happened here a decade ago between Novak Djokovic and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. Djokovic rapidly became Chung’s hero.
Like Djokovic, Chung’s genius is understated, less about dazzling shots and more contained in his efficient, sustainable craftsmanship. His backhand is impeccable, a pruned drive that penetrates with sustained depth, both down the line and crosscourt.
And like Djokovic, Chung has a knack for cumulative oppression, which bore itself out in the most important data point of the match: Sandgren’s 43 forced and 43 unforced errors.
Said Sandgren, who lost a three-setter to Chung in Auckland earlier this month, “He kind of forces you, I mean me, to kind of play on this edge where you're kind of doing some really cool things, and then you can fall off it and make some mistakes because he's forcing you to play so well.”