Australia triumphs over Britain to advance to Billie Jean King Cup final

Australia has knocked out host Britain 2-1 in the semi-finals of the Billie Jean King Cup. Storm Sanders and Samantha Stosur are aiming to win Australia's first title in the competition since 1974.

 Storm Sanders of Team Australia celebrates winning the semi-final match between Team Australia and Team Great Britain at Emirates Arena in Glasgow, Scotland.

Storm Sanders of Team Australia celebrates winning the semi-final match between Team Australia and Team Great Britain at Emirates Arena in Glasgow, Scotland. The win sets up the prospect of a first title in the competition for Australia in 48 years since Evonne Goolagong led the victors. Source: Getty / Ian MacNicol/Getty Images for LTA

Key Points
  • Australia advances to the final after knocking Britain out of the Billie Jean King Cup Finals.
  • Storm Sanders and Samantha Stosur return to the final for the first time since 2019, when they finished runners-up.
  • Australia will play either Switzerland or the Czech Republic in the final.
Australia have been carried to the Billie Jean King Cup final by a perfect Storm and the glorious return of a national tennis institution.

The continuing heroics of double winner Storm Sanders alongside the seemingly ageless Sam Stosur has left captain Alicia Molik believing her team of battlers are now ready to be crowned world champions in Glasgow.

In a tie-deciding super tie-break in the doubles at the Emirates Arena, the pair kept their nerve admirably in the teeth of a rare old home crowd din to edge Olivia Nicholls and Alicia Barnett and seal a 2-1 silencer of a triumph over hosts Great Britain.
Storm Sanders and Samantha Stosur hug in celebration of winning the semi-final match between Team Australia and Team Great Britain.
Storm Sanders and Samantha Stosur hug in celebration of winning the semi-final match between Team Australia and Team Great Britain. Source: Getty / Ian MacNicol/Getty Images for LTA
Saturday's memorable triumph has set up the prospect of a first title in the competition for Australia in 48 years since Evonne Goolagong led the victors.

"It's ours for the taking, we've just got to go for it and see what happens," declared Molik after her own nerves had settled following a day of high drama.

"Today, Australia really showed our fighting spirit. I mean, we are going to bring it tomorrow too. It's exciting!"

Three years ago, Molik led the team that lost agonisingly in the final to France in Perth - but this time she's convinced her side can beat the odds even though they won't start favourites against either the powerful Swiss or Czech Republic sides, who were meeting later in the second semi-final.

"We've got the team, I believe, to get through tomorrow. We're still making up for the final we lost in 2019," said Molik.

Stosur - 19 years since she first played in the event then known as the Federation Cup - was again a rock for her inspired partner as Sanders won her fifth rubber of the week.
With the scores locked at 6-6 in the first-to-10 deciding super breaker, the pair were super-charged after the final changeover, cracking four winning volleys between them to finally edge to a 7-6 (7-1) 6-7 (5-7) (10-6) win.

It was the 39th BJK Cup win of 38-year-old Stosur's distinguished career -and there has hardly been a more important one.

"I'd certainly rather be playing than watching," smiled the former US Open champ, who felt she might spend the week cheerleading on the bench after not having won a match since June.

Instead, she's now prevailed in two crucial matches with Sanders this week. "I wanted to try and help the team in whatever way I could. If that's on the court, that's great; if it's cheering from the sideline, then that's okay too."

Victory came after Sanders had earlier battled through a leg injury to beat Heather Watson 6-4 7-6 (7-3) in the opening singles rubber, only for Ajla Tomljanovic to then suffer a serious off-day, losing to Harriet Dart - ranked 65 places below her 7-6 (7-3) 6-2 to leave the tie on a knife edge.

Sanders was again Australia's aggressive inspiration, defying her lowly world ranking of 237 as she outplayed the world No.133 Watson despite feeling discomfited by a leg injury that required her to receive off-court physio treatment at the end of the first set.

But she was back a couple of hours later, playing superbly. "I'm ready, super- pumped and proud of this team. It's awesome. Kind of use the high from today to keep going for tomorrow," she said.

"We are in the final, and I feel like, yeah, let's give it everything tomorrow."

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Source: AAP


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