Kvitova needed to win the Sydney international to replace Caroline Wozniacki atop the rankings at the start of next week.
Kvitova needed to win the Sydney International to replace Caroline Wozniacki atop the rankings next week and the Wimbledon champion was on track when she led by a set and a break.
But Li rallied strongly in the second and third sets to reach back-to-back finals at Sydney, where she’ll meet No. 3-ranked Victoria Azarenka in Friday’s final. Azarenka beat Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland 1-6, 6-3, 6-2 in the other semifinal later Thursday.
The Wimbledon champion was on track when she led by a set and a break, but Li rallied strongly in the second and third sets to reach back-to-back finals at Sydney, where she’ll meet either No. 3-ranked Victoria Azarenka or Agnieszka Radwanska.
Li reached the Australian Open final last year two weeks after winning in Sydney. She went one better at the next major, winning the French Open to become the first player from China to win a Grand Slam singles title.
Li’s form dipped at the end of last season and she lost in the second round at Wimbledon and the opening round at the U.S. Open, but she started to get back into form in the earlier rounds at Sydney.
A pep-talk from her husband and coach Shan Jiang after the first set against Kvitova helped refocus Li.
“‘OK,’ he say, ‘If you play same like this, you’ll lose match easy,”’ said Li, who has developed a reputation for poking fun at her husband in postmatch interviews.
After the win over Kvitova, who beat Wozniacki at the Hopman Cup last week, Li said she’s back to about where she was at this time last year.
Asked if she was in better or worse form, Li said: “I think the same.”
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