Defending champion Caroline Wozniacki is a two-time Tokyo winner and finalist in 2014
Defending champion Caroline Wozniacki pulverised world number one Garbine Muguruza 6-2, 6-0 on Saturday to reach her fourth Pan Pacific Open final.
The Danish former number one will face Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova as she chases a third Tokyo title after the Russian toppled Angelique Kerber 6-0, 6-7, 6-4 in a see-saw first semi-final.
Top seed Muguruza, playing her first tournament since reaching the top of the women’s world rankings, was blown off court in just under an hour in a stunningly lopsided match.
“I didn’t feel that fresh,” the Spaniard told reporters.
“I felt my energy was a little bit low and I didn’t make the important shots. I’m very disappointed, but she just played better.”
Third seed Wozniacki tore through the first set, sealing it when Muguruza wafted a routine forehand badly wide.
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova of Russia serves against Angelique Kerber of Germany during their Pan Pacific Open semi-final match, in Tokyo, on September 23, 2017
Muguruza cut a forlorn figure as she trudged back to her seat but things went from bad to worse for the Wimbledon champion in the second set.
A dipping forehand pass gave Wozniacki an early break, consolidated after another wild Muguruza backhand in the fourth game.
Wozniacki, a two-time Tokyo winner and finalist in 2014, put Muguruza out of her misery by forcing the Spaniard into another whiffed backhand on match point after just 59 minutes.
Seventh seed Kerber, another former world number one, looked in danger of being fed the dreaded “double bagel” after losing the first eight games in the Tokyo sunshine.
But the German recovered from 6-0, 5-2 down to pinch the second-set tiebreak as Pavlyuchenkova suddenly tightened up, the Russian slamming her racquet to the ground in disgust.
Kerber, who has slipped back to 14th in the world since winning last year’s Australian and US Open titles, clinched the breaker 7-4 with a fierce serve down the middle.
The 29-year-old Kerber, a former Tokyo finalist, then quickly raced to a 3-0 lead in the deciding set, only to be pegged back once more.
But Pavlyuchenkova seized the decisive break in the seventh game with a superb backhand drive volley, the same bludgeoning shot she unleashed to seal victory after a little over two hours.
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