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Halep Sets Sights on WTA No. 1 Ranking After Win in Cincinnati Semifinal

Simona Halep is one victory away from the WTA No. 1 ranking after her win Saturday in the Western & Southern Open semifinals.

MASON, Ohio (AP) Simona Halep moved within a victory of the No. 1 ranking on Saturday.

The second-ranked Halep needed just 54 minutes to cruise past Sloane Stephens 6-2, 6-1 Saturday in the Western & Southern Open semifinals, and can displace Karolina Pliskova at the top of the ranking with a victory over Garbine Muguruza on Sunday.

The fourth-ranked Muguruza reached her first W&S final with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over defending champion Pliskova.

Grigor Dimitrov also will be playing in his first W&S final after outlasting John Isner 7-6 (4), 7-6 (10) in the first men's semifinal.

The final Sunday will be the first on American soil for Muguruza, who lost to Pliskova in last year's W&S semifinals. The Spaniard had lost six straight matches against Pliskova since winning their first in 2013.

''I was very precise with my shots,'' Muguruza said. ''I wanted to be more aggressive and take my shots. I felt pretty good out there—under control. Everything went my way.''

Muguruza won when Pliskova sailed a forehand long on the fifth match point. Pliskova, who played part of one match and all of another Friday after rain forced postponements Thursday, had 28 unforced errors to Muguruza's 13.

Muguruza was coming off playing the tournament's longest match, a 2-hour, 45-minute three-set win over Svetlana Kuznetsova on Friday. That followed Thursday's 2-hour, 18-minute win over Madison Keys, when she fought off three match points.

''I don't think I played my best tennis today,'' Pliskova said. ''I think the energy was pretty low from my side. Obviously, a tough schedule for me the last two days—three matches in about not even 24 hours.

''I think she played very solid, not missing much and obviously serving well. Everything started, I think, in the first game of the first set.''

Muguruza took charge early, breaking Pliskova in the first and last games of the first set.

She gained a second-set edge with a backhand winner on break point for a 4-2 lead before closing it out in 1 hour, 19 minutes.

The 11th-ranked Dimitrov, who lost in last year's semifinal to eventual champion Marin Cilic, had just one double fault and finished with nine unforced errors to No. 19 Isner's 28 in the 2-hour, 3-minute match. The Bulgarian will Nick Kyrgios, who knocked out second-ranked Rafael Nadal in straight sets in a Friday quarterfinal.

''The difference was he was a lot more decisive at the big moments,'' Isner said. ''He was a little calmer as well—a little more free-flowing in big moments. I thought he played a high-level match. He certainly is in good form. I played well enough to beat a lot of players today—just not him.''