Mirra Andreeva was playing in her first Grand Slam quarter-final
Russian teenager Mirra Andreeva claimed the biggest win of her career against an out-of-sorts Aryna Sabalenka to reach the semi-finals of the French Open.
Second seed Sabalenka was seen grimacing and pointing to her stomach as she talked to medical staff in the middle of the first set.
She continued to struggle and appeared to consider retiring from the match.
Despite being far from her best, Sabalenka managed to move past her discomfort to complete the match.
But it was Andreeva, ranked 38th in the world, who emerged victorious, wrapping up a 6-7 (5-7) 6-4 6-4 win.
The 17-year-old is the youngest Grand Slam semi-finalist since Martina Hingis at the US Open in 1997.
She will face Jasmine Paolini in the last four after the Italian stunned fourth seed Elena Rybakina earlier on Wednesday.
"Honestly I was really nervous before the match, I knew she'd have an advantage," said Andreeva, who had lost both her previous meetings with the Belarusian in straight sets.
"Me and my coach, we had a plan today but again I didn't remember anything. I just try to play as I feel."
Sabalenka, who lost before the semi-finals of a major for the first time since the 2022 French Open, said: "I had a difficult time out there physically. I have been very sick the last few days with some kind of stomach bug, so it's been a challenge."
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Sabalenka received medical attention throughout the match
After exchanging breaks early in the opening set, it quickly became apparent that Sabalenka was feeling under the weather.
The Australian Open winner became increasingly frustrated with her below-par performance and called for the trainer as Andreeva broke to go 4-3 up.
After talking to the match doctor and returning to the court, Sabalenka made a swiping gesture at her neck and seemed close to signalling her retirement.
But she appeared to brighten and managed to level the set at 5-5 before digging deep in the tie-break to take the opener.
The same problems returned for Sabalenka, however, and she often needed to crouch down and steady herself on her racquet – receiving a time violation on one occasion.
The 26-year-old looked close to tears for much of the second set and made a slow, lethargic walk to her seat when Andreeva broke at 5-4 to force a decider.
Both players struggled to hold serve as the match trundled past the two-hour mark, and Sabalenka continued to receive medical attention.
Andreeva capitalised on her opponent's struggles and landed an outrageous lob on her second match point at 5-4 to seal a famous victory.
It is another win that marks Andreeva's rapid rise to the top of the sport.
When the latest rankings are released on Monday, she is set to find herself in the top 30 for the first time.
Playing in her first Grand Slam quarter-final, Andreeva occasionally looked agitated by Sabalenka's discomfort, annoyed the world number two could hit stunning winners after struggling to stand up straight.
But the teenager kept her nerve and calmly moved through the second and third set, using a powerful two-handed backhand and delicate drop shots to good effect.
It continues a fantastic 12 months as she reached the last 16 at Wimbledon last summer and then thrashed three-time Slam finalist Ons Jabeur on her way to the fourth round at the Australian Open earlier this year.
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