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Damir Dzumhur returns a shot to Kyle Edmund during their semi-final match on Friday. Image Credit: AFP

Salem: Damir Dzumhur became Bosnia’s first player to reach an ATP Tour final at the Winston-Salem Open on Friday and was glad to reward compatriots at home who stayed up late to watch him overhaul Kyle Edmund.

The 25-year-old Dzumhur recovered from a poor start to beat the Briton 1-6, 7-5, 6-3 and will bid to become the Balkan nation’s first Tour winner in Saturday’s title-decider against Spain’s Roberto Bautista Agut.

“I think everybody in Bosnia is still awake and watching me, which makes me really proud for my country,” Dzumhur said in comments published on the ATP website.

“For such a small country as Bosnia, it’s a really big result.

“It’s going to be a big thing for me, for my country, as the only player in the Top 100 making great results.

“So I’m proud of my country and proud of myself and it’s going to be a good day tomorrow.” Dzumhur, who is ranked 67th, is not the first Bosnian-born player to make an ATP Tour final, with others to have done so under the flag of another country.

The 2014 US Open winner Marin Cilic played for Bosnia as a junior but has represented Croatia as a professional.

Ivan Dodig, a 2015 French Open doubles winner, played for Bosnia until 2008 before also shifting allegiance to Croatia. He won his only ATP Tour singles title in 2011.

Against Edmund, Dzumhur had to fight off the lethargy of playing 11 matches in 12 days, having reached the final of a Challenger Tour event in the Dominican Republic last week.

He did not arrive in North Carolina until the early hours of Monday and was back on court later in the day. He looked headed for an earlier departure for the US Open that starts on Monday, after being routed in the first set.

But he rallied when the adrenalin kicked in.

Unseeded Australian Daria Gavrilova toppled defending champion Agnieszka Radwanska 6-4, 6-4 on Friday to reach the final of the WTA hardcourt tournament at New Haven, Connecticut.

“I trusted my game plan and I think I executed it very well,” Gavrilova, ranked 26th in the world, said after her win over the world number 10 and top seed. “I was pretty aggressive and taking chances whenever I could on her second serve.”

Gavrilova advanced to the third WTA final of her career. She’ll take on second-seeded Slovakian Dominika Cibulkova, a 6-1, 6-3 winner over Belgian qualifier Elise Mertens.