The 33-year-old Williams, a 21 
Grand Slam winner, suffered just her second loss of 2015 as the oldest 
and youngest players in the draw clashed in a tense two-hour, 28-minute 
showdown.
Bencic, 18, stormed
 from behind to win 3-6, 7-5, 6-4, snapping Williams' 14-match win 
streak in Toronto to book her spot in Sunday's final against second seed
 Simona Halep.
Bencic closed 
out the contest on her first match point by smashing a forehand winner 
to the open court. Bencic bent over and covered her face with both hands
 as she soaked in the biggest victory of her blossoming career. 
"I can't describe the feeling right now," said Bencic.
"I
 was very overwhelmed from the situation on the court, but I'm just so 
happy the forehand landed in and she couldn't reach it anymore.
Bencic
 is the youngest player to beat Williams in a complete match since the 
American lost to a 17-year-old Maria Sharapova in the final at Wimbledon
 in 2004. Bencic, who also has Slovak citizenship through her parents, 
was just two years old in 1999 when Williams won her first major title.
"I think I played really crappy today," Williams said. "I played like an amateur to be honest."
Bencic
 has won 20 of her last 24 matches, beating two top 10 ranked players 
(No. 5 Caroline Wozniacki and No. 6 Ana Ivanovic) to reach the semis.
The
 loss casts some doubt into Williams' pursuit of her fifth Grand Slam 
title in a row as she attempts to complete a calendar year Grand Slam by
 defending her title at the US Open, which begins August 31.
A US Open crown would give her 22 Grand Slams, matching Steffi Graf for the most in the Open era.
She
 pulled out of the Stanford tournament last week with an elbow injury 
but said after her quarter-final victory in Toronto that it was no 
longer a problem.
Williams had won in Toronto in her last two appearances in 2011 and 2013.
- 12 double faults -
"I felt pretty much
 in control until I lost the match," said Williams, who had 12 double 
faults. "I always felt I still had an opportunity to stay in there."
What
 she wasn't in control of at times was her emotions. Williams had a 
breakdown in the second set, smashing her graphite racquet to pieces 
after she double faulted on game point to go down 5-3.
And Bencic kept Williams off balance with precision ground strokes and a neat serve-and-volley game when she needed it.Halep advanced with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Italy's Sara Errani. The Romanian second seed Halep will play for her 12th career title and fourth of the year.
Halep's earlier titles this season came in January at Shenzhen, February at Dubai and in March at Indian Wells.
"Obviously Halep is No.3 in the world and she's an amazing player," Bencic said.
"But I'm in the final and everything that comes is going to be a bonus."
 
 
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