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Neither face betrayed the slightest hint of emotion, and those same expressionless masks were in place at the match's start. Early on, there were the sorts of nerves and erratic play -- a combined seven first-set double-faults, for example -- that have marked many of the siblings' encounters as they have adjusted to playing one another.
"I try not to look at her, because if I look at her, I might start feeling sorry," Serena told the crowd afterward.
Neither of their parents, who also serve as their coaches, were sitting in the guest boxes at Arthur Ashe Stadium. An older sister, Isha Price, was there, sitting with her hands clasped in front of her face, eyes shut, during the first-set tiebreaker.
How could she possibly cheer for one sister against another?
"I was stressed," she said. "It is so difficult to watch them. At the end of the day, you want them to play a good match and for the best person to win."
And did the best person win?
"I'm not sure," Price said.
The 23,763 spectators sitting in the packed stands had a hard time figuring out which Williams to support, too. When Venus missed a backhand wide on the match's first point, there wasn't a sound out there -- no applause, no yelling, no booing. Nothing.
There wasn't much to separate the sisters' strokes on this night, either.
Down 6-4 in the opening tiebreaker, Serena reeled off four points in a row, saving two sets points and ending it when Venus pulled a forehand wide after a 10-stroke exchange.
Serena pumped a fist and yelled -- exactly the way she would against any other opponent.
Venus wasted three set points when she served for the second set at 5-3, 40-love, and a fourth when Serena served while down 6-5.
Then came the second tiebreaker, which featured the point of the match. Serena tried a forehand passing shot but Venus stretched and put a volley into a corner. Serena got to that and flicked up a lob that wasn't good enough to get over the 6-foot-1 Venus, who pounded an overhead smash. Now the point was over, right? Nope. Serena got to that, too, stretching the exchange until Venus finally put away a volley to go ahead 5-2.
Take that, little sis!
Fans rose for a standing ovation.
Serena was left gasping for air.
Soon after, Venus was ahead 6-3.
But Serena won six of the last seven points.
"I can't say I was disappointed," Serena said. "You want the best for her, but in that situation you want to win, too."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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