Serena powers into quarters as roof break turns match
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[July 05, 2016]
By John Stonestreet
LONDON (Reuters) - Serena Williams
made the most of a break in her match against 13th seed Svetlana
Kuznetsova on Monday, when the Centre Court roof was closed after
she threatened to sue organizers if she fell and injured herself on
the slippery turf.
The world number one, who subsequently made light of the threat,
began as if late for an Independence Day appointment, serving a
succession of aces and then hitting a brace of groundstroke winners
to break her opponent in the fourth game.
Bidding to equal Steffi Graf's professional-era record of 22 grand
slam titles, Williams failed to keep up the momentum and found
herself 5-4 down when the Russian broke with a crosscourt backhand
winner that left the American sprawled on the ground.
But the Russian, herself a double grand slam winner and three-times
Wimbledon quarter-finalist, failed to serve out the set.
With drizzle imminent, a ballboy losing his footing and both players
complaining about the slippery conditions -- and with Williams
threatening to sue if she got injured -- the match was suspended at
5-5 for the roof to be closed.
After the encounter the American said the comment was not meant
seriously.
"What I say on the court, whether it's smashing my rackets, it's in
the heat of the moment," said the American, who picked up a $10,000
fine for racket abuse in an earlier match at the tournament.
"I have no plans, no future of suing Wimbledon. Let's get serious.
That's not what I do."
COOLING OFF
As well as having a chance to cool off, Williams was able to refocus
her game with coach Patrick Mouratoglou and did not drop a single
game after play resumed.
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Serena Williams talks to officials after slipping during her match
against Russia's Svetlana Kuznetsova REUTERS/Andrew Couldridge
"I had a little time to think about it and just calm down... I think
that really helped me out a lot. I talked to Patrick. He gave me
some tips on what I could do," she said.
Kuznetsova beat Williams on a hardcourt at the Miami Open in March
and, prior to the break, was more than holding her own. She
frustrated the American by varying her pace well and mixing in
slices and dropshots.
Whatever words of wisdom Mouratoglou imparted, the six-times
Wimbledon champion was too hot to handle after the break, reeling
off the last eight games in a 7-5 6-0 win.
The number one seed faces another Russian, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova,
in the quarter-finals, where she was joined for the first time since
2010 by older sister Venus.
"It's great," the younger Williams said. "She's been doing a lot of
improvements. That's been really good for her and super encouraging
for me."
(Reporting by John Stonestreet, Editing by Ken Ferris and Pritha
Sarkar)
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