Serena sizzles after Barty, Kenin script hard-fought wins
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[February 04, 2021]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Serena
Williams sounded a warning for her fellow Australian Open contenders
on Wednesday with a sleek 6-1 6-4 victory against Bulgarian Tsvetana
Pironkova to reach the quarter-finals of the Yarra Valley Classic in
Melbourne.
After top two seeds Ash Barty and Sofia Kenin faced steep challenges
to keep their preparations on course, Williams put up a contrasting
show at Melbourne Park's Margaret Court Arena in the evening
session.
World number one Barty, who won 6-0 4-6 6-3, showed no signs of
fatigue from having played a late match on Tuesday and started in
top gear against Marie Bouzkova at the Margaret Court Arena before
her Czech opponent staged a fightback.
Australian Open champion Kenin, seeded second, appeared headed for
an exit against fellow American Jessica Pegula when she fell 3-0
back after losing the first set but the feisty 22-year-old found her
range and rallied for a 5-7 7-5 6-2 win.
Williams, a 23-times Grand Slam winner and a seven-time
Australian Open champion, moved well, looked composed and mixed power
with poise against Pironkova, who had won a set off her during last
year's U.S. Open quarter-finals.
The 39-year-old American did not allow her a foothold in Wednesday's
match and hit 25 winners against the seven managed by Pironkova, who
like Williams returned to professional tennis after becoming a mother.
"It's definitely nice to get another win," Williams, who will next play
compatriot Danielle Collins for a semi-final spot, said during her
on-court interview. "She's clearly a great player, so it wasn't easy,
but it was good to come through."
Barty, Australia's best hope for a Grand Slam champion this month,
punished Bouzkova's weak serve to hand her a bagel in the opening set
but the world number 52 showed she had the stomach for a fight by
levelling the match with a break in the second.
Bouzkova and Barty traded two breaks of serve at the start of the
decider before the top seed got the crucial break in the eighth game and
sealed the encounter on her first match point with a booming serve.
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Serena Williams of the
U.S. in action during her match against Bulgaria's Tsvetana
Pironkova REUTERS/Loren Elliott
"Coming off a night match, I had to get used to going to bed quite
late again," Barty, who hit 42 winners to her opponent's 17, said.
"I'm an early riser, so I didn't get a hell of a lot of sleep last
night, but it's fantastic to be back out here.
"It was a really solid match. I felt like I pressed a little bit in
the middle and lost my execution."
The 2019 French Open champion will next face American Shelby Rogers,
who ousted Croatia's Petra Martic 7-6(1) 6-3.
Kenin, ranked fourth in the world, struggled with her unforced
errors in the first half of the match but once she managed to land
the ball closer to the lines, a bewildered Pegula faded away.
The Russian-born Kenin hit 14 winners more than her opponent in the
match while committing 10 extra unforced errors and converted her
third match point with a wide serve to set up a last eight clash
against Spaniard Garbine Muguruza.
It will be a repeat of last year's Australian Open final when Kenin
rallied to beat two-time major winner Muguruza, who defeated
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova of Russia 6-1 6-2.
Collins ousted third-seeded Czech Karolina Pliskova 7-6(5) 7-6(3) in
a battle of attrition while Nadia Podoroska of Argentina edged
two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova 5-7 6-1 7-6(7) in a close
contest.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; Editing by Lincoln Feast
and Christian Radnedge)
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