The Phnom Penh Post

Beaten Serena unsure about Aussie Open

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A SLOW-MOVING Serena Williams made an encouragin­g return to tennis after maternity leave, taking a set off the French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko in an exhibition match Saturday, but said she has not made up her mind about defending the Australian Open title.

In a match featuring a super tiebreak and lasting one hour and seven minutes, Ostapenko won 6-2, 3-6, 10-5. The 36-year-old American, winner of 23 grand slam single titles, was making a comeback after taking nearly 11 months off to have her first child.

Her last match was the Australian Open final, which she won despite being two months pregnant.

“It was good to be back out there. I missed playing, I missed competitio­n, I missed the crowd, the atmosphere so much. It was really nice to be back,” Williams said after the match.

“I don’t know if I am totally ready to come back on the Tour yet. I know that when I come back I definitely want to o be competing for championsh­ips,” ” she said, refusing to commit yet to o the Australian Open, which starts in a little over two weeks.

“I don’t know, but I am definitely y looking forward to getting back out t there. I am taking it one day at a time. . I am going to assess everything with h [coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u] and my y team,” she said.

Unforced errors

It was the first time Ostapenko had d played against Williams, whom she e described as her “childhood idol”.

The 20-year-old Latvian was born n almost two years after Williams turned d profession­al in September 1995.

Williams (pictured, AFP) was clearly y having problems with her serve and d was broken five times in the 17 games. .

She also stuck mostly to the baseline e and only twice charged the net.

She started well, breaking Ostap- - enko’s enko s serve in the first game of the match. But Williams’s inability to get her first serve going, along with several unforced errors early in the match, a l l o w e d the Latvian to

b r e a k twice and build a 4-1 lead before wrapping up the set 6-2. Williams’sproblems with her serve continued, but she unleashed a few of her trademark doublehand­ed shots on both sides to break Ostapenko twice at the start of the second set to go 3-0 up.

By this time she was moving better and she started hitting more m winners. “That’s the really reall good thing. In the beginning, nin it felt a little tough. But as the match m moved on, I was less afraid,” explained Williams. Willia “I knew I was not going to fall over and break. The more I played, the more confident I felt fe that I would be able to go for shots sh that I was afraid to go for in the first set.

“It was a wonderful wonderfu opportunit­y for me to kind of test tes where I am at. Not just physica lly, but a lso mentally.”

The super tie-break t was mostly a one-sided one-s affair as Williams made unforced errors trying to be aggressive. a

She was down 2-8 2at one stage and won the next three points, but Ostapenko held her h serve twice to close the match.

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AFPA

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