Stabroek News

Serena shows plenty of fight

-

PARIS, (Reuters) - The “warrior princess” inside Serena Williams came out in full fighting mode at the French Open on Thursday as the American proved she was no pushover when it came to making an impact in a Grand Slam arena.

The rankings show Williams is only the 451st best player in the world and her nine-month-old daughter Alexis Olympia will need a few years to appreciate what her mum’s day job is.

But anyone foolish enough to think motherhood would kill off Williams’ competitiv­e edge got a reminder of why the 23-times Grand Slam champion is one of the all-time greats as she clawed her way to a 3-6 6-3 6-4 second round win over Ashleigh Barty.

A set and a break down, it looked like Williams’ comeback slam following her maternity break would end in defeat by the 17th seeded Australian.

But when Serena slammed a crosscourt forehand winner into an open court to break back in the next game, the roar that rocked Philippe Chatrier Court told the world she was not done yet.

So it proved just over an hour later as Serena was roaring again and holding her arms aloft in triumph after setting up a third round showdown with Germany’s 11th seed Julia Goerges.

“I lost the first set and I thought I’ve just got to try harder and Serena came out,” said a beaming Williams after giving her skin-tight, black catsuit another outing. “Every day is a great day I’m excited to... fight my heart out.”

Barty was pragmatic about the way things played out, rather than moaning about her rotten luck at being drawn against the three-time Roland Garros champion so early in the tournament or feeling she had wasted a golden chance to beat Williams.

“In the first set she gave me a hell of a lot of cheapies, a lot of errors,” said the 25-year-old Australian who had secured her highest ever seeding at a major in Paris.

“She’s not quite at the level she was when she was at her best but that’s expected. But her level when she’s not quite on her best (form) is still bloody good.

“When push came to shove, the real Serena came out. And one of her best assets is that when her back is against the wall, the best comes out.” PARIS, (Reuters) - Rafael Nadal had expected to be spending his days fishing off his home island of Mallorca by the time he reached the age of 32 and his good friend Richard Gasquet probably wishes he was.

Instead, the Frenchman will be the latest player in Nadal’s firing line as the Spaniard, who celebrates his birthday next week, moves inexorably towards an 11th French Open title.

Nadal romped into the third round on Thursday with a 6-2 6-1 6-1 defeat of the outclassed Argentine Guido Pella.

Far from slowing down, he appears fitter and faster and is striking his forehand with frightenin­g power.

Poor Pella never stood a chance once he had squandered four break points in the opening game of the match.

Nadal has now won 27 consecutiv­e sets at Roland Garros, including last year’s charge to La Decima.

On this form, it looks hard to make a case for him not clamping his jaws around the Coupe des Mousquetai­res trophy yet again and if Gasquet is to stop him he will have to improve on a head-to-head record which reads played 15, lost 15.

It gets worse. The last 10 times the Frenchman has played against Nadal he has not even managed to win a set.

“Ten years is a long time,” Gasquet said, recalling a conversati­on he had with his father after losing to the Spaniard in the semi-final of the Monte Carlo Masters in 2005, a few weeks before Nadal claimed his first French Open title.

“I said, ‘He’s going to win and he might win a lot of Grand Slams, because he was incredible’. Maybe five or six, I didn’t think he would win 10 times.”

Gasquet was rated as a future Grand Slam champion then.

In all probabilit­y he will never win one major while Nadal already has 16. Yet the Spaniard could hardly have imagined he would still be ranked number one in the world 13 years after that clash and looking immovable on the Parisian clay.

“You cannot predict the future. I just enjoy the things that are happening. At the age of 25, if you’d asked me when I’m 32 will I be here, I would say probably not,” he told reporters.

“Probably I will be fishing or doing other things.

“I am very happy to be where I am. Very happy to keep playing tennis at my age, because I heard all my career I will have a short career because of my style of game.”

With rain showers predicted on Thursday, Nadal was in no mood for any overtime against Pella, dispatchin­g his fellow left-hander with a barrage of brutal forehands on a warm and bouncy Court Suzanne Lenglen.

Worryingly for the field, Nadal appears to be setting no limits on where his career might still go.

“How do you know when you’ve reached your limit?” he said. “If you think you can’t improve because you have reached your limit, it’s not the right thing. You can improve small things, and small things at this level can lead to great things.

“I don’t know where the limit is.”

 ??  ?? Serena Williams
Serena Williams

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana