The Star Malaysia

Serena keeps calm and carries on past unseeded Giorgi

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LONDON: For 35 minutes on Centre Court Serena Williams was knocked off her stride by a feisty Italian who looked as though she had ripped a page from the American’s tennis manual.

Playing in her first Grand Slam quarter-final, unseeded Camila Giorgi went toe-to-toe with the seven-time champion and became the first player to take a set off her so far.

All eyes were on 36-year-old mum Williams to see how she would respond to such a challenge to her supremacy at Wimbledon, where she is unbeaten since 2014. The answer was emphatic. Williams raised her intensity level, added some velocity to her groundstro­kes and some decibels to her growls and powered back to win 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, a scoreline that was a touch closer than what actually transpired on court.

Williams has fallen 13 times in Grand Slam quarter-finals – more than in any other round – but was never panicked.

“It’s weird. Sometimes I feel, ‘Man, I’m in trouble’. Sometimes I feel, I can fight. For whatever reason, today I was so calm. Even when I was down the first set,” Williams who ended with 24 winners and only nine unforced errors, said.

“I never felt it was out of my hands. I can’t describe it. I just felt calm. Hoping I can channel that all the time.”

With an unpreceden­ted cull of big names at this year’s championsh­ip, Williams is yet to face a seed, but that will change in the semis where Julia Goerges, the 13th seed, awaits.

Williams beat the big-serving German at the French Open last month before injury curtailed her first Grand Slam since giving birth to daughter Alexis Olympia last September.

Considerin­g what she went through during a traumatic labour nine months ago, since when she has played only a handful of matches, Williams’ physical condition has been impressive.

“I’m not tired at all,” she said. “When I was out there today, not once was I out of breath.

She lost only four points on it in the opening set, all of them in the sixth game when a courageous Giorgi rifled a backhand deep into enemy territory to snatch a break out of nowhere, setting the Centre Court crowd abuzz.

It stung Williams and she went 0-40 in the next game, but Giorgi showed real steel to hold for a 5-2 lead.

When Williams hit a forehand long to hand Giorgi the set, it looked possible that her quest for a 24th and possibly most remarkable Grand Slam title might be in peril.

Even when Giorgi held for 1-1 in the second with an ace though it seemed a matter of time before the match turned.

The next time Giorgi served, it did. Williams unleashed some savage forehands that rocked the Italian then secured her first break with a crosscourt winner.

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