Manawatu Standard

Veteran Venus powers into semis

- TENNIS

Venus Williams continued her astonishin­g late-career revival by felling Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova 6-4 7-6(3) yesterday to reach her first Australian Open semifinal in 14 years and become the oldest woman to reach the last four at Melbourne Park in the profession­al era.

The quarterfin­al will hardly be remembered as a classic, with both Venus and the 24th-ranked Russian surrenderi­ng serve with alarming regularity despite perfect conditions for tennis at Rod Laver Arena.

In the end it was 36-year-old Venus’ experience that proved decisive when the pressure rose, and Pavlyuchen­kova crumbled with a double-fault on match point to boost the American’s hopes of a maiden title at Melbourne Park.

‘‘Oh my gosh I’m so excited,’’ said the seven-times grand slam champion after closing out the one hour and 48-minute tussle. ‘‘I want to go further. I’m not happy just with this.

‘‘I’m just so excited that I have another opportunit­y to play again.’’

Following her run at Wimbledon, 13th seed Venus has now made the semi-finals at two of the last three grand slams.

She was 22 when she last made the semi-finals at Melbourne, during a run to the 2003 final where she was beaten by younger sister Serena, the current world number two, in three sets.

Venus will play an allamerica­n semifinal against Coco Vandeweghe, who thrashed former French Open champion Garbine Muguruza 6-4 6-0 in the following quarterfin­al at Rod Laver Arena.

The mouthwater­ing prospect of a repeat of the 2003 final against Serena beckons if the second seed can get there as well.

Venus has stormed through the Melbourne Park draw without losing a set and was never truly threatened by Pavlyuchen­kova who let herself down with nine double-faults.

Both players struggled to hold serve but Pavlyuchen­kova buckled at the bigger moments. When serving at 5-4 to stay in the first set, she double-faulted and butchered a forehand to offer three set points.

Venus needed only one, hammering a backhand return down the line and giving a yelp in triumph.

There was no more resilience on serve in the second set, with both players trading breaks to move to 4-4.

Pavlyuchen­kova double-faulted to fall back to 0-30 at 6-5, two points from eliminatio­n, but bravely rallied to take Williams into a tiebreak.

The Russian led 3-1 before it all fell apart.

She double-faulted to allow Venus to draw level and the American spanked a huge return down the line to edge ahead.

Venus hammered a forehand winner to bring up three match points and Pavlyuchen­kova surrendere­d the match meekly with her ninth double-fault.

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