The Philippine Star

Chinese ejects Venus

- (Reuters)

PARIS – What Venus Williams would have given for a dash of deja-vu in Paris on Sunday.

The same Grand Slam tournament, the same opening round, the same opponent as last year, but at Roland Garros this year the American slumped out 6-4, 7-5 to China’s Wang Qiang.

The loss marked the first time 2002 runner-up Williams has lost her opening match here since 2001, and the only time in her career she has lost consecutiv­e Grand Slam opening round matches.

“There really are no perfect days in tennis, so...” the 37-year-old mused enigmatica­lly. “At this point I have just got to look forward.

“I just want to be my best, that is all... nobody plans on this.”

If Sunday’s result marked a low point for Venus, it represente­d the best win of Wang’s career, and one for which she was good value.

Her comments post-match attempted to play it down, though, Wang saying only that the win had been “one of” the best of her career.

Wang might have been forgiven for rolling her eyes when the draw was made on Thursday, having been beaten by Williams both here and at Wimbledon in their only previous meetings.

But the 26-year-old set about her task with enthusiasm on a sunbathed Court Suzanne Lenglen, never allowing her rangy opponent to settle.

Compact and busy, Wang looked to be putting more effort in every ball than Williams with her long fluid shots and languid movement.

And on a hot day which had both players glistening with sweat by the end of the opening game such difference­s can count double.

So too can free points and short ones, and both Wang and Williams looked to shorten rallies with heavily thumped groundstro­kes aimed for the lines.

When faced with a wingspan like that of Williams, margin for error is miniscule, and Wang fired shot after shot onto the lines, killing off Williams’s scooped, looped backhands with dead flat varieties of her own. There was barely a wisp of wind to offer the overheatin­g players any respite, but Wang, dressed all in black, never took a backward step, sealing the opening in the 10th game after a flurry of points including a drivevolle­y which left the increasing­ly frustrated Williams wrong-footed. The double-fault that Williams hit to lose the first set may have been more indicative of her fortunes, as she struggled to get a good grasp on her game.

 ??  ?? Wang Qiang AFP
Wang Qiang AFP

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