Daily Dispatch

Serena lets rip with ace blitz

-

Six-time champion Serena Williams shook off a sluggish start to power past eighth-seeded Karolina Pliskova 6-4 6-3 on Tuesday and into the US Open semifinals.

The US superstar, chasing a record-equalling 24th major title, surrendere­d an early break to Pliskova, but she roared back with a streak of eight straight games to put away the opening set and take a 4-0 lead in the second against the woman who beat her in the semifinals at Flushing Meadows in 2016.

“I just wanted to play better,” Williams said of her mind-set as she trailed 3-1 in the first. “I was thinking, you know, I can play better, so that was the good news.”

Williams did indeed cut down on the errors, and came up with the big serves when she needed them.

She finished the match with 13 aces and will take on Anastasija Sevastova for a place in the final after the 19th-seeded Latvian toppled defending champion Sloane Stephens 6-2 6-3.

Pliskova, who managed to convert just two of 12 breakpoint chances in the contest, said Williams was simply too good in the important moments.

“She hit all first serves on the breakpoint­s, which is always a little bit tougher to return,” said Pliskova.

“The second set, she was just mixing the serve. She was going a lot of wide. Not much that I could do on the breakpoint­s.”

Williams did drop her serve once in the second, coughing up one of her five double-faults on breakpoint as Pliskova narrowed the gap to 4-1.

But when she fell behind 0-40 in the seventh game she rescued herself with 180km/h service winner followed by a another service winner and an ace. Pliskova got another chance when Williams batted a forehand into the net, but another booming serve, a backhand winner and an unreturnab­le serve saw her safely through the danger.

Serving for the match at 5-3 Williams didn’t allow any room for doubt, holding at love with two aces and an overhead smash followed by one last ace.

“I really feel like right now I’m playing free because I was having a baby this time last year, so I have nothing to prove,” said Williams.

The defeats of Stephens and Pliskova completed the exodus of top 10 seeds, although Pliskova noted that Williams’ 17th seeding – nine spots above her world ranking as she continues her post-baby comeback – was not reflective of her true abilities.

“She’s 17, but she’s not a player which should be 17,” said Pliskova.

 ??  ?? SERENA WILLIAMS
SERENA WILLIAMS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa