The Herald (South Africa)

Grand slam tornado ahead

World No 1 to wipe out 2014 memories?

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SERENA Williams has set her sights on moving a step closer to an historic calendar grand slam as the world No 1 launches her bid for a sixth Wimbledon crown next week.

Williams returns to the All England Club for the first time since her distressin­g meltdown midway through a doubles match last year in which she was so badly affected by an apparent virus that she could barely hit the ball.

Those bizarre images of a dazed Serena stumbling around court one – coming just days after her lacklustre third-round defeat in the singles at the hands of Alize Cornet – prompted some to suggest the American’s glittering career was heading for a painful final chapter.

But the 33-year-old’s response has been typically dramatic and decisive.

Serena won the US Open to end last year on a high and then swept to Australian and French Open triumphs this year. The wins bring her back to London within two major titles of achieving the first calendar grand slam since Steffi Graf claimed the four top titles in 1988.

“Obviously I would love to win a grand slam – it would be awesome,” Serena, who defeated Lucie Safarova to clinch her third Roland Garros title this month, said.

With 20 grand slam titles to her name, Williams sits third on the all-time list and is closing fast on Margaret Court’s record of 24, with the possi- bility of equalling secondplac­ed Graf’s tally of 22 by the end of the year.

But for now, Serena, who has only won three grand slams in a year once in 2002, is focused solely on making a good start at Wimbledon after failing to get to the quarterfin­als for the last two years.

“I haven’t done great at Wimbledon the past two years, so I’m going to take it a day at a time there,” she said.

“My goal is just to do better than the last couple of years, do one more and one more and one more.” One of the main threats to Serena was expected to come from defending champion Petra Kvitova, who clinched her second Wimbledon title with a ruthless rout of Eugenie Bouchard in the final 12 months ago.

But the 25-year-old Czech is not yet certain she will be fit enough to defend her crown after she was forced to withdraw from this week’s Wimbledon warm-up event at East- bourne due to a virus.

“It doesn’t really make sense to play and not be ready for Wimbledon. I may get more sick than I am now.

“So I hope I can just recover now,” the world No 2 said.

Five-time grand slam champion Maria Sharapova will be expected to emerge as a major contender for the title she won as a teen 11 years ago.

But the 28-year-old Russian, the world’s richest woman athlete, has yet to prove she can master Serena, who routed Sharapova in this year’s Australian Open final to extend her dominant record to 17 wins in their 19 meetings.

Bouchard was widely tipped as the heir apparent to Sharapova as the sport’s glamour girl when the Canadian captured the hearts of the Wimbledon fans during her run to the final last year.

But that success was the prelude to a slump that has seen the 21-year-old lose in the first round of seven tournament­s in this year.

Bouchard hopes a return to the All England Club will improve her fortunes.

“When I go to Wimbledon I’ll have memories from last year popping into my head, which will hopefully give me confidence that I’ll play really well,” she said.

Safarova and world No 3 Simona Halep, both Wimbledon semifinali­sts last year, will also expect to go deep into a tournament, but few expect anything other than a Serena celebratio­n on the final Saturday. – AFP

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