The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Never give up

Serena battles back to reach last four – then reveals the advice she will give daughter

- Simon Briggs TENNIS CORRESPOND­ENT at Wimbledon

Serena Williams (US) bt Camila Giorgi (Italy) 3-6, 6-3, 6-4

In the interview room yesterday, Serena Williams was asked what first lesson she would pass on to her 10-month-old daughter, Olympia. Her answer was a little cliched, she admitted, but no less valid for that. “Never quit.”

The point was neatly demonstrat­ed on Centre Court yesterday as Williams played her first quarterfin­al at any event in 18 months. Her opponent, the undersized Italian Camila Giorgi, blitzed the first set with her incongruou­sly violent hitting, and could easily have turned in an upset on another day. But Williams simply was not having it.

“For whatever reason, today I was so calm,” she said after her 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 victory. “Even when I was down the first set, I thought, ‘Well, she’s playing great. I’m doing a lot of the right things. It is what it is’.

“It was just the way I felt today. I never felt it was out of my hands. It’s weird. I can’t describe it. I just felt calm. Hoping I can channel that all the time, but one day at a time.”

After a week of largely underwhelm­ing matches on Centre Court, this was at least a showdown for the fans to get excited about.

You could not call it a contrast of styles, because both women were hammering serves and returns so venomously that only 20 per cent of points lasted more than four shots.

But it was certainly a contrast of physiques. Williams is one of the most muscular players on the wom- en’s tour, whereas Giorgi looks like she is built from pipe-cleaners. Still, she has the same extraordin­ary flexibilit­y that Denis Shapovalov brings to the men’s tour, having trained as a gymnast when she was small.

Giorgi generates extraordin­ary racket-head speed with her fluid swings, and her first-serve average speed of 112mph actually beat Williams’s 105mph, even if Williams came up with the second-fastest individual serve of the tournament – a 122mph ace down the ‘T’ – to demonstrat­e that she is fully recovered from the right pectoral injury she sustained in Paris.

Giorgi says that she does not bother following women’s tennis, and it does not look like she thinks too hard about it either. She only has one setting – full on.

Receiving serve, she met Williams’s first delivery just inside the baseline and the second even earlier. It was an uncompromi­sing approach, and she did not vary it, even though the rewards were hardly forthcomin­g. In 14 return games she won just 14 points.

Giorgi’s post-match chat was equally direct, as she managed only 57 words in the English section of her interview.

“I play a great level today,” she said. “I did a great week, yes.”

Fair enough, as there was little more she could have done. Williams might have helped her out in the first set, donating the sixth game via three miscued backhands and one forehand into the net. But after that there were precious few freebies, as Williams backed up her status as the runaway Wimbledon favourite with a superbly controlled performanc­e.

“I think I learnt the lesson of never giving in, always fighting,” said Williams, who was watched by the rapper Drake as well as a Royal Box line-up that included Billie Jean King. “I feel like it’s really important in life, no matter what you’re going through, to never quit.

“I’ve always embraced being a role model. I think for me I just fell into that perfectly. Now that I’m a mom, I just want to even be more of that role model for my daughter, for lots of kids out there, people out there that just want to be inspired.

“Here is some good news. Right now there’s so much bad news in the world. “We just need a good story.”

At No52, Giorgi is the highestran­ked opponent that Williams has faced on her way to the semi-finals. On paper, the competitio­n should hot up significan­tly tomorrow against 13th seed Julia Goerges. But let us not get ahead of ourselves.

At 29, Goerges is playing her first major semi-final, having never gone beyond the last 16 at any slam before. And Williams also has the reassuranc­e of having beaten Goerges comfortabl­y in Paris a month ago, when she was considerab­ly less well-conditione­d than she is now. In three previous meetings between these two, Goerges has never come close to winning a set.

Now that Williams is into the last four, and seemingly bearing down on an eighth Wimbledon title, might her friend Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, visit the Royal Box this weekend? Williams replied: “Just stay tuned, right? Stay tuned for the next episode, Serena Williams on Centre Court.”

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 ??  ?? Hit performanc­e: Canadian rapper Drake (left) applauds Serena Williams (right) during her quarter-final victory on Centre Court
Hit performanc­e: Canadian rapper Drake (left) applauds Serena Williams (right) during her quarter-final victory on Centre Court
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