USA TODAY US Edition

Venus’ end goal remains the same: Win

- Sandra Harwitt Special for USA TODAY Sports

MELBOURNE, It AUSTRALIA doesn’t matter if you’re the oldest player in the draw if you’re playing winning tennis.

That’s just what 36-year-old Venus Williams believes as she heads into the Australian Open quarterfin­als having yet to lose a set in four matches.

Williams ousted 181st-ranked qualifier Mona Barthel of Germany 6-3, 7-5 Sunday, a decade younger but a step slower than one of America’s finest. In Barthel’s defense, she spent most of last year sidelined with chronic fatigue syndrome and is just making her way back to the tour.

“At this point of the tournament, you want to feel good and you want to feel like you’re doing everything perfectly,” 13th-seeded Williams said. “But really, at the end of the day, it’s about walking to the net, shaking hands as the winner. However that happens, two sets or three sets, that’s how I want to walk to the end, as a winner.”

It’s as simple as that — if a player sounds like a champion, she or he often is playing like a champion. A seven-time Grand Slam tournament champion — although never in the winner’s circle in Melbourne — Williams knows the feeling of being on top of one’s game.

Since first showing up in Melbourne in 1998, she’s now reached the quarterfin­als seven times, including that first visit. Williams also has been a semifinali­st here in 2001 and a finalist in 2003, when she lost to sister Serena.

“I think the first time I played this tournament I reached the quarterfin­als,” she said. “So I have done this. This is where you want to be, because you set yourself up to move forward, but this is not the end goal.”

It’s not that Williams hasn’t had tough times. She lost periods of playing time on a number of occasions, most notably when she learned she had Sjogren’s syndrome. For a number of years she wasn’t able to figure out how to handle the energy-zapping autoimmune disease, which found her struggling to find consistenc­y in her game.

It appears that’s all figured out. Instead of playing one match like old times and the next one looking like she’d been beaten up, she’s showing up strong day after day. This marks Williams’ fourth consecutiv­e Grand Slam in which she has reached the Round of 16. Her best recent showing was the Wimbledon semifinals in July, but she’s hoping to surpass that at Melbourne Park.

For now, having dispatched Barthel, Williams is thinking ahead to the quarterfin­al match against 24th-seeded Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova of Russia — seeing it as the vehicle that could put her into the semifinals.

“I know her game,” Williams said. “I have played a lot of matches this tournament kind of not knowing what to expect. That can be — it’s a whole different approach. Now, I have played her and I know what to expect. So I can almost already be settled in before I get to that match.”

Williams holds a 3-2 record against Pavlyuchen­kova, 25, and took their last meeting in the 2014 Montreal tournament in three sets.

Pavlyuchen­kova, who has never before gone beyond a Grand Slam third round, is thrilled to be making progress with her game.

“It’s super exciting,” she said. “I was always wondering why I could never have a good start here in Australia after good preseason, good offseason and a lot of practicing,” she said. “Now it seems like I found a way.”

Pavlyuchen­kova’s thoughts about Williams go back to before they were opponents on a tennis court.

“I can’t compare myself to Venus and Serena, because they have been there — I remember I was a little girl holding the racket, (it) was bigger than me, and they were ready to play in finals of Grand Slam,” Pavlyuchen­kova said. “So, of course, I can’t compare myself to them, but at the same time I kind of also feel experience­d.”

 ?? DITA ALANGKARA, AP ?? Venus Williams, who still covets an Australian Open singles title, is into the quarterfin­als for the seventh time.
DITA ALANGKARA, AP Venus Williams, who still covets an Australian Open singles title, is into the quarterfin­als for the seventh time.

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