Calgary Herald

Williams fights off nerves for spot in semis

- HOWARD FENDRICH

NEW YORK Serena Williams began her U.S. Open quarter-final tentativel­y. Her shots lacked their usual sting, her attitude its usual conviction.

She was facing the last player she lost to at Flushing Meadows. She kept looking up at her coach as if seeking solutions. After just 20 minutes Tuesday, Williams was in danger of trailing by two service breaks. Not much later, the outcome was no longer in doubt because the 23-time Grand Slam champion suddenly was in complete control.

Williams put aside some early shakiness, turning things around with an eight-game run en route to a 6-4, 6-3 victory over No. 8 Karolina Pliskova for a spot in the semifinals. It was Williams’ first win over a top-10 player this season.

“I was playing really not a good game,” said Williams, who was a point from trailing 4-1 while making 22 of her 30 unforced errors in the first set. “I was thinking, ‘You know, I can play better.’ So that was the good news.”

Pliskova offered this guess about what was happening to Williams: “Maybe she was a little bit nervous.”

But that didn’t last long. Pliskova is a big server and hitter in her own right, someone who briefly spent time at No. 1 in the WTA rankings and was runner-up at the U.S. Open in 2016, when she beat Williams in the semifinals. The 36-year-old Williams did not compete in New York a year ago because she gave birth to her daughter.

Go back to 2015 and that was another semifinal departure for Williams, whose bid for a calendar-year Grand Slam was shockingly ended by Roberta Vinci.

“Well, I want to just be able to get past the semis here. It’s been a few ... rough semis for me,” Williams said. “But regardless, this has been a great road.”

This time, Williams’ semifinal opponent will be No. 19 Anastasija Sevastova of Latvia, who beat defending champion Sloane Stephens 6-2, 6-3.

Stephens, who said she had been dealing with a sinus infection, rued all of her wasted opportunit­ies, most notably the seven break points she failed to convert in the first set. She sure didn’t attempt to hide her frustratio­n, either, repeatedly gesturing toward or speaking in the direction of her coach Kamau Murray.

When someone urged her to raise her level in the second set, Stephens replied, “I’m trying!”

“When you don’t play big points well, the match can get away from you,” Stephens said. “I think that’s what happened today. I didn’t convert.”

Sevastova, who retired in 2013 because of injuries and returned nearly two years later, advanced to her first Grand Slam semifinal.

On the men’s side, John Isner’s bid to become the first American man in a dozen years to get to the final four at Flushing Meadows ended with a 6-7 (5), 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-2 loss to No. 3 Juan Martin del Potro, who won the 2009 championsh­ip.

The Argentine next faces either defending champion Rafael Nadal or No. 9 Dominic Thiem Friday in the semifinals.

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Serena Williams

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