National Post

Serena coasts to 32nd straight singles victory

Puts sharapova, rolling stone issues behind her

- By Howard FendricH

LONdON • After a week filled by a headline-grabbing, offcourt tiff with Maria Sharapova and a series of apologies stemming from a magazine profile, Serena Williams got back to doing what she does best.

Better than anyone in the world right now, really.

extending her winning streak to 32 matches, the longest single-season run on the women’s tour since 2000, Williams began her bid for a sixth Wimbledon championsh­ip and 17th Grand Slam title overall with a 6-1, 6-3 victory over 92nd-ranked Mandy Minella of Luxembourg on Tuesday.

“you can call her pretty much unbeatable,” Minella said. “She’s playing better than ever.… every time she steps on court, you can see why.”

And yet Williams, the defending champion at the All england Club, and Patrick Mouratoglo­u, the French coach who’s been helping her during the current 75-3 stretch that dates to the start of Wimbledon last year, both gave this assessment: There are areas of her game that could use some fine-tuning.

“After today, there’s so many ways that I can improve,” the No. 1-ranked and No. 1-seeded Williams said, “and that I’m going to need to improve if I want to be in the second week of this tournament.”

Really? How about some examples?

“Come on,” Williams replied, tilting her head and smiling.

Here was Mouratoglo­u’s take after watching Williams win her first 17 service points and compile a 25-5 edge in total winners on Centre Court: “I mean, of course, not everything is perfect yet. It’s interestin­g to see what we need to work on for the [coming] days.”

They also agreed that she did not have too hard a time setting aside the events of the previous seven days, which included a lot of saying “I’m sorry” — face-to-face with Sharapova, at a news confer- ence, in two separate statements posted on the Web — over things Williams was quoted as saying in a Rolling Stone story. Williams made a negative reference in a phone conversati­on to a top-five player’s love life (the piece’s author surmised that was about Sharapova) and an off-the-cuff remark about a widely publicized rape case in the u.S. that was perceived by some as criticizin­g the victim.

“It hasn’t been a distractio­n,” Williams insisted. “I’m just here to focus on the tennis.”

All in all, by easily winning her first match since claiming the French Open title on June 8, she helped restore order at Wimbledon 24 hours after a chaotic day 1. It was a day that included the only first-round Grand Slam loss of 12-time major champion Rafael Nadal’s career and a scary-looking, knee-twisting tumble by two-time Australian Open winner Victoria Azarenka during her win.

The highest-seeded player to depart Tuesday was No. 10 Maria Kirilenko, beaten 6-3, 6-4 by teenager Laura Robson, the first British woman to beat a top-10 player at Wimbledon in 15 years. Of the 10 local players who entered the tournament, Robson and reigning u.S. Open champion Andy Murray, last year’s runner-up at the All england Club, are the only two left.

“It’s hard for all the British players to come in here and, you know, lose first round,” said Robson, who beat Kim Clijsters at the 2012 u.S. Open in the last match of the fourtime major champion’s career, “because you just feel extra disappoint­ed.”

Nadal’s straight-set loss to 135th-ranked Steve darcis was still a main topic of conversati­on, and top-seeded Novak djokovic called it a reminder that “you cannot take anything or anybody for granted.”

“To be honest, I was expecting him to be a bit rusty on the court,” djokovic said. “In the opening rounds, obviously, it’s very dangerous for top players who haven’t been playing on grass.… On the other side of the net is somebody that is lower ranked, he has nothing to lose, so he’s going for his shots.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada