Weekend Herald

Tired Williams runs out of steam as Wang prevails

- Tennis

Down to what felt like her last chance, Serena Williams came through with a cross-court forehand winner to close a 24-stroke point, then raised her arms, held that celebrator­y pose and looked over towards her guest box.

Finally, on her sixth try, after 90 minutes of action, she had converted a break point against 27th-seeded Wang Qiang in the Australian Open’s third round.

Right then, it appeared the comeback was on, the bid for a 24th Grand Slam singles title could continue. It turned out that Williams was only delaying a surprising defeat.

So tough at the toughest moments for so many years, Williams just could not quite do enough to put aside some shaky serving and all manner of other miscues, instead making her earliest exit at Melbourne Park in 14 years, a 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-5 loss to Wang yesterday.

“I was optimistic I’d be able to win. I thought, ‘okay, now finish this off.’ I honestly didn’t think I was going to lose that match,” Williams said about her mindset after forcing a third set.

She began by crediting Wang but eventually shifted to criticisin­g herself for not playing well enough to win.

“I didn’t return like Serena. Honestly, if we were just honest with ourselves, I lost that match,” Williams said. “I can’t play like that. I literally can’t do that again. It’s unprofessi­onal. It’s not cool.”

This was hardly the only meaningful — and unexpected — result on day five: Hours later, 15-year-old sensation Coco Gauff became the youngest player to eliminate a defending women’s champion at a Grand Slam tournament since 1991 by defeating Naomi Osaka 6-3, 6-4.

Gauff took advantage of Osaka’s myriad mistakes to get to the fourth round in her Australian Open debut.

Williams was broken in the final game after more than two-and-a-half hours, fittingly ending things with a backhand into the net. That was her 27th unforced error on the backhand side, part of a total of 56 miscues. Wang made only 20.

“I’m better than that,” said Williams, who trudged through the long walkway that leads to the locker room, carrying two bags, while Wang was doing the winner’s interview in Rod Laver Arena.

Later, at her news conference, Wang laughed as she said: “I always believed I could do this one day. I didn’t know which day.”

The only other time these two women faced each other came at Flushing Meadows last September — the only Slam quarterfin­al appearance of Wang’s career so far — and Williams needed all of 44 minutes to dominate her in a 6-1, 6-0 victory. The total points were 50 to 15.

Wang quickly surpassed those game and point totals yesterday, thanks in large part to nearly flawless play in the first set.

She saved all four break points she faced in that set, accumulate­d 10 winners and made just five unforced errors. Wang picked up the lone break she needed at love with an easy forehand putaway winner that made it 5-4, and she soon owned the set.

After that lopsided loss in New York, Wang decided she needed more powerful strokes to compete with the likes of Williams, devoting her offseason to more work in the gym.

“I think it worked,” Wang said, nodding. “You can see the result.”

Wang quickly went up a break in the second set, too. Then, when Wang served for the victory at 5-4, Williams seemed to shift the entire complexion of the match.

She was 0 for 5 on break chances until then but the sixth time was the charm. On the point of the day, with both players slugging away from the baseline, it was Williams who did what it took to take it.

She was superior in the tiebreaker, too, and on they went to a third set.

“During the second set, [I was] a little bit confused,” Wang said. “I have to be calm, you know? A little bit confused inside, but my mind always told me I had to focus on the court, focus on the point and trust myself.”

Asked whether she would party on Friday night, Wang offered a simple answer: “No.”

So what were her plans? “Rest,” she said, “and just prepare for the next match.”

That will come against 78thranked Ons Jabeur of Tunisia, who ended the career of Caroline Wozniacki by eliminatin­g the 2018 Australian Open champion and former No. 1 by a 7-5, 3-6, 7-5 score.

Friday’s winners included No. 1 Ash Barty, two-time major champion Petra Kvitova, No 18 Alison Riske and No 22 Maria Sakkari.

In men’s action, defending champion Novak Djokovic, No 14 Diego Schwartzma­n, 2014 US Open champion and unseeded Marton Fucsovics advanced. So did 100th-ranked Tennys Sandgren, who got past Sam Querrey 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 in an allAmerica­n match-up.

This was the first Grand Slam tournament in 11 years with each of the top 10 seeded women reaching the third round. Who would have suspected Williams would be the first to lose, followed soon thereafter by No 3 Osaka?

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