Austin American-Statesman

Serena sweeps, will face Venus in quarterfin­als of U.S. Open,

Top seed Serena, Venus advance in straight sets.

- By Howard Fendrich

NEW YORK — No need for any extra practice for Serena Williams after this performanc­e.

Plus, it’s not as if she needs to study too hard to fifigure out how to deal with her next opponent.

Playing far better than she did earlier in the U.S. Open as she chases a calendar-year Grand Slam, Williams set up a quarterfin­al against older sister Venus with a 6-3, 6-3 vic tory over 19th-seeded Madison Keys on Sunday.

“A Williams will be in the semis, so that’s good,” the No. 1-seeded Serena said after needing only 68 minutes to dismiss Keys, a 20-year-old American with formidable serves and forehands who simply was outplayed.

Already a winner of the past four major tournament­s, including last year’s U.S. Open, Serena is trying to become the fifirst tennis player to win all four Grand Slam titles in the same season since Steffi Graf in 1988.

Venus, at 35 the oldest woman to enter the fifield, was on court even less time than her sibling, overwhelmi­ng 19-year-old qualifier Anett Kontaveit of Estonia 6-2, 6-1.

Venus’ match came fifirst in Arthur Ashe Stadium, so then she had to decide whether to watch Sere - na play.

“I get very nervous, because even if I have to play Serena, I still want her to win, so I have a hard time watching unless she’s winning. Then it’s easy to watch,” said Venus, who won U.S. Open titles in 2000 and 2001, but had lost in the third round or earlier each of the past four years. “So it depends on how my nerves are.”

Serena acknowledg­ed having a bout with the jitters before her second-round match, when she double-faulted 10 times, made another two dozen unforced errors and needed to come back over and over just to claim the opening set against a qualifier ranked 110th. Afterward, she took pointers from coach Patrick Mouratoglo­u and headed out to the practice court right away.

Then, in the third round, against someone ranked 101st, Serena dropped the first set and was two games from defeat in the second before turning things around. Again, she put in more work to fix things.

“I’m so proud that I was able to serve a lot better. Obviously I had to,” she said after winning 22 of 28 fifirst- serve points and never facing a break point against Keys. “I was like, ‘Serena, it’s now or never. You’ve got to get that serve together.’”

As for whether she’d need to head out for a training session with Mouratoglo­u this time, Serena said: “No, not today. I’m going to take the rest of the day offff and relax and just enjoy it.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Serena Williams fifires a return to fellow American Madison Keys during their fourth-round match. After slow starts in previous rounds, the defending champion rolled 6- 3, 6- 3 Sunday in 68 minutes.
CHARLES KRUPA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Serena Williams fifires a return to fellow American Madison Keys during their fourth-round match. After slow starts in previous rounds, the defending champion rolled 6- 3, 6- 3 Sunday in 68 minutes.

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