Los Angeles Times

Williams finds her way back to final

She rallies from 4- 2 first- set deficit to defeat Radwanska at Indian Wells.

- By Helene Elliott

Fifteen years after she left Indian Wells with boos ringing in her ears and the belief she was unwelcome, Serena Williams is back in the final of the BNP Paribas Open.

Williams shunned the event after her 2001 triumph because she was upset over being jeered after her sister, Venus, withdrew from their semifinal match. Serena Williams didn’t return until last year and she had to withdraw from her semifinal because of an injury.

On Friday, again welcomed as warmly as she has been since she arrived last week as the top seed and No. 1 in the world, Serena sputtered at times but held off an aggressive effort by Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland to win, 6- 4, 7- 6 ( 1). and advance to Sunday’s final.

Williams will face No. 13 seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus, who defeated Karolina Pliskova of the Czech Republic, 7- 6 ( 1), 1- 6, 6- 2. Williams’ career record vs. Azarenka is 17- 3, including their last f ive meetings. That includes wins by Williams in the 2015 Wimbledon quarter-

finals and the 2013 U. S. Open final.

“I definitely didn’t think I would ever be in another f inal here, ever,” said Williams, who improved her career record against Radwanska to 10- 0 and became the oldest finalist here at age 34 years 6 months, one month older than 1991 champion Martina Navratilov­a. “After the last f inal I had here, I never pictured myself being back.

“Hopefully it will be very different than the last f inal. But my goal is just to be out there, and I think it’s kind of cool that I can really close the door by being in the final again. So I think it’s something that really kind of came full circle.”

Williams has not lost a set in f ive matches at Indian Wells, though she was oddly erratic Friday. She commit- ted 29 unforced errors and double- faulted six times, but when it mattered most she was able to muster her formidable strength and concentrat­ion — or, as she has called it, her inner tiger.

Where was that tiger early, when a smart and wellprepar­ed Radwanska broke her in the f irst game of the f irst set and built a 4- 2 lead before Williams held and broke back to make it 4- 4 and picked up her intensity to win the set?

“She was there. She didn’t come out,” Williams said. “She was just quiet, but she was quiet winning points. She won 11 points in a row.”

The 11- point streak occurred at the start of the second set, and Williams had a 3- 0 lead before Radwanska could counter.

“In the f irst set she served pretty much every ball to my forehand. I started reading it, so she obviously changed her strategy,” said Williams. “She’s a very smart player, so she knows that you just can’t go into the match and just do the exact same thing against anybody for the whole match.”

Radwanska will be No. 2 in the rankings next week, which will match the careerbest level she reached in July and August of 2012. Putting up a f ight against Williams was some consolatio­n, especially after she was overpowere­d by Williams, 6- 0, 6- 4, in the semifinals of the Australian Open this year. But the gap between Williams and everyone else remains huge, and Radwanska couldn’t bridge it.

“Definitely should have won that first set. Also some chances in that second set,” Radwanska said. “But, yeah, in the important moments she was really returning very well. I was serving f irst serves, but she was too good.”

Maybe too good to be beaten at Indian Wells. “I think everyone is a rival, especially against me,” Williams said. “They come out with a game I have never seen before. But it’s made me better.”

 ??  ?? Azarenka
Azarenka
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Williams
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European Pressphoto Agency ?? SERENA WILLIAMS improved her career record against Agnieszka Radwanska to 10- 0.
Mike Nelson European Pressphoto Agency SERENA WILLIAMS improved her career record against Agnieszka Radwanska to 10- 0.

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