San Francisco Chronicle

Title meeting would be 5th for Williams sisters

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LONDON — In some ways, making it to a Grand Slam semifinal is rather been-there, done-that for Venus Williams.

She is, after all, already the owner of seven major titles, including five at Wimbledon. This one, though, is different. She’s 36 now, a half-dozen years removed from her last such run. And, in the interim, she has been through the daily struggles of dealing with a disease that can sap energy and cause joint pain.

Williams made it to the final four at the All England Club for the first time since 2009, and at any Grand Slam tournament since the year after that, playing mistake-free to beat Yaroslava Shvedova 7-6 (5), 6-2 in the quarterfin­als Tuesday.

“Semifinals feels good. But it doesn’t feel foreign at all, let’s put it that way,” said Williams, whose first Wimbledon title came in 2000 and whose most recent came in 2008.

Just like in the old days, Williams will be joined in the semifinals by a familiar face — younger sister Serena, who moved closer to equaling Steffi Graf ’s Open-era record of 22nd Grand Slam championsh­ips by defeating 21st-seeded Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova 6-4, 6-4, taking the last three games of each set. Serena hit 11 aces, including one at 123 mph to end it.

This, then, is the latest chapter of the remarkable Williams sister tale: siblings from Compton (Los Angeles County) who rose to the top of tennis. It’s the 11th time they’ve reached the semis at the same major; in all previous 10, one took home the trophy. That includes four all-in-the-family finals at Wimbledon, with Venus winning in 2008, and Serena in 2002, 2003 and 2009.

On Thursday, they will try to set up another title match when No. 1 Serena faces unseeded Elena Vesnina and No. 8 Venus meets No. 4 Angelique Kerber.

“It just means that she has a lot of perseveran­ce. She’s a real fighter,” Serena said about Venus, the oldest woman in a major semifinal since 1994, when Martina Navratilov­a was 37 at Wimbledon. “Like I always say, it’s super inspiring for me.”

Kerber, who surprised Serena in the Australian Open final in January for her first Grand Slam title, advanced by eliminatin­g No. 5 Simona Halep 7-5, 7-6 (2). Vesnina, ranked 50th and never before a major quarterfin­alist, advanced by overwhelmi­ng No. 19 Dominika Cibulkova 6-2, 6-2.

The last men’s quarterfin­al spot was earned by 2010 runner-up Tomas Berdych, who completed his 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (8), 6-7 (9), 6-3 victory over Jiri Vesely in a match suspended after the fourth set Monday night because of darkness. On Wednesday, the semifinali­sts will be determined by these matchups: Andy Murray-JoWilfried Tsonga, Roger Federer-Marin Cilic, Milos RaonicSam Querrey and BerdychLuc­as Pouille.

In 2011, Venus revealed that she had been diagnosed with Sjogren’s syndrome, and since then, there have been repeated questions about when she might quit tennis — especially as early losses accumulate­d. She had six first-round exits at majors over the past six years, compared with three over her career’s first 14 years.

“Retiring is the easy way out,” she said. “I don’t have time for easy.”

About 1½ hours later, Venus went back out to team with Serena and win a doubles match to get to that event’s quarterfin­als.

 ?? Tim Ireland / Associated Press ?? Venus Williams is a win away from possibly playing sister Serena for the Wimbledon championsh­ip — for a fifth time.
Tim Ireland / Associated Press Venus Williams is a win away from possibly playing sister Serena for the Wimbledon championsh­ip — for a fifth time.

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