The Commercial Appeal

Novak Djokovic

Top seed rallies to beat home favorite

- Associated Press

cruised past Bernard Tomic and into the second week of play at the All England Club, while women’s top seed Serena Williams survived a scare on Friday.

LONDON — Twice, Serena Williams stood two points from a loss at Wimbledon against a British opponent buoyed by a roaring, flag-waving Centre Court crowd.

Twice, Williams was close to the end of her bid for a fourth consecutiv­e major title — and for the third leg of a calendar-year Grand Slam.

And twice, pushed to the precipice, Williams regrouped, resisted and wound up winning.

The No. 1-seeded Williams overcame a surprising­ly staunch challenge from 59th-ranked Heather Watson and emerged with a 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 victory in the third round Friday.

“I honestly didn’t think I was going to win,” said Williams, who trailed 3-0 and 5-4 in the final set. “How I pulled through, I really don’t know.”

Her 24th victory in a row at Grand Slam tournament­s sets up a showdown Monday against another five-time Wimbledon champion, her older sister Venus.

“We’ve been facing each other a long time,” said the 16th-seeded Venus, who eliminated 82ndranked Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia 6-3, 6-2.

This will be the 26th all-Williams matchup and the first at a major since Serena beat Venus in the 2009 Wimbledon final.

“It’s unfortunat­e that it’s so soon,” Serena said.

Other women’s fourth-rounders Monday: 2004 champion Maria Sharapova vs. Zarina Diyas; Victoria Azarenka vs. Belinda Bencic; and French Open runner-up Lucie Safarova vs. CoCo Vandeweghe of the U.S., who had never been this far at a major.

Men’s matchups: defending champion Novak Djokovic vs. Kevin Anderson; French Open champion Stan Wawrinka vs. David Goffin; Richard Gasquet vs. Nick Kyrgios.

Denis Kudla, an American wild-card entry, reached the second week at a major for the first time and awaits the winner of U.S. Open champion Marin Cilic against American John Isner, whose match was suspended because of darkness at 10-all in the fifth set. It was reminiscen­t of Isner’s record 70-68 fifth-set victory spread over three days in 2010, but he and Cilic have a long way to go to equal that marathon.

Nothing in that match, or any other Friday, offered the tension and drama provided by Williams vs. Watson. Especially once Watson — playing steadily, if not spectacula­rly — appeared on the verge of a significan­t upset.

“She just did everything so well. I wasn’t able to keep up. You know, sometimes you just don’t have your day,” said Williams, who lost in the third round at Wimbledon last year. “I thought maybe today just wasn’t my day.”

It looked that way when Watson took six straight games to go up two breaks in the third set. Then came an epic, 18-point game that began Williams’ comeback. Watson twice was a point from leading 4-0, but she looked tight, shanking a forehand about 5 feet long, then pushing a forehand wide to get broken.

Still, she broke Williams at love for a 5-4 edge.

At the ensuing changeover, Union Jacks of various sizes flapped in the swirling wind while chants of “Heather!” reverberat­ed through the nearly century-old arena. When play resumed, yells came during points, and Williams complained to the chair umpire, drawing boos.

“It was really intense today,” Williams said. “I’ve never heard boos here.”

At deuce, potentiall­y two points from the end, Williams produced a forehand winner. Moments later, again at deuce, again two points from defeat, Williams hit up another big forehand.

“When she needs to hit the line or needs to hit a winner, she’ll just do it,” Watson said, “and that’s what she did.”

That began a match-closing run of three consecutiv­e games for Williams, who held at love for a 6-5 lead with four unreturned serves.

“I don’t know where she found this strength today to win it,” said Williams’ coach, Patrick Mouratoglo­u, “because she was so far mentally at a certain point.”

Williams broke Watson to finish it, yet even that didn’t come easily. Williams needed three match points, cashing in the last with a backhand return that forced a miss by Watson.

There weren’t all that many unforced errors from Watson: She totaled 11; Williams 33.

“She couldn’t play better,” Mouratoglo­u said about Watson. “She played the perfect match.”

At the moment, even that is apparently not enough to beat Williams.

Now her older sister will give it a try.

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 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Top-seeded Serena Williams said she thought “maybe today just wasn’t my day” before she rallied to beat Heather Watson of Britain 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 during the third round at Wimbledon on Friday.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH / ASSOCIATED PRESS Top-seeded Serena Williams said she thought “maybe today just wasn’t my day” before she rallied to beat Heather Watson of Britain 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 during the third round at Wimbledon on Friday.

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