Didn't take long for Serena Williams to show her fourth-round opponent at the U.S. Open where things were headed.
"The first point of the whole match," 82nd-ranked Andrea Hlavackova
explained, "when I served, and she returned, like, a 100 mph forehand
return, I was like, 'OK, I know who I'm playing. You don't have to prove
it to me. I know.'"
Monday's match was less than 15 seconds old. It might as well have been over.
Dominant from the moment she ripped that return of an 88 mph second
serve, forcing Hlavackova into an out-of-control backhand that sailed
well long, to the moment she powered a 116 mph service winner on the
last point, Williams extended her 2½-month stretch of excellence with a
6-0, 6-0 victory to get to the quarterfinals at Flushing Meadows.
Those two big zeros pretty much tell the story; it's the fifth time
in her career Williams won with what's commonly called a "double bagel."
Some other impressive numbers: Williams won 60 of 89 points, built a
31-9 edge in winners and improved to 23-1 since losing in the first
round of the French Open. That run includes singles and doubles titles
at both Wimbledon and the London Olympics.
Hlavackova knows this act all too well: She and Lucie Hradecka were
the doubles runners-up at both of those events. Not that those 2-on-2
encounters helped prepare for the 1-on-1 match in Arthur Ashe Stadium on
Monday.
"Singles is completely different," said Hlavackova, who chose the
phrase "What can you do"? more than once when analyzing what it's like
to face 14-time major champion Williams.
"My coach warned me to not go on the court and play for a score,"
Hlavackova said, by which she meant just trying to keep it as close as
possible. "I was in the match. I was trying to figure out how to win.
And when it was, like, 6-love, 4-love, 30-love, I was thinking, 'Well,
I'm not playing for a score, but one game wouldn't hurt.'"
Oh, well.
Next for the fourth-seeded Williams, who won the U.S. Open in 1999,
2002 and 2008, is a match against former No. 1 Ana Ivanovic, who reached
a Grand Slam quarterfinal for the first time since winning the 2008
French Open by defeating 55th-ranked Tsvetana Pironkova of Bulgaria 6-0,
6-4.
Williams — who lost in the third round of doubles with older sister
Venus on Monday night — is 3-0 against Ivanovic, including a
straight-set victory in the fourth round at Flushing Meadows last year.
Must not have left much of an impression on the American, because when
asked what she remembers most about their most recent match, Williams
replied: "Was it here?"
Assured that it was, in 2011, Williams said with a smile: "OK. Yeah,
I remember, clearly, not a lot, but I will be looking at the film."
In the semifinals, the Williams-Ivanovic winner will meet either No.
10 Sara Errani or No. 20 Roberta Vinci, doubles partners who both
eliminated higher-seeded women Monday and now face the uncomfortable
prospect of trying to beat a best buddy.
"Our friendship won't change, no matter what, no matter who wins,"
said Vinci, noting that she expects they'll have dinner together, as
usual, Monday and Tuesday. "It definitely won't be an easy match from a
mental perspective. We know each other well. We practice together often.
We play doubles together. We know everything about each other."
Errani and Vinci teamed up to win the French Open doubles
championship in June, and now one of them is going to be the first woman
from Italy to play in the U.S. Open semifinals since the professional
era began in 1968.
Errani, the runner-up to Maria Sharapova at the French Open, got past No. 6 Angelique Kerber of Germany 7-6 (5), 6-3.
Reaching her first singles quarterfinal in 32 career Grand Slam
tournaments, Vinci stunned No. 2 Agnieszka Radwanska 6-1, 6-4.
"I really had the worst day," said Radwanska, who could have moved
up to No. 1 in the WTA rankings by reaching next weekend's final. "She
really mixes it up — a lot of slice, then suddenly hitting very well
from the forehand side, then kick serve, drop shots, volleys as well,
coming to the net. It's really tough because she really had an answer
for everything."
Radwanska could sympathize with Hlavackova's plight, having lost to Williams in the Wimbledon final.
"When she's on fire, you can't do anything about it. It doesn't
matter what you try to do, it's going to be a winner," Radwanska said.
"It's just Serena. She's a great champion."
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