Most Popular Sports
All Sports
Show All

Serena Williams survives scare from Kaia Kanepi to reach last eight, Sloane Stephens eases through

ByReuters

Updated 03/09/2018 at 07:10 GMT

Serena Williams survived a scare from giant-killer Kaia Kanepi to claim a rollercoaster 6-0 4-6 6-3 win on Sunday and move into the US Open quarter-finals, a step closer to a record-equalling 24th career Grand Slam title.

Serena Williams (US Open)

Image credit: Getty Images

"I feel like just getting through it in general was all I'm looking at now and not looking back and just moving towards the next match," offered a relieved Williams, safely through to the last eight at Flushing Meadows for a 15th time.
Following a shock upset of world number one Simona Halep in the first round, the 44th-ranked Kanepi had looked a potential trouble spot for the six-times US Open champion.
Any tension inside a packed Arthur Ashe Stadium, however, was quickly eased as a ruthless Williams stormed through the opening set in 18 minutes for the loss of a measly six points.
It was about as perfect a start anyone could have to match Williams, who was guilty of just two unforced errors while firing 14 winners and converting all three break chances.
But in a bizarre momentum shift, fans suddenly found themselves on the edge of their seats as the Estonian opened the second with a break. The pressure continued to mount as Kanepi, who had not strung together three consecutive tour-level match wins since her quarter-final run at last year's US Open, broke Williams again to go up 5-2 before holding off a late rally from the 17th seed to level the match.
picture

Serena Williams celebrates

Image credit: Getty Images

But having taken her first set against Williams in five career meetings, there would not be a second.
Just as quickly as the momentum swung to Kanepi, it returned to Williams in the third set as the 36-year-old American broke her opponent at the first opportunity and jumped out to a 3-0 lead before cruising to victory.
"It wasn't easy, obviously, I think one thing she did well was change her strategy and started doing just a completely different game and gave me a different look to her game," explained Williams, who laid down 18 aces.
"It's not tough, but I feel like I made one or two crucial errors and that cost me the second set, or at least cost me the first game.
"It wasn't like my level went down tremendously. It was one or two points that made a huge difference in that second set."
Next up for Williams is a quarter-final meeting with eighth seeded Czech Karolina Pliskova who advanced with a straight-forward 6-4 6-4 win over 18th seed Ashleigh Barty of Australia.
picture

Sloane Stephens

Image credit: Getty Images

Elsewhere, defending champion Sloane Stephens eased through with a 6-3 6-3 victory over Belgian Elise Mertens.
Stephens, who has not dropped a set in four matches at Flushing Meadows this year, lost to Mertens at the Cincinnati warm-up last month but was never in danger of suffering a repeat as she wrapped up the win in one hour and 26 minutes.
"(Mertens) beat me two weeks ago so I knew that I had to come here and fight and do my best," Stephens said in. "I played a solid match so I couldn't really ask for any more."
The American struck 17 winners and controlled play from the baseline, ran relentlessly to extend the points, dominated in the longer rallies and was also helped by her opponent's struggles on serve.
"I think just like I always say, get your racquet on it, make a play on the ball, make your opponent play an extra ball," Stephens told reporters. "That's the most important thing to me.
"Sometimes it doesn't have to be the best shot, but making them play another shot, you might get another opportunity. I worked really hard on that."
Join 3M+ users on app
Stay up to date with the latest news, results and live sports
Download
Share this article