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Stephens Upsets Williams in Stunner | Stephens Upsets Williams in Stunner |
(about 7 hours later) | |
MELBOURNE — What was supposed to be a learning experience against one of the greatest tennis players in history turned instead into one of the bigger surprises in tennis history as the 19-year-old Sloane Stephens introduced herself to a global audience by rallying to defeat her 31-year-old American elder, Serena Williams, on Wednesday, 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. | |
Williams is a 15-time Grand Slam singles champion and was the No. 3 seed and a heavy favorite at the Australian Open. But what made the quarterfinal result all the more unexpected was that she has been as dominant of late as she has been at any time in the past: sweeping to the Wimbledon, Olympic and U.S. Open titles last year, then winning 20 straight matches coming into this quarterfinal. | |
But the streak and Williams’s newfound tranquility on court came crashing to a halt on this cool, sunlit afternoon in Rod Laver Arena as Williams — frustrated by a back problem and Stephens’s precocious blend of offense and defense — smashed her racket to smithereens early in the third set. | |
As a result, there will be no rematch between Williams and the world No. 1, Victoria Azarenka, in the semifinals Thursday. Instead it will be Azarenka vs. the 29th-seeded Stephens, who until this trip to Australia had never been past the fourth round in a Grand Slam tournament. | |
Though Stephens has had other tennis role models, including Kim Clijsters, it was a poster of Williams that once adorned her wall. | |
“This is so crazy, but oh my goodness,” Stephens said, wiping away tears in her post-match interview. “I think I’ll put a poster of myself now.” | “This is so crazy, but oh my goodness,” Stephens said, wiping away tears in her post-match interview. “I think I’ll put a poster of myself now.” |
It was the second Grand Slam shock of late for Williams, who was beaten in the first round of the French Open last year by the unseeded Frenchwoman Virginie Razzano. But this was the first time that Williams, the best player of her generation, had been beaten by a younger American in tournament play. | |
Stephens said she felt good about her chances before the match began. | Stephens said she felt good about her chances before the match began. |
“Last night I was thinking about it,” she said. “And someone asked me, ‘Do you think you can win?’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, I think so.’ But I wasn’t too clear about it, and this morning when I got up I was like, ‘Dude, you can do this. Go out and play and do your best.”’ | |
Though Stephens grew up watching Williams from afar, they met only fairly recently. They were Fed Cup teammates last year and have spent time together in Los Angeles, where Stephens lives with her mother and younger brother and where Williams has a home. | |
But they will now be rivals as well as teammates, and this defeat came less than a month after they played for the first time. Williams won that match in the quarterfinals in Brisbane, Australia, in straight sets, but Stephens was surprisingly comfortable playing at Williams’s torrid baseline pace, drawing big praise from Williams in the aftermath. | |
Stephens looked comfortable again Wednesday, handling Williams’s power and holding her first three service games at love before Williams broke her in the eighth game and then, as expected, closed out the opening set. | |
Williams led 2-0 in the second set, but Stephens then began to lift her game again. | |
The daughter of the former National Football League running back John Stephens, who is now deceased, Stephens is one of the fastest players in women’s tennis. She tracked down groundstrokes on the run that would have been winners against most other players, and she managed to break Williams’s serve for the first time to get back to two games each. | |
The match took another turn in the eighth game when Williams shouted in pain as she ran forward and smacked a lunging backhand near the net. Grimacing, she was quickly broken again as Stephens took a 5-3 lead. Williams, limited in her movement, broke back in the next game and then called for a trainer on the changeover, eventually leaving the court for further treatment on her lower back. | |
“Well, a few days ago, it just got really tight, and I had no rotation on it,” she said. “I just went for this drop shot in the second set, and it just locked up on me. I think I couldn’t really rotate after that.” | “Well, a few days ago, it just got really tight, and I had no rotation on it,” she said. “I just went for this drop shot in the second set, and it just locked up on me. I think I couldn’t really rotate after that.” |
Williams’s huge serve was considerably slower after she returned to the court, but she managed to hold at love to 5-all while serving change-ups to a visibly rattled Stephens. But the teenager fought off a break point in the next game with a forehand winner and then broke Williams for the third time in the set to even the match at one set apiece. | |
Williams began to swing more freely on her serve as the third set began. But with Stephens up 2-1, Williams reared back after failing to break serve and smashed her racket twice on the blue hardcourt with two massive swings, destroying the racket and then flinging it at her bench, earning a code violation for equipment abuse. | |
“It made me happy, unfortunately,” Williams said later. | |
But Williams, despite all her straightforward victories in Australia so far, said that this had been an unhappy trip for her in part because of an ankle injury she suffered in her first-round match. | |
“I’ve had a tough two weeks between the ankle, which is like this big every day,” she said, holding her hands far apart, “and my back, which started hurting. A lot of stuff.” | |
Williams did not elaborate on the other “stuff,” but she said that despite her physical problems, she had not considered retiring from the match Wednesday. | |
“I thought about it like for a nanosecond,” she said. | |
Stephens has had physical problems of her own; she had to rest for eight weeks and skip the end of the 2012 season because of a torn abdominal muscle. On Wednesday afternoon, she was busy fielding text messages and monitoring her growing number of Twitter followers shortly after the upset. | |
“It was 17,000, and now I have 35,000,” she said with a grin. | |
Despite Williams’s loss, this has been an encouraging tournament for American women’s tennis, with Jamie Hampton taking a set off Azarenka in the third round and with the 17-year-old Madison Keys pushing Angelique Kerber of Germany hard in the third round. But Stephens, the last American left in singles play, is now unquestionably the leader of this promising generation of players from the United States. | |
“It’s nice to see her grow up so quickly,” said Mary Joe Fernandez, captain of the U.S. Fed Cup team. “That wasn’t an easy position to be in, and I thought she held her composure beautifully.” | |
Earlier Wednesday, Azarenka was simply too consistent, composed and relentless for Svetlana Kuznetsova as she wore down the powerful and experienced Russian and then pulled away to win their quarterfinal, 7-5, 6-1. | |
“I’m glad I could produce my good tennis when it was needed,” said Azarenka, the 23-year-old Belarussian and the defending Australian Open champion. Her march through the draw has not been as statistically impressive as the likes of the second seed, Maria Sharapova, who has dropped just nine games in five matches. | |
Kuznetsova is ranked 75th at this stage and is still working her way back after a knee injury that spoiled most of her 2012 season. But the 27-year-old Kuznetsova remains one of the game’s most dangerous outsiders: a two-time Grand Slam singles champion with an imposing physique and an unusually well-stocked tool kit that includes — besides the requisite power — drop shots, sharp angles, crisp backhand slices and that increasingly rare thing, a reliable overhead. | |
“I know what kind of tennis she is capable to produce, so I was ready for it,” Azarenka said. | |
The key game Wednesday came with Azarenka serving at 4-5 in the opening set. Three times Kuznetsova pushed her to deuce. Three times, Azarenka played aggressively to avoid a break. There was a lunging forehand drop volley. There was an ace served wide, one of many fine slice serves Azarenka delivered in the deuce court. There was a forehand volley winner and ultimately a backhand return into the net from Kuznetsova that allowed Azarenka to even the match at 5-5. | |
Azarenka accelerated from there. She broke Kuznetsova in the next game and then served out the set, which required 1 hour 17 minutes, longer than any of Sharapova’s matches in Melbourne so far. The difference in the second set was as much physical as psychological as Azarenka — fresh and steady in the extended rallies — was simply too much for Kuznetsova to handle at this stage of her comeback. | |
Murray in semifinals | |
Andy Murray advanced to the Australian Open semifinals Wednesday with a 6-4, 6-1, 6-2 victory over Jeremy Chardy, The Associated Press and Reuters reported from Melbourne. | |
Murray, the U.S. Open champion, had his service broken for only the second time while serving for the match. But Murray, a Scotsman, broke back immediately to clinch a quarterfinal victory over Chardy, of France. | |
“Andy had a response for everything,” his unseeded opponent told French reporters. “He will be very hard to beat here.” |