Serena Williams Loses To Ana Ivanovic In Australian Open
Serena Williams went out of the Australian Open as a back
injury hindered the five-time champion against a rampant Ana Ivanovic.
The Serb came back from a set down to win 4-6 6-3 6-3 - her
first ever victory over Williams in five attempts.
There had been reports before the match that Williams had a
back problem, and so it proved.
"I almost pulled out. I'm such a competitor, I probably
should have," said the world number one.
Play media
Williams 'should have pulled out'
"I don't want to blame anything. I feel like Ana
deserves all the credit. I feel she played unbelievable today. I think she went
for her shots."
Williams revealed that she did not know the exact nature of
her injury but had been dealing with it for "a few days".
She added: "It's not anything that's life threatening
or anything. I feel like it will get better. I just need a couple days off.
"Unfortunately I don't have that in a Grand Slam."
The reigning French and US Open champion had been tipped by
some to complete the Grand Slam of all four major titles in 2014.
"I have given up on that a long time ago," said
the 32-year-old. "I feel like I don't even think about winning four in a
row.
"Maybe I can win four in a row, but it seems like in
the one year it's kind of difficult for me for whatever reason."
Ivanovic, 26, goes on to face Canada's Eugenie Bouchard in
the last eight.
"It's amazing," said the 14th seed.
"Honestly, I went on the court and I just wanted to play the best I could.
I'm so thrilled."
View from Serena Williams's coach Patrick Mouratoglou
"I've never seen Ana play that good," the
Frenchman told BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller. "I think she's
improved her game, returning much better, serving better.
"Serena blocked her back during practice and after that
all the muscles got really tight. She was about to pull out before playing
Daniela Hantuchova [in the third round]. She finally decided to try and I don't
know how she got through this match, but she did. Today it was better but she
couldn't move the way she usually does, so very often she was off balance and
couldn't hit as hard or move up to the ball.
"She was not at her best, but not everyone would have
beaten her anyway. Ana played a really great match."
Ivanovic is a former world number one and 2008 French Open
champion, but since then she has reached just one major quarter-final at the
2012 US Open.
A 0-4 record against Williams gave little cause for optimism
either, but from the outset Ivanovic was able to threaten the American's
usually impregnable serve.
The Serb fashioned four break points in the opening set,
converting one, but was broken twice as Williams edged it.
Ivanovic took over from that point, her once fragile serve
holding up well as Williams appeared to struggle with her movement, and she did
not face another break point.
Williams was warned for a time violation when serving to
stay in the contest and managed to save two match points , but Ivanovic closed
it out nervelessly with a love hold after one hour and 56 minutes.
"I was very consistent," added Ivanovic.
"It's not easy playing such a champion, but she's also
just a human and I know she has lots of pressure too.
"I just went out there swinging and I think I did that
really well."
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