Williams Battles On
World number one Serena Williams battled her way into the
fourth round of the Sony Open with a 6-4 4-6 6-4 win over Frenchwoman Caroline
Garcia on Saturday but the six-time champion hardly looked at home on the Miami
hardcourts calling her effort unprofessional.
The game's dominant player, Williams, who lives an hour
drive away from the Crandon Park complex, has yet to put her stamp on her home
tournament, advancing with a pair of labored wins over Yaroslava Shvedova and
Garcia.
The hard-hitting Frenchwoman showed no fear, slugging it out
with the 17-time grand slam winner for more than two and a half hours before
Williams ended the fight with a blistering forehand winner.
"I really gave myself a tremendous amount of trouble
out there," Williams told reporters. "Granted she played great but I
made so many errors. I hit so short.
"I just have to do better."
A more unsettling sight for tournament officials has been
the large swaths of empty green seats, the hometown girl and the biggest draw
in women's tennis unable to attract a full house to either of Williams' center
court matches.
Meanwhile, Williams' serve seems to have deserted her, the
muscular American unable to find her mark against Garcia while firing seven
double faults.
A minority owner in the National Football League Miami
Dolphins, a smiling Williams stepped out onto center court dressed in the
orange and turquoise colors of her team earning the approval of the half empty
stadium.
But the smiles did not last long, a misfiring Williams
spending most of the match gesturing, scowling and shouting at herself for a
string of miscues.
"It's important to stay positive," said Williams.
"Obviously I wasn't at my best. I had 40 something errors. It's not the
way to play professional tennis. Maybe amateur.
"On the professional tour you have to do a little
better than that, so hopefully I can, in the next few matches, to do
better."
The contest got off to an uneven start, Williams breaking
Garcia three times with the Frenchwoman countering with two breaks of her own.
In contrast, the rest of the match would produce just two
breaks, Garcia breaking Williams to take the second set and the defending
champion breaking the Frenchwoman to open the third.
"I just try to forget it's Serena Williams, to forget
that she won how many Grand Slams and just be me and just play," said
Garcia, now 0-3 against Williams. "If I want to win a match like this, I
have to play and don't think of my opponent, what she is doing in the past but
just be focused on what she's doing now and how I play now."
In other action, fifth seeded German Angelique Kerber raced
into the fourth round with a 6-0 6-2 demolition of Bulgarian Tsvetana Pironkova
while ninth seed Sara Errani of Italy was stopped 6-3 2-6 6-4 by 23rd seeded
Russian Ekaterina Makarova.
The morning session featured an intriguing clash between
12th seeded Serb Ana Ivanovic and Italian Flavia Pennetta, who arrived in Miami
riding the momentum from a victory at the BNP Paribas Open at Indian Wells.
Ivanovic, a former French Open champion, ended Pennetta's
run with 6-4 6-3 victory setting up a fourth round meeting with 2011 Wimbledon
winner Petra Kvitova, the eighth seed advancing with a no-nonsense 6-3 6-4 win
over Croatian Donna Vekic.
Belgian Kirsten Flipkens moved onto to the fourth round in a
walkover when 14th seed Sabine Lisicki withdrew due to the flu.
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