Venus
Williams of the US celebrates her Australian Open quarter-final win over
Russia's Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, in Melbourne, on January 24, 2017 ©Greg Wood
(AFP)
|
A vintage Venus Williams
powered past Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova and into her third Australian Open
semi-final Tuesday, becoming the oldest woman to make a Grand Slam last four in
23 years.
AFP
report continues:
The
36-year-old overcame the Russian 6-4, 7-6 (7/3) and will play either fellow
American Coco Vandeweghe or French Open champion Garbine Muguruza for a place
in the final.
Her
achievement makes her the oldest woman to reach a Grand Slam semi since a
37-year-old Martina Navratilova at Wimbledon in 1994.
It
is a remarkable feat for Williams, who made her professional debut in 1994 and
is enjoying a late-career renaissance following a battle with a rare autoimmune
disorder.
She
made the same round at Wimbledon last year but had not got this far at
Melbourne Park since 2003, when she beat Justine Henin only to lose to sister
Serena in the final.
Henin
is long retired but Serena is still going strong and plays her quarter-final,
against Johanna Konta, on Wednesday, with an all-Williams title match still on
the cards.
Venus
Williams also made the last four at Melbourne in 2001, losing to then world
number one Martina Hingis, another veteran who is playing in doubles at this
year's Australian Open.
"I'm
so excited, she never let up. We have always had these quality matches. I'm not
happy just with this but so happy I can go further," she said.
"To
be here is like, 'Oh my God!'"
The
seven-time Grand Slam champion is yet to drop a set. She has benefited from a
favourable draw, playing two qualifiers and China's fifth ranked player Duan
Yingying.
But
Pavlyuchenkova, seeded 24, was a different matter, having beaten Elina
Svitolina, seeded 11, and Svetlana Kuznetsova, the eighth seed, on her way to
the quarter-finals.
Competing
at Grand Slams for a decade without managing to step beyond the last eight, the
Russian had been confident she could take the next step.
- In the zone -
Two
netted forehands gave her a break point on Williams' opening serve as the match
got underway, but she couldn't convert and it went with serve.
But
13th seed Williams gave her another chance in game three and this time she
grabbed it with an untouchable crosscourt backhand.
Pavlyuchenkova,
with her right shoulder strapped, failed to make the most of her edge and a
double fault allowed Williams to haul herself level again.
It
was short-lived as Williams struggled to find the mark on first serve and
Pavlyuchenkova jumped on the second, with a netted forehand from the veteran
again giving a break away.
Neither
player was serving well but Williams began to assert herself, pushing
Pavlyuchenkova around the court to create opportunities. She broke back for 4-4
with a volley after a high lunging forehand from the Russian.
Williams
was starting to get in the zone, hitting some amazing winners, including an
unstoppable backhand down the line to secure the set by breaking again to love.
The
American held serve in the opening game of the second set to immediately put
the pressure on and kept hammering away in an 11-minute second game, which
Pavyluchenkova finally won after eight deuces.
A
wild backhand in the next game handed momentum to the Russian, who broke for a
2-1 lead, but after a seesawing Williams broke straight back.
Another break each and it was 6-6 and into a tiebreak where Williams used her big-match experience to prevail, with Pavlyuchenkova succumbing on a double fault.
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