Serena Williams Recovers To Start Season On A Winning Note
31st December 2018
The 37-year-old was a long way off her commanding best and was visibly frustrated with her own game early in her Hopman Cup singles match, but still did enough to beat Greece's Maria Sakkari in straight sets
- Serena Williams overcame a sluggish start to win her opening match of the new season in Perth Monday, two weeks out from 2019's first Grand Slam
- The 37-year-old was a long way off her commanding best and was visibly frustrated with her own game early in her Hopman Cup singles match, but still did enough to beat Greece's Maria Sakkari in straight sets
- In her first tournament outing since the controversial loss to Naomi Osaka in the US Open final in September, Williams struggled early and her groundstrokes were erratic in the first set
PERTH, Australia-
Serena Williams overcame a sluggish start to win her opening match of the new
season in Perth Monday, two weeks out from 2019's first Grand Slam.
The 37-year-old was a long way off her commanding best and
was visibly frustrated with her own game early in her Hopman Cup singles match,
but still did enough to beat Greece's Maria Sakkari in straight sets.
However, it was Sakkari and her team-mate Stefanos Tsitsipas
who had the last laugh as Greece beat the USA 2-1 in the mixed doubles Group B
tie.
In her first tournament outing since the controversial loss
to Naomi Osaka in the US Open final in September, Williams struggled early and
her groundstrokes were erratic in the first set.
Sakkari, ranked 41st in the world, gained an early break and
served for the first set but couldn't capitalise despite several gilt-edged
opportunities.
That opened the door for Williams, the bookmakers' favourite
for the upcoming Australian Open in Melbourne, to power back and ultimately win
7-6 (7/3), 6-2 in an hour and 44 minutes.
Williams had her left ankle worked on at the end of the
first set but it didn't stop her dominating the second, in which she looked
more like the player who has won 23 Grand Slam singles titles.
"I was making a lot of errors and I'm like 'it's okay,
it's your first match, it'll get better'," she said.
"It's never easy (first match), there are lot of errors
that are going to be made and I think we both did pretty good."
Early break
Williams said her taped ankles weren't a concern so soon
before 2019's first Grand Slam, blaming a little discomfort with her shoes.
Williams won her last Grand Slam in Melbourne in 2017, but
wasn't able to defend her title due to the birth of her first child.
Bidding to equal Margaret Court's record of 24 titles, she
was beaten in last year's Wimbledon and US Open finals.
Williams said she was looking forward to facing Swiss
champion Roger Federer on Tuesday, when the USA plays Switzerland and the pair
will be opponents for the first time in the mixed doubles.
"I have been looking forward to it, this is so
cool," she said, adding it was "like a dream come true".
Earlier, world number 15 Tsitsipas gave Greece the initial
advantage in the tie as he edged past Frances Tiafoe in three sets, 6-3, 6-7
(3/7), 6-3.
The Greek 20-year-old won the first set comfortably and
secured an early break in the second.
But the 39th-ranked American broke back in the sixth game
and levelled the match in the tie-break.
Another early break by Tsitsipas put him ahead in the third
and a sizzling backhand winner on match point secured victory for the Greek.
The Greek duo kept their tournament alive when they won the deciding mixed doubles, 4-1, 1-4, 4-2.