Australian Open: Serena Williams Dispels Injury Concerns, Defeats Camila Giorgi In First Round
Serena Williams, who was plagued with a knee injury before the start of the Australian Open, put in a good show against Camila Giorgi to move to the second round.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: January 18, 2016 10:07 am IST
World number one Serena Williams dispelled concerns she was struggling with a knee injury by digging deep to beat Camila Giorgi Monday in a testing start to her Australian Open campaign. (Serena Williams Eyes Steffi Graf's 22-Slam Record)
In searing heat, the six-time Australian Open champion, who is gunning to equal Steffi Graf's Open-era record of 22 Grand Slam titles, ground down the Italian 6-4, 7-5 in 1hr 45 mins during her first round clash. (Serena Williams Not Worried About Injuries)
Wearing a canary yellow pleated skirt and matching mid-rift bearing shirt, displaying her pierced naval, Williams was composed but not her usual clinical self during the draining workout.
"It wasn't very easy, she plays really well," said the top seed, after successfully coming through her first tour-level match since the US Open in September.
"I haven't played a competitive match in a really long time so it was good for me to come out here and get through it.
"I was able to stay in it and stay calm and that is what matters most."
Leading into the match the lopsided statistics made the American an overwhelming favourite -- she had won 737 tour matches and 69 singles titles to Giorgi's 248 and one.
And Giorgi's nerves were clearly jangling as she opened with a double fault with the heat hitting 32 Celsius (89.6 Fahrenheit) on Rod Laver Arena.
But the world number 36 -- the highest ranked non-seed -- quickly settled down to hold serve with a scintillating crosscourt forehand.
With Williams' knee giving her problems in the latter half of 2015 and in the lead-up to Melbourne Park, the Italian did her best to push her around the court but the top seed was moving freely and held for 1-1.
Despite her lack of match practice, a focused Williams quickly got in her groove and carved out a decisive break with some powerful groundstrokes to grab a 2-1 advantage.
She held for 3-1 and broke again for 4-1 as the right-hander's confidence appeared to sap before the Italian regained composure to claw back to 4-2.
It was the start of a mid-set wobble by Williams, who lost the next game and had to recover from 0-30 down on her serve in the eighth to stay on top, screaming "Come on!" as she finally went 5-3 clear. She served out the set in 43 minutes.
- Killer instinct -
A 12-minute opening game in the second set, won by Giorgi, set the tone for a close match with Williams' rustiness starting to show as she failed to find the killer instinct.
It went to 5-5 before she finally got the break she was seeking, serving out to love to seal a hard-fought victory.
Williams dropped only three matches in 56 last season and won three majors, the Australian and French Opens and Wimbledon, before being deprived of a calendar-year Grand Slam at Flushing Meadows.
Those major titles took her to within one of Graf's long-time record of 22, and put her three clear of both Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova.
Melbourne Park has been a happy hunting ground. She claimed her first Australian Open title way back in 2003, beating elder sister Venus in the final, and reached her sixth last year when she toppled arch-rival Maria Sharapova.
Williams is in a tough half of the draw with Russia's Sharapova, seeded five, potentially awaiting her in the quarters.
Next up for the 34-year-old is either Taiwan's Hsieh Su-wei or Latvian Jelena Ostapenko.