Sloane Stephens of the US (R) shakes hands with compatriot
Serena Williams after defeating her in their women's
singles quarterfinal at the Australian Open in Melbourne.
REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar
American teenager Sloane Stephens caused the biggest
upset at this year's Australian Open when the 29th seed rallied
to overcome an injury-hampered Serena Williams in the
quarterfinals today.
Stephens prevailed 3-6 7-5 6-4 to set up a semi-final against
world number one Victoria Azarenka, the 19-year-old
maintaining her focus to see out the victory after the
five-time champion had jarred her back in the second set and
left the court for medical treatment.
"Oh my goodness," an emotional Stephens said in a courtside
interview as she secured a maiden grand slam semi-final
berth. "I'm sure my grandparents are freaking out. I'm sure
they're watching on the computer."
The match was billed as a showdown pitting the future of
American tennis against the most accomplished player of the
present generation, and the early signs indicated that
Williams possessed too much power for her younger opponent.
Both players hammered away at each other on serve in the
opener with the receiver winning a total of two points until
the eighth game, when Williams broke Stephens to take a 5-3
lead then held to seal the set in 28 minutes.
The nature of the contest changed dramatically when Williams,
already concerned by an ankle injury sustained in the first
round, appeared to twinge her back when chasing a drop shot
in the eighth game of the second set.
Visibly in pain, the 31-year-old's vigour disappeared and she
took a medical timeout to have the injury assessed.
Tournament officials told ESPN that she was suffering from
spasms.
MENTAL BLOCK
The 15-times grand slam champion, who had looked in such
distress that it appeared she would retire from the match,
somehow returned but there was no zip to her serve.
Averaging more than 170kph throughout the tournament and with
several serves in excess of 200kph, the American was barely
able to roll her shoulder over, with the sole aim of getting
the ball into the service box to begin rallies.
By contrast, Stephens, appeared to suffer a mental block,
getting broken when she was serving for the set while
Williams, who was now serving less than 130kph, held to love
as the slower paced deliveries affected the teenager's
timing.
Stephens, however, managed to regain her composure and win
the next two games to take the set 7-5 and level the match.
Frustrated and in pain, Williams let her anger boil over at
the end of the third game of the decider after Stephens had
taken a 2-1 lead.
Williams twice smashed her racquet into the court and hurled
the broken equipment under her chair and the momentary
outburst of destruction appeared to work in her favour as she
cranked up the speed of her serve again.
Looking more comfortable in her movement, Williams broke to
make it 4-3 in the decider but was unable to prevent her
gutsy opponent from breaking back immediately.
Stephens then held and broke again to seal the shock victory
and set up a semi-final against defending champion Azarenka
after the Belarusian had beaten Svetlana Kuznetsova 7-5 6-1
in the early match on Rod Laver Arena.
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