Australian Open: Maria Sharapova heads back to drawing board after Serena Williams proves in a different class

Maria Sharapova admits it is 'back to the drawing board' after she lost to Serena Williams for the 18th time in a row at the Australian Open.
NO STOPPING HER: Serena Williams celebrates reaching the semi-finals in Melbourne.NO STOPPING HER: Serena Williams celebrates reaching the semi-finals in Melbourne.
NO STOPPING HER: Serena Williams celebrates reaching the semi-finals in Melbourne.

Sharapova has not beaten Williams since 2004 and has now lost 19 of their 21 matches overall after the American strolled to a 6-4 6-1 win on Rod Laver Arena.

The Russian had opportunities, most notably with two break points at the end of the first set, but Williams delivered at the decisive moment and it was one-way traffic thereafter.

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Three out of Sharapova’s last five major tournaments have now been ended at the hands of the world No 1, who goes through in Melbourne to face Poland’s Agnieszka Radwanska in the semi-finals.

“It’s obviously always frustrating,” said Sharapova.

“I mean, it’s motivating. It’s tough to sit here 30 minutes after the match and talk about the match, but that’s part of my job.

“It’s motivating because she’s at a different level. She makes you go back to the drawing board, not just for me, but for many other players. She makes you work. That’s inspiring.”

Sharapova served a career-best 21 aces against Belinda Bencic in the previous round but failed to penetrate Williams, who broke twice in each set.

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“I think if you’re serving maybe 180 (km/hr) against somebody else compared to Serena, that’s an ace,” said Sharapova.

“Against Serena, as we all know, the return is one of her great strengths. She’s very explosive. She stays quite close to the baseline. She cuts the ball early. She doesn’t give you many angles. That’s the reason I can’t get so many free points against her.”

Williams started slowly and was certainly not at her barnstorming best but it is ominous for the rest of the draw that she won with so much to spare.

When it was put to her that there is clearly a big gap between her and Sharapova, Williams said: “There is. I don’t know. It’s something about her game.

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“I like the way she hits the ball. Plus, when I play her, I know automatically I have to step up my game.

“I think that makes me play better. When I play better, when I’m forced to play better, I don’t know, I do well.”

Williams twice called for a trainer but allayed any concerns about injury, instead claiming she suffered food poisoning last week.

Radwanska eased past Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro 6-1 6-3 but she has never beaten Williams in any of their eight previous meetings.

“It will be a good match,” continued Williams.

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“She’s been playing really well towards the end of the year, and already this year she’s been very consistent. She presents a completely different game, an extremely exciting game. So I think it will be a long match and it will be a good match to see where I am.”

Jamie Murray and new doubles partner Brazilian Bruno Soares made it through to the Australian Open semi-finals.

Murray and Soares came from a set down to beat South African Raven Klaasen and American Rajeev Ram 6-7 (3/7) 6-4 7-6 (7/3).