Serena Williams fired a warning to Maria Sharapova ahead
of their Wimbledon semi-final clash as the world number one admitted she
saves her best performances for clashes with her fiercest rival.
Williams
and Sharapova meet on Thursday in the latest instalment of a bitter
rivalry that took root on Centre Court in 2004 and still festers more
than a decade later.
Sharapova caused one of the great Wimbledon
shocks 11 years ago when, aged just 17, she defeated Serena in the final
to claim her first Grand Slam title.
The duo's relationship has
remained frosty ever since, occasionally turning nasty -- as it did when
they traded barbs about Sharapova dating Williams' ex-boyfriend Grigor
Dimitrov and the American's own relationship with her French coach
Patrick Mouratoglou.
But, while Sharapova has collected five Grand
Slam titles and built a global brand that makes her the world's highest
paid female athlete, the 28-year-old has still been left trailing in
Serena's wake and the Russian hasn't come out on top since 2004.
The
33-year-old American has a 17-2 lead in their head to head record,
winning their last 16 meetings and depriving Sharapova of three major
titles -- in the 2007 and 2015 Australian Open finals and the 2013
French Open final.
Serena has also won all four of her semi-final
meetings with Sharapova, defeated the Russian in their previous
Wimbledon clash in the last 16 in 2010 and routed her in the 2012
Olympic final at the All England Club.
After battling back to
defeat Victoria Azarenka 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 in the last eight -- extending
her winning run at Grand Slams to 26 matches and her 2015 record to 37-1
-- Serena can't wait to take on Sharapova again.
"I love playing
Maria. I think she brings out the best in me. I thought we had a
wonderful final in Australia. It was very entertaining," said Serena,
who remains on course to hold all four major titles at once and is in
the hunt to clinch the first calendar Grand Slam since 1988.
"For me, I don't feel like I have any pressure going into this match.
"It's
just totally different for me. I don't have anything to prove. I won
all the Grand Slams, multiple times. Now it's just I'm here just to
enjoy it.
"It's actually making me play better, which is crazy."
- New match -
Sharapova
is in her fifth Wimbledon semi-final, and her first since 2011, thanks
to a hard-fought 6-3, 6-7 (3/7), 6-2 last eight victory over Coco
Vandeweghe.
Asked if her lack of success in the Serena match-up
would be weighing on her mind, Sharapova gamely insisted she still
relishes the challenge of playing the American.
"I think it's
always a new match. I haven't had great success against her. I would
love to change that around. That's how I look at it," the world number
four said.
"Definitely no secrets between each other's games, but
it will be an incredible moment for me to step out on Centre Court
against her again.
"If you look at Grand Slam champions, you look at their draws, everyone comes from a few challenges, being down in matches.
"There's no easy road to victory. You're going to have your bumps. That's the way I see it."
The
other semi-final may end up being overshadowed by Serena v Maria Part
20, but there is still plenty of intrigue in the meeting between
Agnieszka Radwanska and Garbine Muguruza.
Radwanska defeated Madison Keys 7-6 (7/3), 3-6, 6-3 to reach her fourth Grand Slam semi-final and her third at Wimbledon.
The
Polish 13th seed reached the Wimbledon final in 2012, losing to Serena,
and she hopes her experience of the latter stages of a major will stand
her in good stead against Spanish 20th seed Muguruza, who will be
appearing in the last four of a Grand Slam for the first time.
"Being
in a final, that was a huge experience for me. It helps. Experience is
always very important, especially in a Grand Slam," the 26-year-old Pole
said.
Muguruza, 21, beat Swiss 15th seed Timea Bacsinszky 7-5,
6-3 to become the first Spanish woman to make the Wimbledon semi-finals
since Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario in 1997.
"Centre Court is special," she said. "I like to play on big courts because it's extra motivation."
(C) AFP


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