ESPN.com - TENNIS - Williams, Davenport reach quarterfinals

 
Tuesday, August 21
Williams, Davenport reach quarterfinals

NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- Venus Williams stopped her match with Sandrine Testud for a three-minute medical timeout, then served two aces on the way to a 7-6 (5), 6-3 victory Tuesday in the Pilot Pen Tennis Tournament.

Williams said her back started to hurt during the match and was getting worse, so she decided to get some treatment while she was up a game in the second set.

Her back has not bothered her before, and Williams said she did not consider ending the match over the injury.

"I have a good trainer so I'm hoping to get a lot of work on it tonight," she said.

Testud noted that Williams served two aces over 110 mph after she came back from the medical timeout.

"I wish I had the same problem," Testud said.

Williams responded that a serve does not take too much movement.

"It's one of the strongest points of my game," she said.

Williams, the No. 3 seed and two-time defending champion, struggled at the start of the second-round match and nearly dropped the first set before rallying to win in a tiebreaker. She has never dropped a set at the Pilot Pen.

In another second-round match, Amelie Mauresmo took Henrieta Nagyova to the longest tiebreaker on the tour this year in a 7-6 (14), 6-3 victory.

"The tension was so high in the tiebreaker," Mauresmo said. "Mentally, it was very good to win. Obviously at the beginning of the second set she was a little bit down."

Mauresmo will play Lindsay Davenport in a third-round match Wednesday.

Davenport, the tournament's top seed, advanced with a quick 6-2, 6-1 win over qualifier Anastasia Myskina on Tuesday night. Davenport broke Myskina in her final three service games and closed out the 50-minute match with a deft backhand drop shot at the net.

"Nothing to complain about tonight," said Davenport, who took last week off after winning the estyle.com Classic in Los Angeles. "I was trying to dictate the points out there and really trying to be aggressive. I felt like I was pretty much in control the whole match."

Fourth-seeded Kim Clijsters, a finalist at the French Open, beat Aranxta Sanchez Vicario 6-1, 6-4, rallying from a 1-4 deficit in the second set.

"I wasn't playing as aggressive. I think I was hitting too many balls to her backhand. She's got a very good backhand," Clijsters said.

The 18-year-old Clijsters earned her seventh career singles title with a win over Davenport last month at Stanford. It was her first victory over Davenport in five meetings and she reached a career-best No. 5 ranking.

In first-round matches, fifth-seeded Justine Henin beat Asa Carlsson 6-2, 6-3; No. 7 Nathalie Tauziat defeated Meghann Shaughnessy 6-2, 2-6 7-5; qualifier Kveta Hrdlickova beat Daja Bedanova 1-6, 6-3, 6-2; and Anke Huber downed Magui Serna 6-2, 6-2.

Henin arrived in New Haven last year ranked No. 66 in the world and recovering from injuries. Now healthy, she is enjoying a career year that included an appearance in the Wimbledon finals where she lost to Williams.

Ranked No. 6, the 19-year-old Belgian attributes her rise to hard work, both physically and mentally.

"I'm still learning. I think it's a good experience to be in the top 10 at 19 years old," she said. "Everything came very fast, but I think I'm prepared now in my head for the U.S. Open.

"(Wimbledon) was a good experience. I beat good players, but when I played against Venus I said `OK I still have a lot of work to really be in the top.' I'm still learning now. I'm still very young," she said.

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