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Home  » Sports » Federer and Venus avoid Paris nightmares

Federer and Venus avoid Paris nightmares

By Pritha Sarkar
May 28, 2009 23:21 IST
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Roger Federer was lucky to keep alive his dream of winning a maiden Roland Garros crown and Venus Williams used a good night's sleep to spare herself from a French Open nightmare in the second round on Thursday.

Federer appeared to be heading for his earliest grand slam defeat since 2003 when he struggled to find his touch for three sets on a damp day in Paris but found his range in the nick of time to subdue Argentina's Jose Acasuso 7-6 5-7 7-6 6-2.

"I was not afraid to die, so everything was okay. It was sort of a fun match to be part of with so many ups and downs. I could have won the first three sets. Could have lost them also. (So) I'm thrilled to be through," Federer told reporters.

It was a sentiment shared by Williams.

The third seed's second-round tussle was suspended on Wednesday due to bad light after she had lost the first set. She returned to save a match point before crawling over the finishing line with a 6-7 6-2 7-5 win over Czech Lucie Safarova.

"I was very angry. I really wanted that tiebreaker. She just came up with shot after shot, on the line, deep, hard, you know the best shots she could hit," said Williams. "I was pretty upset.But I wound down ... (and today) I felt very good."

Her sister, Serena, enjoyed an easier outing with a 6-2 6-0 destruction of Spaniard Virginia Ruano Pascual.

Jelena Jankovic snuffed out the challenge of Slovak Magdalena Rybarikova 6-1 6-2 and Russian seventh seed Svetlana Kuznetsova was at her ruthless best in a 49-minute 6-0 6-2 demolition of Kazakhstan's Galina Voskoboeva.

Federer likes the sun to beat down on court so the clay plays faster but the weather gods let him down badly.

The sun failed to peek through the clouds even once during the three-hour-25-minute tussle and the Swiss was left bewildered as he tried to find a way to break down the tactics of a player who feels at home on red dirt.

Federer stumbled through the first set, was tripped up in the second, fought back from 5-1 down in the third and coasted through the fourth -- much to the relief of the panic-stricken fans who gave the players a standing ovation.

"The conditions made it definitely hard today. It was slow, so you had to really be very patient and that might have played in his favour," said the Swiss.

EASY VICTORY

With little to analyse in yet another easy victory in Paris, fifth seed Jankovic did say she learnt something new from Serbia's President Boris Tadic when he made a flying visit to Roland Garros on Wednesday.

"He gave us some tips yesterday. Did you know if you eat fruit after the meal you get fat? I actually didn't know that," Jankovic told a bunch of amused reporters.

"If you eat it late in the afternoon or in the evening, it turns into fat. That's sugar."

While Jankovic has sliced through the draw, the Williams sisters have given the fans value for money.

Two days after Serena needed nine match points to huff and puff her way into round two, Venus saved a match point against the hard-hitting Safarova.

Safarova, no stranger to causing upsets having beaten Amelie Mauresmo at the 2007 Australian Open when the Frenchwoman was defending champion, looked to have one foot in the third round when she had the long-limbed American lunging from side to side to earn match point at 5-4 in the third set.

But the American threw everything in her arsenal on the next point and stayed alive with a thumping forehand winner.

Two games later, the seven-times grand slam champion had her dad applauding on his feet when she streaked ahead to 40-0 to earn three match points.

She needed only one as Safarova's service return bounced on top of the net before rolling back to her side of the court to end a duel that had enthralled fans for two hours 30 minutes.

Men's fifth seed Juan Martin del Potro marched on by beating Serbia's Viktor Troicki 6-3 7-5 6-0, while 10th seed Nikolay Davydenko carved out a 4-6 6-3 6-0 6-2 win over Diego Junqueira.

French number one Marion Bartoli, the 13th seed, slumped to a 6-3 7-5 defeat by Italy's Tathiana Garbin.

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Pritha Sarkar
Source: REUTERS
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