US Open 2015: Serena Williams to meet sister Venus in quarter-finals

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Serena WilliamsImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Serena Williams is a six-time US Open champion

US Open

Venue: Flushing Meadows, New York Dates: 31 August-13 September

Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on every Andy Murray match plus selected matches

Serena Williams saw off a significant threat to her Grand Slam hopes with victory over 19th seed Madison Keys at the US Open.

Williams, the world number one, beat her fellow American 6-3 6-3 to set up a quarter-final against her sister Venus.

Serena, 33, is now three wins from competing the first calendar Grand Slam since Steffi Graf in 1988.

Novak Djokovic overcame an in-form Roberto Bautista Agut, subduing the Spanish 23rd seed 6-3 4-6 6-4 6-3.

The top seed, who has already won the Australian Open and Wimbledon this season, will face Bautista Agut's compatriot Feliciano Lopez in the next round.

Men's defending champion Marin Cilic and 19th seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga both won and will meet in the last eight.

Serena finds her serve

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Keys hit more winners than Serena, but won only 10 of 28 points on her second serve

Williams knew she faced a serious threat in the powerful 19-year-old Keys, and the six-time champion produced a clinical performance.

She had looked nervous and on edge throughout the first week, with her normally impregnable serve vulnerable - the most dominant shot in tennis was broken five times in three matches.

Williams hit the practice court hard after her third-round match, and she would not offer up a single break point against Keys.

"I served much better today," Williams said afterwards. "I'm so proud I was able to serve better.

"Obviously I had to - I knew I wouldn't have too many chances to break."

In a match dominated by short rallies of fewer than four strokes, Keys cracked first with two double faults in a row to give up the break in game eight.

Williams duly served out and kept the pressure up in the second set, missing a host of break points before converting the seventh to lead 4-3.

She did not require any help, but a net cord handed Williams match point and a Keys double fault brought an end after 68 minutes.

The next player in Serena's path is her 35-year-old sister Venus, who beat Estonia's Annett Kontaveit 6-2 6-1.

Serena stats

  • Williams won 64% of points on the Keys second serve

  • She won 79% of first serve points and 70% on second serve

  • Rallies of 0-4 shots - 90; rallies of four or more shots - 21

  • Serena is fourth in the aces chart on 26, Venus leads on 33

  • She has spent four hours and 59 minutes on court in four matches

Djokovic out-lasts Bautista Agut

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Djokovic's racquet bore the brunt of its owner's frustrations in the second set

Djokovic dropped a set for the first time in this year's tournament after routine wins over Andreas Seppi, Andreas Haider-Maurer and Joao Souza in the previous rounds.

It briefly looked as if the 2011 champion could be in more serious trouble as Bautista Agut's forehand, helped by some indifferent hitting from the opposite end, delivered a stream of winners to wrestle the second set his way.

However the Serb drew on his reservoirs of stamina and shrewdly focussed on his opponent's weaker backhand wing to prevail in three hours and three minutes.

"I was a set and break up, could have gone 5-2 up in the second and didn't capitalise. He turned the match around," explained the 2011 champion.

"He made me work for every point. I had to get in the rallies and it wasn't easy."

Champion Cilic rolls on

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Marin Cilic beat Kei Nishikori in the final of the 2014 US Open

Cilic survived an examination from France's Jeremy Chardy, and a twisted ankle, to return to the quarter-finals.

After winning the first set, the Croat rolled his ankle in losing the second and was taken to a third-set tie-break.

But he took that with the help of four aces and breezed through the fourth to complete a 6-3 2-6 7-6 (7-2) 6-0 win.

"Jeremy played really well from second set on and I was having trouble with my movement after twisting my ankle," said Cilic, a first-time Grand Slam winner at Flushing Meadows last year.

The ninth seed will next play Tsonga, who beat fellow Frenchman Benoit Paire 6-4 6-3 6-4.

Britwatch

Briton Dominic Inglot's new partnership with Sweden's Robert Lindstedt has continued its promising start as the unseeded pair overcame Tommy Haas and Radek Stepanek 6-4 6-3.

Inglot and Lindstedt, who won the Winston-Salem doubles title in only their third Tour-level event last month, will play either either sixth seeds Rohan Bopanna and Florin Mergea or ninth seeds Daniel Nestor and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the quarter-finals.

Should they make the final they could meet Britain's Jamie Murray and Australian John Peers who advanced through the other half of the draw with a 6-4 6-4 win over Austria's Philipp Oswald and Canada's Adil Shamasdin.

Britain's Colin Fleming and partner Treat Huey of the Philippines were beaten in three sets by Argentina's Leonardo Mayer and Portugal's Joao Sousa, going down 6-4 3-6 6-3.

Quotes of the day

"I don't see any broken racquet. The umpire asked me 'how do you feel?' I said 'pretty tired'." Novak Djokovic hides the evidence of a broken racquet in his win over Roberto Bautista Agut.

"I don't think we're going to be, you know, like helmet to helmet hitting each other or anything." Madison Keys doesn't think tennis needs to take steps around concussion, following Eugenie Bouchard's fall in the locker room.

"Awesome. It's been awesome." Venus Williams describes the experience of spending almost 20 years at the top of the game with her sister.

"It's one of my best weapons since I'm kid, so it's something I don't really need to focus on." Jo-Wilfried Tsonga is not spending his time practising the serve.

"When Novak plays good, you don't know what to do to be honest." Feliciano Lopez admits that he could be clueless against possible quarter-final opponent Novak Djokovic.

"The way to win the points is to play well." Defending champion Marin Cilic reveals the secret to his success.

Selfie of the day

Image source, ESPN
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Roger Federer wrestled with the 'selfie racquet' handed to him by an American broadcaster but, as usual, found the shot he wanted in the end

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