MELBOURNE, Australia — The powerful serve that carried Serena Williams to 25 consecutive wins suddenly became the target of Ana Ivanovic’s attack in a major fourth-round upset at the Australian Open. ADVERTISING MELBOURNE, Australia — The powerful serve that carried
MELBOURNE, Australia — The powerful serve that carried Serena Williams to 25 consecutive wins suddenly became the target of Ana Ivanovic’s attack in a major fourth-round upset at the Australian Open.
Williams had a back complaint she’d tried to keep secret before Saturday but Ivanovic noticed quickly that the best serve in women’s tennis wasn’t coming in as fast as expected, and started taking big swipes.
The No. 14-seeded Ivanovic ended Williams’ bid for a sixth Australian and 18th Grand Slam title with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 victory that took the hottest of favorites out of contention at Melbourne Park and opened up one side of the women’s draw.
“It’s not easy playing such a champion … but she is also just a human,” said Ivanovic, who beat Venus Williams in the final at Auckland, New Zealand, earlier this month. “I just went out there swinging.”
Williams hadn’t lost a match since August, and had a phenomenal record of 78-4 in 2013. She came into the fourth round on the second-longest winning streak of her career, and it was her 70th match at Melbourne Park, a record in the Open era. Williams set the mark for most match wins (61) ever at the Australian Open with her third-round victory.
But she didn’t move her feet well. And when she tried to step up the intensity in the third set, her grunts becoming louder until she toned it down after spraying a wild backhand in the next-to-last game, Ivanovic matched her stroke for stroke.
“It wasn’t the best,” top-ranked Williams told a news conference, after hearing that her coach had leaked news of the back injury.
“Again, I don’t want to blame anything. I feel like Ana deserves all the credit,” Williams added. “I feel she played unbelievable today. I think she went for her shots. It’s not like I gave her the match.”
Ivanovic advanced to the quarterfinals here for the first time since her run to the 2008 final and will next play the winner of Saturday’s later match between Australian wild-card entry Casey Dellacqua and No. 30-seeded Eugenie Bouchard.
The other quarterfinal on Ivanovic’s half will feature two women who’ll turn 32 next month, after two-time finalist Li Na beat No. 22 Ekaterina Makarova 6-2, 6-0 and No. 28 Flavia Pennetta upset No. 9 Angelique Kerber 6-1, 4-6, 7-5.
Novak Djokovic watched the second and third sets of Ivanovic’s win on TV, then continued his bid for a fourth straight title here with a 6-3, 6-0, 6-2 win over Fabio Fognini. No. 3-seeded David Ferrer beat Florian Mayer 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-2, 6-1 and will next play No. 7 Tomas Berdych, who beat No. 19 Kevin Anderson 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.
In the 52 previous matches here where she’d won the first set, Williams had only ever lost one match — against fellow American Sloane Stephens in last year’s quarterfinals.
The crowd was evenly divided at first but, sensing an upset, started backing Ivanovic, the former girlfriend of Australian golfer Adam Scott, as the match progressed.
After dropping serve twice in the first set, Ivanovic didn’t face another break point in the second or third sets. She broke Williams three times, frequently standing well inside the baseline to receive.
She had 33 winners, including 20 on her forehand. She also had a little bit of luck, when she drove a backhand that deflected off the top of the net, looped over and caught the line.
“I had to remind myself all the time just to stay in the moment, because there were moments in the match where it could have gone either way,” Ivanovic said.
Ivanovic won her only major at the French Open in 2008, giving her the No. 1 ranking for a total of 12 weeks. But since she’d only advanced past the fourth round once at 22 Grand Slams.
“I had to break a spell, fourth round,” Ivanovic said, “and what’s the better place to do it than here against such a champion?”
Williams hit 22 winners but made 31 unforced errors, mostly on her backhand.
“I made a tremendous amount of errors, shots … I haven’t missed since the ’80s,” Williams said.
Pausing to concentrate, Williams was given a warning for a time violation in her last service game, and fended off a match point when Ivanovic netted a return.
In the next game Ivanovic set up triple match point when Williams hit a service return too long, and then clinched it just under two hours.
Williams didn’t say exactly what the back injury was, but thought she’d get over it in a few days with some rest. She’d thought about pulling out of the tournament, but it wasn’t in her nature to concede defeat.
“Maybe I wasn’t the best physically, but that had nothing to do with it,” Williams said.
Williams won her last Australian Open title in 2010, and hasn’t been past the quarterfinals since then, her campaigns often derailed by injuries at the season’s first major.
“I think I have done pretty well here, in general over the history,” she said. “I feel like I’ll win it again.”