Skip to content

Serena survives to see second round

Serena Williams entered Tuesday with a 37-0 record in the first round at Grand Slam tournaments.
Serena Williams
USA's Serena Williams reacts as she defeats Czech Republic's Klara Zakopalova during their first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris

]PARIS — Serena Williams entered Tuesday with a 37-0 record in the first round at Grand Slam tournaments.

She also began the day with a four-match losing streak, the longest of her career.

Williams focused on the second of those statistics, the more discouraging one. While she never appeared truly in danger of coming out on the wrong end against 100th-ranked Klara Zakopalova, there were times when it did seem Williams simply could not wrap things up.

Twice, Williams served for the match and was broken.

Eight times, Williams was a single point from victory and couldn’t complete the task. Finally, on match point No. 9, Zakopalova pushed a forehand wide to seal Williams’ 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-4 victory, leaving the 10-time Grand Slam champion screaming and hopping at the baseline in a mix of joy and relief.

“I was just desperate for a win,” the second-seeded Williams said, “and I think it pretty much showed in my game.”

Whether it was the result of rust or a lingering knee injury or the swirling wind that carried debris from the stands onto the court, Williams’ mistakes kept coming.

She finished with the same number of unforced errors as winners, 35, wound up wasting 13 of 20 break points and put only 55 per cent of her first serves in play.

Williams called her performance “horrendous,” and said: “I just played junior tennis — or even worse.”

All in all, it was a 2 1/2-hour struggle for the 2002 French Open champion. Afterward, she went on court with older sister Venus to play doubles, a match suspended in the third set at about 9:45 p.m. because of darkness.

It was an anticlimactic end to a Day 3 that brought the first rain of the tournament, a two-hour-plus delay that interrupted easy victories for No. 5 Jelena Jankovic and No. 7 Svetlana Kuznetsova.

The only newsworthy upsets might not necessarily count as significant surprises, actually, given that they involved U.S. men losing to Argentines: No. 15 James Blake lost to qualifier Leonardo Mayer 7-6 (6), 7-5, 6-2, and No. 22 Mardy Fish was beaten by Maximo Gonzalez 6-3, 1-6, 6-4, 7-6 (4).

Bobby Reynolds lost in straight sets to No. 11 Gael Monfils of France, making U.S. men 2-7 in the first round. Tuesday’s winners included No. 4 Novak Djokovic — whose opponent, Nicolas Lapentti, quit after hurting his ankle — No. 5 Juan Martin del Potro, No. 9 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and 2003 champion Juan Carlos Ferrero.

Ferrero needed five sets to beat 2006 semifinalist Ivan Ljubicic, and while that and other matches might have interested fans, nothing going on around Roland Garros came close to the potential shock value of a loss by Williams.

Set aside, for a moment, that Zakopalova beat Williams on clay last month at Marbella, Spain, part of the American’s recent skid on the slow surface.

Instead, consider this: The Czech player is 7-24 at Grand Slam tournaments.

“I feel very disappointed,” Zakopalova said. “She’s Serena.”