MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) ― Serena Williams stuck out a fist in mock triumph and mouthed “C’mon,” careful not to push her point too far.
The 33-year-old Williams was closing in on her 19th Grand Slam singles title, her 16th straight win over Maria Sharapova and her sixth Australian Open championship when she was docked a point by the chair umpire for hindrance ― for yelling in celebration too early when she thought she’d hit a service winner.
She didn’t let that, or another early celebration on match point, or a hacking cough that made her sick, become distractions. Instead, Williams maintained her composure to beat Sharapova 6-3, 7-6 (5) on Saturday night to continue her 100 percent record in finals at Melbourne Park and move closer to Steffi Graf’s record of 22 major titles in the Open era.
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Serena Williams celebrates after beating Maria Sharapova on Saturday. (EPA-Yonhap) |
“I got too excited and I hit a great serve ... I didn’t expect her to get it back,” Williams explained of the hindrance call in the seventh game of the second set. “I said, ‘C’mon,’ a little too soon. I guess there’s a rule that you can’t do it. So I’m fine with it. I moved on very fast to the next point; just tried to stay as focused as I could.”
The muted fist pump, she said, was just for fun.
“I’m like, ‘C’mon.’ It just goes to show you I have more fun on the court. I would have never done that three years ago, four years ago,” said Williams, who has let similar calls upset her in the past. “So I just kind of made a little sarcasm after that.”
On her third match point, she let her racket go before hearing a let call to what she thought was an ace.
“I thought, ‘Wow this is it, I did it,’ only to hear let. I was like, ‘OK Serena!’” she said.
So she fell back on her biggest weapon, firing another ace ― her 15th of the set and 18th of the match. This time, after checking it was official, she bounced around like a little child and the celebration was real.