Serena Williams grinds past Buzarnescu to keep French Open dream alive

Bid for record 24-th Grand Slam rolls into third round after gritty three-set victory

Serena Williams is into the third round of the French Open. Photograph: Martin Bureau/Getty/AFP
Serena Williams is into the third round of the French Open. Photograph: Martin Bureau/Getty/AFP

It remains to be seen whether Serena Williams can play herself into form over the coming days and rise to become a true contender for the French Open title, but her effort alone cannot be faulted. The three-times Roland Garros champion moved into the third round by punctuating an arduous three-setter with a strong finish, beating Mihaela Buzarnescu 6-3, 5-7, 6-1 to advance.

The victory, only her third of the clay season, may not have been convincing but during this uncertain period every victory marks a small step forward. After looking sublime in Australia, beating two top 10 players before losing in the semi-finals to eventual champion Naomi Osaka, she spent three months away and her absence has shown.

So Williams is in Paris with expectations about as low as they have ever been for her at a slam. Rather than mental, the question here is simply whether she can elevate her level enough. Williams is an underrated clay player – she has won three titles in Paris – but for her game to truly suit the slow, high-bouncing surface she has to be in top physical shape.

For a while, it seemed Williams could have an easy afternoon. She opened the match serving well, easily navigating her early service games. By the end of the set, her uncertain forehand obliged as she dismantled Buzarnescu’s serve and conceded only three points on her serve in the opening set.

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Buzarnescu is a tidy, diminutive lefty who generates power and depth through her feathery timing. A top-20 player in 2018, her upwards trajectory was halted by injuries and she is now ranked 174. As the match endured and she began to read Williams’ serve, she grew more comfortable and began to show her considerable ball-striking ability. So often it was Buzarnescu bossing the rallies from inside the baseline, with Williams forced into uncomfortable positions. She ended the set with a lovely running backhand crosscourt winner.

While Buzarnescu’s level immediately dropped, a reflection of her ranking, Williams responded to the second set correctly, tightening her serve and reducing her unforced error count. Her movement also improved with more time on court, underlined when she somehow pulled out a 19-stroke rally at 2-0 in the third set that included an overhead, a defensive lob from Buzarnescu that seemed to touch the clouds and an exhausted dropshot from Williams before the American flicked a passing shot around Buzarnescu at the net. Both women laughed, with Williams apologising as Buzarnescu applauded. The tension broke and Williams never looked back.

Unlike in Australia, where Williams had to go through three of the current top five to reach the final, her half of the draw is not a bad place to be. It has already seen the sad withdrawal of Naomi Osaka, a freak injury suffered by Petra Kvitova and an early loss for Bianca Andreescu, meaning Williams is the second highest ranked player left in her draw behind third seed Aryna Sabalenka. They will face each other in the quarter-finals should they keep winning.

She faces Danielle Collins next, the bearer of one of the best stories in the tournament: she is playing her first tournament since undergoing surgery to address complications from endometriosis, a condition where tissue similar to the lining of the womb grows in different parts of the body.

“I think, as most women in the world who have our menstrual cycles, sometimes when we’re dealing with these painful moments, we learn to accept it,” she said earlier this week. “And for me things started to become too abnormal and really unhealthy, and it was causing a lot of havoc for me around that time.”

“It certainly presented its challenges, but it’s been really kind of shocking, like since surgery I’ve just felt so much better, especially with my back pain.”

Earlier in the day, Japan's Kei Nishikori bolstered his reputation as the greatest fifth-set player of the 21st century by defeating 23rd seed Karen Khachanov 4-6, 6-2, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4, his second five-set match in the opening two rounds. Nishikori's record in slam deciders is now 26-7 (79 per cent), sixth on the all-time list. Novak Djokovic (77 per cent), Rafael Nadal (63 per cent) and Roger Federer (58 per cent) all trail behind him.

Importantly, the Tokyo Olympics entry list will be formed from the rankings at the end of Roland Garros. After missing nearly a year with an elbow injury, there was a chance that Nishikori, a true trailblazer and the greatest male Japanese player of the Open Era, may not have qualified for his home Olympics. Today’s win places his live ranking around 62nd and within the entry list cut-off. Some player withdrawals are expected at the Olympics, so he should be able to start planning his trip home. - Guardian