Serena Williams has ‘nothing to lose’ against Johanna Konta

American must face in-form British No 1 in her bid for seventh Australian Open title

Serena Williams prepares to serve to Barbora Strycová in their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia, on Monday. Photograph: Kin Cheung/AP

Serena Williams insists she has nothing to lose when she takes on Britain’s Johanna Konta at the Australian Open.

Williams will be walking out for her 47th grand slam quarter-final while Konta will be playing her second, and the American is also gunning for an Open era record 23rd major title.

One more triumph would pull Williams clear of Steffi Graf and one short of Margaret Court in the all-time list.

It would also see her reclaim the world No 1 ranking after the current incumbent Angelique Kerber was beaten in the fourth round in Melbourne by Coco Vandeweghe on Sunday.

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Williams moved one step closer with a 7-5 6-4 victory over 16th seed Barbora Strycová, and now faces Konta, the in-form British No 1, for a place in the last four.

“I have absolutely nothing to lose in this tournament,” Williams said. “Everything here is a bonus for me. Obviously I’m here to win. Hopefully I can play better. I can only go better.”

Niggling injuries

Williams chose not to play another match last year after the US Open in September, deciding instead to recover from niggling injuries and recuperate.

She then endured a second-round loss at her comeback in Auckland earlier this month, prompting doubts about her fitness and form coming into the first grand slam of the season.

Into the quarter-finals, however, and without dropping a set, Williams is now the clear favourite to collect a seventh Australian Open title.

She has never played Konta but is aware of her opponent’s remarkable rise, the Briton chasing her 10th consecutive victory after winning the Sydney International a fortnight ago.

“I have watched her game a lot,” Williams said. “She’s been doing really, really well, and she hasn’t lost yet this year, I don’t think [she has lost once, at Shenzhen].

“She’s been playing really well. She has a very attacking game. I know her game pretty well and I look forward to it.”

Fairytale story

The bottom half’s other quarter-final will see fifth seed Karolína Plisková play one of the tournament’s fairytale stories in Mirjana Lucic-Baroni.

Lucic-Baroni overcame American qualifier Jennifer Brady 6-4 6-2 to reach the last eight of a grand slam for the first time in 18 years.

The Croatian, who turns 35 in March, last made it this far at Wimbledon in 1999, when she lost to Graf in the semi-finals.

A string of personal problems, however, caused by an abusive father, derailed her tennis career and left her sitting out every major tournament from 2004 until 2009, before returning at Wimbledon in 2010.

She had not gone past the first round at the Australian Open since 1998.

“I hope nobody is going to pinch me and wake me up because this is just incredible,” Lucic-Baroni said.

“I’m a tough little cookie – really, really stubborn. When I want something I will do whatever it takes.

“It’s not a guarantee you’re going to get there but man, what satisfaction I feel right now – incredible.

“And to anyone struggling out there, I can’t say because of the TV here, ‘F’ everything and everybody, whoever tells you, you can’t do it, just show up and do it with your heart.”

Lucic-Baroni will play Plisková after the Czech beat Australia’s Daria Gavrilova 6-3 6-3.