Serena Williams Battles Past Margarita Gasparyan to Enter US Open Third Round

The 38-year-old Williams will face compatriot Sloane Stephens in the third round of the tournament.

Serena Williams fought her way to a 6-2 6-4 victory on Thursday over Russia's Margarita Gasparyan at Arthur Ashe Stadium in the second round of the US Open, as she kept the hopes of a record-equaling 24th Grand Slam title alive.

The 38-year-old Williams will face compatriot Sloane Stephens in the third round of the tournament. Williams who has bagged 23 Grand Slam titles so far, and is only one shy of leveling with Margaret Court.

Gasparyan Fights Back

A dominant Williams sailed through the first set at Arthur Ashe Stadium, closing out the first game with one of seven aces in the match before breaking her unseeded opponent's serve on the second game to take an early 2-0 lead. Williams showed little sign of weakness, aside from a single double fault and a trio of unforced errors, as she finished off the set in just 35 minutes.

Serena Williams
Serena Williams Wikimedia Commons

Momentum shifted during the second set, however, as Gasparyan, 26, went on the offensive and the six-time champion committed four double faults. The unseeded Russian drew Williams to the net and sent a forehand pass winner whizzing by her, before forcing her into an error on the next point to break her serve and narrow the lead 3-2. Williams retaliated, breaking her serve, but Gasparyan refused to back down, eventually leveling the score 4-4.

Williams, a crowd favorite who this year must play without her legions of fans cheering her on, clawed her way back, managing to close out a lengthy 16-point game to hold her serve and retake the lead 5-4, psyching herself up shouting "Come on!" inside the empty stadium. "It wasn't that frustrating," Williams said after the match. The second-set setback "could help me know what not to do next time."

Face-Off With Stephens

The retractable roof of the stadium was put in place after the competitors warmed up due to rain in Flushing Meadows, and the two played in almost pin-drop silence, with spectators barred from the sprawling Queens campus amid the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.

During a changeover toward the end of the contest, Williams told the chair umpire she felt like she was "sprinting" to manage her on-court towel, one of the many new health requirements of the COVID-19 era.

"I don't have enough time," she said. "I don't want to get a warning but this is not normal." She next faces fellow American Sloane Stephens in the third round. Williams said Stephens, who won the tournament in 2017, is "a great competitor."

"I've just got to get ready for the match," said Williams. "Always going to be intense. Always going to be, you know, who I am on the court, so that's the only thing I can do. "And the only difference is I'm playing such a good player so early, so I have to bring, you know, what I can even more."

(With inputs from agencies)

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