Showing posts with label Serena Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serena Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, April 20, 2017

Serena Williams is pregnant � her swimsuit selfie spoke the truth


Überraschung! Serena Williams ist in der 20. Woche schwanger

Serena Williams is pregnant, her representative confirmed Wednesday afternoon, hours after the tennis star posted and then deleted what appeared to be a baby announcement on social media.

"I"m happy to confirm Serena is expecting a baby this Fall," the athlete"s rep told the associated press via email.

williams" early morningSnapchatselfie showed the 35-year-old athlete in profile, wearinga bright yellow one-piece swimsuit and sportingthe bittiest of bellies captioned with the declaration,"20 weeks."

Williams and Redditco-founder Alexis Ohaniangot engaged in December. Other posts on her Snapchatshowed signs of what appeared to be a vacation in Mexico.

Along with lots of entertainment and news outlets, the Women"s Tennis Assn. picked up on the Snapchat post early in the morningbut later took down its congratulations message, according to CNN, which posted a screen grab of the deleted selfie. Tennis" US Open offered congratulationsas well, without question.

Updated, 4:53p.m.: This post wasupdated with confirmation that Williams is pregnant.

The article was originally published at 3:19 p.m.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-entertainment-news-updates-april-serena-williams-pregnant-tennis-star-1492638557-htmlstory.html

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Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Serena Williams will be No. 1 once again, starting April 24


Serena Williams Hints She"s Pregnant!

Grand Slam queen Serena Williams will once again reclaim her throne at No.1, according to the wta. williams will usurp angelique kerber (who held the position for 25 straight weeks) after the points from last years Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart drop off and the new rankings are released on April 24.

Kerber, however, will have a chance to redeem herself in this years tournament, which kicks off next Monday. So long as the German reaches the semifinals of the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, she will be back at No. 1. Kerber has a first-round bye, but will still need to win two matches to surpass Williams in the rankings.

[More from Excelle Sports:Marketa Vondrousova wins first WTA Tour title at Biel Ladies Open]

Williams last played in the Australian Open, where she defeated her sister Venus in the final to reach 23 Grand Slam victories. She currently holds the most Grand Slam titles of any player, male or female, in tennis history.

Source: http://www.excellesports.com/news/serena-williams-no-1/

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Saturday, January 28, 2017

Why Johanna Konta won"t be intimidated by Serena Williams" reputation


Serena Williams destroys racquet early in final | Australian Open 2017
By Johnette Howard | Jan 23, 2017ESPN.com

Mary Jo Fernandez and Steph Brantz look ahead to Serena Williams" quarterfinal matchup against Johanna Konta and break down whether Rafael Nadal can overcome recent struggles against Milos Raonic.

MELBOURNE, Australia -- Fast-rising Johanna Konta isn"t a household name to many casual tennis fans yet. But it"s telling that she caughtSerena Williams"attention long before they were scheduled to play for the first time ever Wednesday, here in the Australian Open quarterfinals. Think of the ninth-ranked Konta as the distaff version of Andy Murray. She"s the first female British tennis player since Virginia Wade, really, who has a legit chance to challenge for Grand Slam titles.

Serena and her coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, have noticed.

Williams will set an Open era record of 23 major singles title if she wins the championship in Melbourne, breaking a tie with steffi graf. williams will also yank the No. 1 ranking back from Angelique Kerber. Now that Murray has delivered major titles under the extraordinary pressure of having an entire kingdom watching him, it"s the 25-year-old Konta"s turn to see if she can. She was born in Sydney but now calls England her home. She has won eight straight matches without dropping a set and has started 2017 with a 13-1 match record that included her second career WTA title in Sydney.

Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

Serena Williams has yet to lose a set so far at the Australian Open, but neither had her quarterfinal opponent, Johanna Konta.

Like Williams, she"s a terrific server. It"s probably the strength of her game.

"I"ve been watching her a lot," Williams said earlier this week.

Said Mouratoglou on an ESPN television interview: "I saw [Konta] play early this year, and she"s one of the players who impressed me the most. I think she has no doubt at the moment. She hits every ball as if she thinks she can"t miss. You can see it."

It"s telling that the ninth-ranked Konta is even on Williams" radar. Serena is often coy when asked for details about what she"s up to, preferring to keep some mystery around how she maintains her world-beating edge. On Monday, even an innocuous question about how she uses the scouting videos that Mouratoglou told everyone he gives her on USB drives (some of them men"s matches that Williams studies for ideas) caused Williams to clam up.

"There are a lot of things that I do, I don"t really talk about all of them all the time," Williams said. "There may or may not be truth to that [video] story."

Williams is still the best player in the world and the favorite to get past Konta and eventually through to the final. But Konta has the game to give her a fascinating challenge. She hits the ball hard. She moves terrifically well. And people who know Konta say she is unlikely to be intimidated by Serena"s reputation. But it doesn"t hurt that bigger underdogs than Konta have pulled upsets at this tournament, including those who earlier this week knocked out Murray, Kerber and Novak Djokovic.

As ESPN analyst Chris Evert noted, "Every player thinks they have a shot now. And every player has hope when they come up against a top player."

Konta agrees. She made the semifinals here a year ago, losing to eventual champion Kerber in straight sets. When the accomplishment has been mentioned during introductions this year, Konta has admitted, "It gave me goosebumps." She has also been upbeat in believing she"s ready for the challenge of finally playing Serena, and the measuring stick it should provide. Konta has repeatedly emphasized how hard she has worked in the past year on maintaining her composure in high-stakes matches like this, and is eager to see how she will react.

All that said, Konta also knows she has never been tested like Serena could test her.

"It"s always been my dream to be at the top of the game," Konta said. "But I think there"s a lot of work to be done between reality and dreams. ... I believe in my own ability. I believe in the good things that I bring to the court, and I believe in my ability to fight "til the very end.

"I think it"s about playing, me going out there and doing what I want to do against her. And it will be about just staying focused on that. I"ve got to focus on the work and not think of whether I can or cannot beat her. Yeah. I just need to stay on the work."

Source: http://www.espn.com/espnw/sports/article/18541934/australian-open-why-johanna-konta-intimidated-serena-williams-reputation

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Sunday, July 3, 2016

Wimbledon 2016 live: Serena Williams wins on Centre and Nick Kyrgios sets up date with Andy Murray


Serena Williams Gives her smashed racket to a fan

Nick Kyrgios andFeliciano Lopez will resume their entertaining No 1 Court battle afterSloane Stephens and Svetlana Kuznetsov finish fighting it out for a place in the fourth round.

Daniel Schofieldwas in attendance as Kyrgios raced into a one-set lead before Lopez got the better of him in a second set tiebreak, and filed this report:

Andy Murray must wait to discover who he will face in the fourth round as NickKyrgiosand Feliciano Lopez were locked at a set apiece (6-3, 6-7) in a combustible but compelling encounter before bad light stopped play.

If the resumption is any bit as good as the first leg of their match then spectators on No 1 court are in for a treat. Between themKyrgios, the No 15 seed, and Lopez, who is ranked seven players lower, hit 99 winners from which you could easily draw a shot of the tournament compilation.

The shots were only part of the attraction. Despite their different backgrounds, the two men are clearly kindred spirits particularly in regard to publicly expressing their emotions.Kyrgios, the 21-year-old from Australia, began the match in a state of near fury and his disposition only darkened with his players box earning his scorn for a perceived lack of support.

The Australian also directed his fury at the British weather when he needed a medical timeout in the first set for what appeared to be a blocked nose. On-court microphones caught him telling the medical trainer, You know why? It is the stupid weather, its my nose.

Lopez matched if not better that vocal output. Halfway through the first set, the Spaniard appeared to be incandescent. With what no one really knew, although like withKyrgiosmost of his ire seemed to be aimed towards his players box Given that both men came through five-set marathons in their previous round, Murray can afford to kick back and relish watching another war to decide who he will face next week.

The BBC as well as those lucky enough to be in possession of Centre Court tickets must be hoping it isKyrgios. For all his histrionics and hissy fits such a match would be pure box office.

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/tennis/2016/07/03/wimbledon-2016-peoples-sunday-live---order-of-play-plus-nick-kyr/

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Saturday, June 4, 2016

French Open: Serena Williams, Garbine Muguruza to face off in final


Serena Williams vs Kristina Mladenovic French Open 2016 Highlights

Indeed it would be the ideal way -- if you"re a fan of Williams and Novak Djokovic -- to conclude a tournament where rain, roofs, injured players and schedules have taken up much of the discussion at the expense of forehands, backhands and the like.

Williams is a win away from matching Steffi Graf"s 22 grand slam titles in the Open Era and Djokovic needs one victory to become the eighth man to tally all four majors.

They"ve both been in that position before, Williams at the Australian Open in January and Djokovic on three occasions in Paris.

Williams defeated unseeded Kiki Bertens 7-6 (9-7) 6-4, while Djokovic got the better of another debut grand slam semifinalist, Dominic Thiem, 6-2 6-1 6-4, as the cool, gray weather persisted in the French capital.

Both world No. 1s go in as favorites against Garbine Muguruza and Andy Murray, who will try to play spoiler. They, too, though, would notch vital victories: Muguruza, who fell to Williams in the Wimbledon final last year, is bidding to win a first major in her blossoming career. The 22-year-old bettered 2010 French Open finalist Samantha Stosur 6-2 6-4.

How special it would be for second-seed Murray to win the French Open, on the red clay he struggled on several short years ago. Murray became the 10th man in the Open Era to make all four grand slam finals when he beat defending champion Stan Wawrinka 6-4 6-2 4-6 6-2 and is the first British man since 1937 to make a French Open final.

No, it wasn"t Fred Perry back then but Bunny Austin.

If Williams is to triumph Saturday, the American will have to overcome an adductor injury, which affects the hip and thigh.

When Williams showed up two hours late for her press conference after laboring in the quarterfinals against Yulia Putintseva, one suspected something was amiss. She denied it Thursday but admitted it Friday after television analysts broke the news.

"Yeah, I have had some issues, but you know, it is what it is," she told reporters.

Williams can"t help but bring drama to the French Open. This year it"s happening late.

Twelve months ago -- struck by illness -- Williams looked close to making an exit in nearly all of her six matches prior to the final. Five of her seven encounters -- including the final against Lucie Safarova -- went the maximum three sets.

The first set against Bertens, in particular, proved to be great theater. A shame that Philippe Chatrier court was about one-fifth full -- if not less -- when the tussle started at 1 p.m. local time (1100 GMT). Suzanne Lenglen court, where Muguruza played Stosur, was also initially sparse despite tickets going for a bargain 20 ($22).

The incessant rain in Paris forced the women"s semifinals to be contested Friday instead of the usual Thursday. And rather than both men"s semfinals taking place on center court, Djokovic and Thiem were given a date on Lenglen following the women.

The unseeded Bertens, who missed out on becoming the first Dutch woman to reach a grand slam final since Betty Stove at Wimbledon in 1977, had her own health issues to contend with.

She needed a medical timeout for a left calf injury Thursday before downing 2015 semifinalist Timea Bacsinszky. Pre-match chatter hinted that a withdrawal on the biggest day of her career was a possibility.

But the 58th-ranked player in the world has withstood more threatening health scares in the past. In 2014, Bertens thought she had cancer after being diagnosed with a lump on her thyroid gland. Although she eventually tested negative, the 24-year-old endured sleepless nights for a year due to the anxiety and couldn"t train properly.

When Bertens faced Williams at the U.S. Open last August, she failed to take her chances in the opening set, leading to a predictable straight-set loss. It was a similar story that unfolded Friday.

With a lethargic Williams trailing 3-1, Bertens missed chances to earn a double-break advantage. A fleeting set point was squandered on the Williams serve at 5-3, with Bertens snatching at a forehand that crashed into the net.

Bertens -- who was up 4-0 in their tiebreak at last year"s U.S. Open, only to blow her lead -- might have thought it was time to repay the favor. From 5-2 down in the first-set tiebreak, Bertens rallied to 5-5.

Williams sent two poor volleys into the net to hand Bertens a 7-6 advantage, but again the forehand misfired. Williams closed out the tiebreak, and despite Bertens" early 2-0 lead in the second set, one sensed this one was over.

On the other side of the draw, Muguruza became the first Spanish woman to make the final in Paris since her Fed Cup captain, Conchita Martinez, in 2000.

Another Spaniard has, of course, done fairly well in the men"s competition at Roland Garros over the past decade: Rafael Nadal. It remains to be seen whether some of the nine-time French Open winner"s magic will rub off on his compatriot Saturday.

Muguruza does know what it feels like to beat Williams in Paris, winning their duel at the French Open in 2014. And Williams has shown vulnerability in her last two majors, falling to Roberta Vinci and Angelique Kerber at the U.S. Open and Australian Open, respectively.

"I think that all of us want to win a grand slam irrespective of who the other player is," Muguruza told reporters. "Of course if this player is a champion it"s even more enjoyable."

Djokovic in great form

Thiem, the third man from Austria to play in a grand slam semifinal, owns the most wins on clay this year. His powerful, heavy shots pack a punch.

Djokovic, however, set the tone early. The best returner in tennis stretched his young rival to 32 points in Thiem"s first three service games. By that time, Thiem was behind a break.

Feeling he made an abundance of errors and lacked punch on his serve, Thiem nonetheless praised Djokovic.

"He doesn"t give you any presents," Thiem, like Djokovic playing for a fourth straight day, said.

Saluting the crowd with the aid of a ball kid this fortnight, this time Djokovic enlisted the help of six of them.

Murray and Wawrinka promised to be a blockbuster but only delighted -- for the neutral -- in spurts. Murray saved three break points, all with attacking tennis, at 5-4 in the first to grab a crucial advantage.

He maintained the momentum until the third, when Wawrinka broke to end the set.

Wawrinka, a French speaker from Switzerland, implored the crowd to get further behind him and they obliged. Yet the extra emotion from the 31-year-old might have caused him more damage than good: He was broken to start the fourth and didn"t recover.

It was Murray"s first win over a top-four player at a grand slam since ousting Djokovic in the 2013 Wimbledon final. A significant hurdle was thus overcome.

The true test comes Sunday, though.

Djokovic leads 4-0 head-to-head in grand slams since 2013 and is 12-2 in their past 14 meetings overall. Murray did win their last match in Rome in May although even he acknowledged the normally resilient Djokovic was fatigued after draining victories against Nadal and Kei Nishikori.

"It"s another grand slam title up for grabs for both Andy and myself," said Djokovic. "One thing that I know that I can expect when I get on the court with him is, it"s going to be a very physical battle. That"s why the day off will definitely serve me well."

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/03/tennis/french-open-djokovic-serena-murray-wawrinka/index.html

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Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Prediction: Maria Sharapova will stun Serena Williams, snap 16-match losing ...

Maria Sharapova was so close. Victoria Azarenka looked to have Serena Williams on the ropes in their Tuesday quarterfinal, a position the world No. 1 has steadily found herself in during her 26-match Grand Slam winning streak. With an Azarenka win, Sharapova would be facing a woman shed defeated four-straight times in Thursdayssemifinal, a woman who would give her an easily defined path to just her second Wimbledon final in 11 years.

Instead, Serena Williams did what Serena Williams does. She buckled down, let out of a few screams and made that first-set deficit a distant memory by the end, rolling over Azarenka like shes rolled over so many before, 3-6, 6-2, 6-3.

(AP)

And now, its Serena vs. Sharapova for the right to go to the Wimbledon final. But what should be a tennis delight featuring the two best players in the gameover the past decade is instead a rivalry if you can even call itthat on par withthe Globetrotters and Generals. Over the past decade, when they have consistently been two of the best tennis players in the world, Serena Williams is 16-0 against Maria Sharapova. Sixteen and zero. How bad is it for Sharapova, beyond that 0-16 record?

1. Of the 16 matches, 13 have been decided in straight sets.

(Getty Images)

2. Just three of the 35 sets theyve played have gone to a tiebreak. (Serena has won all three.)

3. Serena has won a total of 32 sets during the streak. Ten of those were by a score of 6-0 or 6-1, including the famous 6-0, 6-1 beatdown in the 2012 Olympic final at Wimbledon.

4. The last time the womenwent to three sets (Miami, 2013), Serena won the decider 6-0.

(AP)

5. And its not as if this rivalry is based on old matches that hold little meaning today: Ten of the 16 matches have taken place since 2012.

But if youre going to talk about all those pro-Serena stats, you have to mention the one pro-Maria stat: When they played their second match, all the way back in 2004 when Sharapova was a lanky 17-year-old Russian and Serena ruled the game, Sharapova pulled what was, at the time, one of the biggest upsets of a generation. It came in the Wimbledon final, created a tennis superstar in Sharapova and sent Williams into a relative tailspin (she had six majors at the time, then would win just three in the next half-decade).

(AP)

Theyve only played in Wimbledon once since then, six years later when Serena won one of the harder fought battles of their rivalry, taking their fourth-round match 7-6 (9), 6-4. And, to her credit, Sharapova has played Williams (relatively) tougher of late. Their meeting in the Australian Open final was 6-3, 7-6 (5). An early-2014 final in Brisbane was 6-2, 7-6 (7). The 2013 French Open final was 6-4, 6-4.

Put aside the stats for a second.Sharapova is going to win one day. She just has to. Unless one of them retires this year, the odds say that shell get the best of Serena at some point in her career. All streaks end. And there will be no better time then Thursday. Serena looks completely dialed in at the moment, dispatching her sister with ease, then calmly coming back against an opponent in Azarenka whoeasily could have won that match in straight sets. Serena Williams currentlylooks like a freight train barreling through London en route to New York.

(AP)

Still, the historical weightof the Grand Slam looms for Serena. She has to be calmer after getting through that tough Venus/Vika double, but now that the Wimbledon title is just four sets away, we could start to see some of the tight playing we saw earlier in the tournament and during the French Open final. For the first time since Serenas winning streak over Maria became a thing(say around match No. 8), the pressure will bemore on Serenas side of the court than Sharapovas. The Russian isexpected to lose. Seventeen doesnt sound that much worse than 16. She can be freer and easier, knowing that Serena is two wins away from a second Serena Slam and nine wins away from a historic Grand Slam. Sharapova, on the other hand, is just playing with house money.

This is Serena Williams match to lose. But maybe, just maybe, its Maria Sharapovas to win. The streak will end some time. Why not Thursday?

Prediction: Maria Sharapova d. Serena Williams, 7-6 (5), 6-1.

(Getty Images)

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Source: http://ftw.usatoday.com/2015/07/serena-williams-maria-sharapova-wimbledon-semifinal-preview-winning-streak-last-time-she-won-tv-time

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Sunday, February 1, 2015

Top 100 memories from Down Under



#ICYMI: Australian Open Week 2

MELBOURNE, Australia -- Nike, Wilson and Gatorade are just a few of Serena Williams' vast array of endorsements.

She's one of the richest women in the world, with a net worth of $100 million -- give or take. And after two weeks of successfully grinding out another Australian Open title, the world No. 1 might very well be in the market to add to her already boundless wealth.

May we suggest teaming up with the makers of Mucinex or Robitussin. Serena, who captured her 19th career Grand Slam title, had coughing fits throughout the tournament, so much so that she had to cut some of her practices short. Nonetheless, Serena was able to catch her breath long enough to beat Maria Sharapova for the title, the American's 100th career win over a top-five player.

Sticking with this centennial theme, how about the top 100 things we remember from this year's first major in ... 100 sentences.

1. No. 5 Ana Ivanovic wasted no time becoming the first major casualty of the Aussie Open, losing in three sets to Lucie Hradecka.

2. Ivanovic soon found a travel-home buddy in No. 9 Angelique Kerber after the German was ousted in an opening-day three-setter.

3. And then former Wimbledon finalist, No. 28 seed Sabine Lisicki, joined the pity party, as did No. 27 Svetlana Kuznetsova.

[+] Enlarge

Ryan Pierse/Getty ImagesAna Ivanovic was the first major casualty of the Australian Open.

4. When Day 1 was over, no fewer than eight women's seeds were already setting their sights on the French Open.

5. We'd be remiss if we didn't mention there were nine (nine!) opening-day men's matches that went five sets.

6. And this included the always demonstrative Ernests Gulbis, who told the vociferous Aussie Open crowd to "shut up."

7. While the Latvian was short-tempered, Rafael Nadal walked onto the court with alarmingly short shorts.

8. So short, in fact, that some thought this was the 1980 Australian Open all over again, which, apropos of nothing, is the same year Venus Williams was born.

9. Venus, for what it's worth, played nothing like the 34-year-old she is in her first-round match, blasting Maria Torro-Flor 6-2, 6-2.

10. Afterward, Venus said she was feeling great on the court, unlike, say, Christina McHale, who had an on-court reverse dinner (if you know what we mean) during a thrilling 12-10 third-set win.

11. But McHale prevailed, as did Viktor Troicki, who was returning to Grand Slam play for the first time since after a yearlong suspension for failing to provide a blood sample.

12. Troicki was understandably overjoyed, as was the retired Li Na, who returned to Melbourne Park and announced her pregnancy.

13. Felicitations are in order for her, as they should be for Czech Tomas Berdych, who announced his engagement to model Ester Satorova.

14. While Li and Berdych have a lot to be proud of, so should hometown girl Jarmila Gajdosova, who, after 10 attempts, finally won a match at the Australian Open.

15. Gajdosova was understandably relieved, as was Aussie Lleyton Hewitt, who was playing in front of his home fans for the 19th straight year.

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Patrick Scala/Getty ImagesIn his 19th appearance Down Under, Lleyton Hewitt gave us some early thrills.

16. In all, 11 Australian men and women reached the second round of the Aussie Open, including uber-talented Nick Kyrgios, whom many still believe is too emotional to win big.

17. Conversely, uber-talented Milos Raonic, one of the most tranquil players on tour, made headlines for dropping 11 pounds so he could more freely on court.

18. As for Sloane Stephens, she felt the weight of Victoria Azarenka's racket with the Belarusian winning their much-ballyhooed first-rounder handily.

19. Afterward, Stephens said she was disappointed but wasn't going to dwell on yet another disappointing result.

20. But a loss is a loss, something Maria Sharapova almost experienced before saving two match points in her second-round clash against Alexandra Panova.

21. Afterward, Sharapova told the media she was just off, much like Nadal, who needed five sets, and a lot of inspiration, to hold off American Tim Smyczek.

22. Nadal, who played for 4 hours, 12 minutes before prevailing, nearly channeled his inner Christina McHale by coming this close to leaving the contents of his stomach on the court.

23. In his news conference, Rafa downplayed the potential, um, eruption and instead lauded his worthy competitor for a class-act decision.

24. Historically not a paragon of class, Aussie Bernard Tomic nonetheless quelled Philipp Kohlschreiber in four sets behind a raucous crowd on Margaret Court Arena.

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Matt King/Getty Images Juan Martin del Potro never had a chance to play the Aussie after he decided to undergo wrist surgery again.

25. But at least Kohlschreiber made it out on court, unlike the unfortunate Juan Martin del Potro, who that day underwent surgery on his wrist -- the 2009 US Open winner's third such surgery.

26. There's no question the tennis world wishes del Potro a speedy recovery, as do they Marinko Matosevic, who was embarrassed by Andy Murray in a 102-minute second-rounder.

27. And while Murray was in good spirits, the same couldn't be said of Roger Federer, who barked at a television cameraman ("Do you need to be so close?") during a medical timeout in his second-round struggle.

28. Nonetheless, Federer still impressed Pete Sampras, who told ESPN UK that he's amazed by Federer's motivation and willingness to travel at 33 years old.

29. While Federer was still alive in the draw, a handful of young Aussies, Tomic and Kyrgios, were just getting started, each having won second-round matches on the first Wednesday.

30. Another precocious Aussie, teenager, Thanasi Kokkinakis, almost joined the celebration that day but was ousted in five thrilling sets by huge-serving Sam Groth, who just so happens to be an Aussie himself.

31. If there was a bitter narrative that day, Kyrgios was ripped for his arrogant, disingenuous postmatch remarks.

32. Nice guys play tennis, too, including Raonic, who debuted what he called his military shave haircut at the Aussie.

33. It should be noted that Raonic's hair does not move, thanks what he calls "a lot of product."

34. Apparently, Azarenka's feet were moving just fine as she, a round after stopping Stephens, easily dismissed Caroline Wozniacki.

35. There is so much about the Aussie Open that Azarenka (a two-time champ) loves, but Vegemite is not one of those things.

36. After missing a good part of 2014, Azarenka showed us a lot, as did Serena Williams, who showed off some serious skin with her backless Australian Open dress.

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Cameron Spencer/Getty ImagesEugenie Bouchard's awkward encounter with an emcee led to tennis' first ever Twirlgate.

37. Eugenie Bouchard's attire garnered a lot of attention when, awkwardly, the courtside emcee asked her to perform a twirl in front of the Margaret Court Arena crowd after her match.

38. Bouchard called the request "very unexpected," unlike Hewitt's decision to stick with tennis after 19 years playing Down Under.

39. Venus Williams, who is trying to earn her MBA, wasn't going anywhere, either, as she breezed through her second-round match.

40. Venus is a bright player, as is American compatriot Coco Vandeweghe, who stopped Aussie Sam Stosur in the second round.

41. Early on in Australia was good to the American women, including Madison Brengle, who topped 13th-seeded Andrea Petkovic and then told reporters she had a recent scare when doctors had to remove a spot of cancer from her leg.

42. Federer had more than a scare, though, as he was taken apart by Andreas Seppi in the third round.

43. Seppi came into the match with a 23-match losing streak against top-10 players and an 0-10 record against Federer.

44. Nobody beats Seppi 11 times in a row, and no one beats Nadal the first time they play, as Dudi Sela found out in Round 3.

45. Sela's staunch followers failed to lift the Israeli's spirits as he was bushwacked in three quick sets by the 14-time Grand Slam champ.

46. There was little excitement in that match, unlike the raucous crowd that almost propelled fan favorite Marcos Baghdatis over 10th-seeded Grigor Dimitrov.

47. Dimitrov prevailed in five thrilling sets, a far more compelling match than the 6-1, 6-1 beatdown his girlfriend, Maria Sharapova, gave Zarina Diyas that day.

48. It was a thorough performance, much like the one Novak Djokovic handed Fernando Verdasco in a swift three-setter.

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AP Photo/Andy BrownbillJohn Isner was the last American man to lose at the Australian Open.

49. And while everything was going swimmingly for the top-ranked Serb, the same couldn't be said for American John Isner, who couldn't forge a single break against Gilles Muller in a disappointing third-round loss.

50. Combined with Steve Johnson's dismal, the U.S. men were once again left without a single representative heading into the fourth round.

51. That made it four straight years without a single American man in the fourth round Down Under and, remarkably, officially marked the 45th straight Grand Slam since a Yank last hoisted a Grand Slam trophy.

52. This again raised questions as to why U.S. can't produce more successful men's players, the same concern Scotland is going to have, according to Murray's brother, Jamie, who lashed out at his country for not making more indoor facilities.

53. Jamie Murray called the situation rubbish, which is probably how Jarkko Nieminen felt after Stan Wawrinka was done blowing him off the court.

54. Wawrinka was feeling eminently confident with his game, as were Kyrgios and Tomic, who each reached the fourth round -- the first time two Aussies had gone this far in their home Slam since 2004.

55. Not to be outdone, the Williams sisters won three-setters in their third-round matches, which meant that for the first time since 2011, the siblings were still both alive in the round of 16 in the same Grand Slam.

56. At the same time the two Williams were doing their thing, two Madisons were making headlines as well.

57. Madison Keys stunned defending Wimbledon champ and No. 4 seed Petra Kvitova, while Madison Brengle took care of fellow American Vandeweghe.

58. It goes without saying that the two Madisons were over-the-moon happy with their efforts, especially with the growing band of believers the two were garnering.

59. No one had more belief in her game than Agnieszka Radwanska, who under the guidance of Martina Navratilova, was crushing everyone in her way through three rounds.

60. Radwanska was understandably feeling at ease, unlike one spectator who was miffed at the tennis Australian organizers for failing to provide enough shade in the stands.

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Elsa/Getty ImagesNick Kyrgios showed us his game is as big as his charisma.

61. While said fan was angry, the always entertaining Kyrgios was busy coming back from two sets down in front of a jamming Hisense Arena to beat Seppi.

62. For his part, Kyrgios became the first native player to reach the Aussie quarterfinals since Hewitt a decade ago.

63. As for Murray, he then became the first Brit to reach the quarterfinals Down Under since ... Murray a year ago.

64. The Scot slowed down Dimitrov in four spine-tingling sets, but true to form, Murray had his share of irascible moments during the match.

65. Afterward, a more mirthful Murray told the crowd that he may not only wear a kilt to his upcoming wedding but also do so without wearing ... wait for it ... underpants.

66. Murray, who is not always a private (so to speak) person has a knack for creating drama with quite a panache, as does Mr. Tomic, who called the first-week scheduling at the Aussie "ridiculous."

67. Perhaps Tomic was feeling bitter, considering he had just been wiped out of the Aussie by big-hitting Berdych in three sets.

68. That match took only 2 hours, 1 minute -- five minutes less than it took Nadal to send Kevin Anderson back home.

69. Just two rounds after it looked like Sharapova might be going home, she continued her sizzling play with a straight-sets win against Peng Shuai, setting up a blockbuster match with Bouchard.

70. Although Sharapova and Bouchard garnered the attention, under-the-radar Ekaterina Makarova was busy continuing her clinical performances Down Under, reaching the quarterfinals without dropping a single set.

71. While Makarova quietly moved along, Venus Williams did as well, but with much more recognition after an impressive three-set win against Radwanska in the fourth round.

72. The 34-year-old Venus was joined in the quarters by sister Serena, who struggled to get by Garbine Muguruza.

73. However, young Keys completely overpowered Brengle, giving the U.S. three women in the final eight in a major for the first time since the 2004 US Open.

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Greg Wood/AFP/Getty ImagesMadison Keys emerged on to the scene in a big way at the Australian Open.

74. Keys, so ecstatic after reaching the quarters, said she was going to celebrate by buying a Louis Vuitton handbag.

75. The American triumvirate were joined in the winner's circle that day by Slovakian Dominika Cibulkova, who flew well under the radar for the tournament, and not because she's only 5-foot-3.

76. Cibulkova's height might be a little compressed, but she is a massive ball-striker, as Azarenka found out in a three-set loss to last year's Aussie Open runner-up.

77. Massive ball-striking was at its finest at the Aussie Open, with 19 WTA players crushing 115 mph serves or faster, this compared to only 10 who did it last year in Oz.

78. While the power was impressive, Kei Nishikori has made a sweet living with his fleet feet, a feature that was on full display in beating David Ferrer in three sets.

79. Ferrer's journey was cut short, as were the belly-bumping Bryan brothers, who were stunned by Dominic Inglot and Florin Mergea in a hasty 68-minute third-rounder.

80. That was a solid effort, and the start of a string of quick, efficient matches, including Sharapova's 6-3, 6-2 win against Bouchard in the quarterfinals.

81. This coming just after Makarova was done waxing Simona Halep in just over an hour.

82. Not to be outdone, Berdych crushed Nadal in straight sets, ending a 17-match losing streak against the Spaniard.

83. No one, but no one beats Berdych 17 times in a row, and no teenagers beat Murray period, as Kyrgios found out in a straight-sets quarterfinal thumping.

84. Teenagers, though, made a nice comeback on Day 10 when Keys foiled Venus Williams' Aussie Open pilgrimage with a choppy three-set win.

85. Although Keys is a great story, she thwarted any chance of an all-Williams sister semifinal showdown -- a matchup we would have seen if Venus had won -- considering Serena clobbered her way into the final four with a 6-2, 6-2 win against Cibulkova.

86. Serena, as we thought, then took it to Keys the next day in the semifinals, but the world No. 1 needed nine match points to finish the job.

87. Still, a win is a win, and some make winning look easy, as Sharapova did in her semifinal match against Makarova.

88. This set up the greatest non-rivalry matchup, maybe in the history of the game, between Serena and Sharapova.

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William West/AFP/Getty ImagesFor the 16th straight time, Serena Williams beat Maria Sharapova.

89. Serena had won 15 straight against her Russian rival dating back to 2004, but Williams purportedly had to cut practice short the day before after experience coughing fits that had plagued her throughout the tournament.

90. Murray was feeling just fine, though, especially after a redemptive semifinal win against Berdych, the player who scooped up the Scot's longtime hitting partner last year.

91. Murray, though, quickly had to go on the defense in his postmatch presser after cameras captured his fiance, Kim Sears, spewing some foul-mouth language toward Berdych.

92. Sears was obviously bothered by something, just as top-seeded Novak Djokovic was bothered by Stan Wawrinka, who took the Serb to five sets before falling short.

93. The set up the fifth head-to-head Grand Slam finals meeting between Djokovic and Murray, including their third Down Under.

94. Cleary these two knew each other well, unlike Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Lucie Safarova, who teamed up for the first time and promptly won the Aussie Open women's doubles title.

95. A fascinating feat, but they will have to win 18 more major championships to catch Serena Williams, who took out Sharapova for her 19th Slam and sixth Down Under.

96. Serena, who served up 18 aces in the final, became the oldest women's champ (33) at the Aussie Open.

97. As for Sharapova, she fell to 5-5 in her career in Grand Slam finals.

98. It's not a great record for the Russian but better than Murray, who fell to 2-6 in major finals after a plot-twisting four-set loss to Djokovic.

99. Djokovic snared his fifth Aussie Open title, the most of anyone in the Open era.

100.With the win, Djokovic equaled Andre Agassi, Ken Rosewall, Jimmy Connors and Ivan Lendl with eight Slam titles.

Source: http://espn.go.com/tennis/aus15/story/_/id/12257848/australian-open-serena-williams-novak-djokovic-shine-first-slam-season



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