Back injury brings down Serena Williams

By Darren Walton / Wire

World No.1 Serena Williams revealed she almost pulled out of the Australian Open with a back injury before suffering a shock fourth-round loss to Ana Ivanovic on Sunday.

Williams was reluctant to discredit her opponent – a three-time grand slam finalist and former French Open champion and world No.1 – but admitted the injury contributed to her 4-6 6-3 6-3 loss.

The American initially deflected questions about the injury but came clean after being told her coach had already let the cat out of the bag.

“I guess the secret is out, but I obviously wasn’t hitting the way I normally would hit and wasn’t moving the way I normally would move and making a lot of errors that I normally would not make and I haven’t made in a couple of years,” Williams said.

“But it’s okay. I feel like I know for a fact I can play so much better than what I did today, so with that, knowing that, I’m not disappointed or anything.

“I just know that I can play 10 times better than what I did today.

“I made a tremendous amount of errors, shots I missed I normally don’t miss – I haven’t missed since the ’80s.”

The 17-times major champion was hoping to catch tennis legends Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert on the all-time grand slam leaderboard with a sixth Open title at Melbourne Park.

“I almost pulled out. I’m such a competitor. I mean, I probably should have,” Williams said.

“But I don’t want to blame anything. I feel like Ana deserves all the credit.

“Maybe I wasn’t the best physically, but that had nothing to do with it.

“I think Ana just played a really good match. She did what it takes to win.

“I feel she played unbelievable today. She went for her shots. It’s not like I gave her the match.

“I tried to fight the best I could today. But, yeah, I almost didn’t play.

“But, hey, I did, and at least I feel good that I tried the best that I could.”

She’s turning 33 in September but after winning 78 of 83 matches in a dominant 2013 season, Williams is confident of adding to her record Australian Open collection.

“I feel like I’ll win it again,” she said.

“Obviously not this year, but maybe next year.”

The Crowd Says:

2014-01-19T19:34:36+00:00

Rob G

Guest


She loves the "I don't want to use it as an excuse but.........." If she wasn't making excuses she wouldn't mention it.

2014-01-19T16:04:57+00:00

Tsuru

Guest


As far as I can remember, this is the first time Serena has given credit to an opponent who beat her in an important event. I recall, for instance, her completing an interview, after Stosur beat her in the US open, without mentioning her opponent. Maybe she is starting to mature and get a perspective. Maybe she's learning from Nadal, who insisted David Ferrer played better than him (in the OZ open?) a few years ago, even though everyone had watched him hobble around for 3 sets. But the bottom line is that part of being an all-time great is keeping yourself fit ALL the time, being able to adapt and/or come back if something does go wrong, and accepting that occasionally others deserve credit.

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