Roger Federer stepped up his relentless march to another
Australian Open title yesterday, sweeping into the third round
alongside drawcards Amelie Mauresmo, Andy Roddick and Serena
Williams.
The world No 1 blasted veteran Swede Jonas Bjorkman 6-2, 6-3,
6-2 in just 95 minutes as he chases his third Australian crown and
10th Grand Slam.
The defending champion moved up a gear from his opening round
win over German Bjorn Phau and was never under threat against the
50th-ranked Bjorkman.
It extended his unbeaten streak to 30 matches and he is closing
in on his personal best unbeaten run of 35 matches set in 2005.
"I think I was pretty much in control of the match today," said
the Swiss maestro, who played in temperatures that were a cool 17
Celsius below the previous day's scorching 40 C.
"I started well and I felt like if I got my serve going, it's
going to be tough for Jonas. That's a little bit what happened.
"I think it was a good match from my side. I didn't give him so
many chances like I did against Phau in the first round. I think
it's a bit of an improvement."
He will next play Russian 25th seed Mikhail Youzhny.
Sixth seed Roddick, on course to meet Federer in the semifinals,
downed Frenchman Marc Gicquel in straight sets and said his game
was peaking at the right time.
"I thought I hit the ball a little bit better, played a little
bit more solid today," Roddick said. "I was putting myself in
better positions on the court.
"I still could have executed a little bit better, but I feel
like I'm pretty close to playing clean tennis."
Marat Safin, who won here in 2005, will be Roddick's next hurdle
after the Russian came through another tough five-setter.
Seeded 26 after an injury-hit 2006, Safin came from behind to
overcome Israeli qualifier Dudi Sela 6-3, 5-7, 4-6, 7-6 (7/4),
6-0.
Last year's finalist Marcos Baghdatis of Cyprus, seeded 11,
couldn't summon the same reserves, pulling one set back before
being beaten 7-6 (7/5), 6-2, 2-6, 6-0 by Gael Monfils of
France.
Defending champion Mauresmo continued her title defence with a
clinical 6-2, 6-2 victory over Russian teenager Olga Poutchkova to
schedule a third round meeting with Czech Eva Birnerova.
"It's never easy when you go out there and you don't know the
player you're up against," said the Frenchwoman, also the reigning
Wimbledon champion.
"She was pretty talented and she could really play some great
shots so I was very serious and I'm very happy to go through."
Williams, meanwhile, fought out a 7-6 (7/4), 6-2 win over Anne
Kremer of Luxembourg and admitted she was still rusty as she comes
back from a four-month injury layoff.
The seven-time Grand Slam champion, who won here in 2003 and
2005, failed to dominate Kremer, a 31-year-old qualifier ranked 159
in the world.
"Progress report: Improvement, still working on some things,
need to stay more focused," said the 25-year-old, who is unseeded
here.
Third seed Svetlana Kuznetsova, a former US Open champion, has
never been beyond the quarterfinal here in five attempts but looked
in imposing form against Australian wildcard Monique Adamczak,
winning 6-2, 6-1.
Also into the third round is Serbian 11th seed Jelena Jankovic,
while China's Li Na, seeded 19, sailed past Elena Bovina of Russia
in a first round match postponed from Tuesday.
(China Daily via AFP January 18, 2007)