SPORTS

Wozniacki, Venus advance to Auckland quarters

January 07, 2015 15:00 IST

Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark plays a forehand against Taylor Townsend of USA during the 2015 ASB Classic in Auckland on Wednesday. Photograph: Hannah Peters/Getty Images

Top seed Caroline Wozniacki and Venus Williams advanced to the Auckland Classic quarter-finals and kept alive the hopes of an anticipated final between the pair in dramatically contrasting circumstances on Wednesday.

Denmark's Wozniacki had to battle back from a 5-2 deficit in the second set before overcoming American teenager Taylor Townsend, who produced a superb all court game that was mixed with blistering groundstrokes and soft hands around the net.

The world number eight raced through the first set 6-1 before the 2012 junior Australian Open champion finally got some rhythm to win four successive games in the second set and take a 5-2 lead.

Nerves, however, got the better of Townsend as Wozniacki scrambled back to 5-4 before she saved three set points to level at 5-5.

The former world number one then raced through the tie-break to win 6-1, 7-6 (7-4) and set up a tricky quarter-final clash with Germany's Julia Goerges.

Third seeded Williams, who spent less than an hour on court on Tuesday, took a little longer to overcome Japan's Kurumi Nara 6-4, 6-1 on Wednesday and set up possibly the pick of the quarter-finals where she will face Russia's Elena Vesnina.

The Russian World No 64 has a 2-1 career record over Williams, including a sensational 6-1, 6-3 victory over the American in the first round at Wimbledon in 2012.

"When I played her at Wimbledon it was very special," Vesnina told reporters. "I won that match in two sets and I was so happy because I didn't expect it.

"She's a super great player, but on grass she's the best of the best and to beat her there was amazing and I'm always saying this is the biggest win of my career.

"I'll go on the court and I'll try to show my best tennis, I'll try to play aggressively, move her around.

"Whenever you go on court you want to win the match no matter who you're playing."

Source: REUTERS
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