New York: Venus Williams eliminated the highest-rated rival in her sister Serena’s path to a historic US Open final by defeating 12th-seeded Swiss teen Belinda Bencic 6-3, 6-4 yesterday.
Bencic, who inflicted the most recent defeat upon top-ranked Serena Williams in a Toronto semi-final last month, fell to 0-4 against Venus and has yet to win a set off the seven-time Grand Slam champion.
“I’m really pleased I played a (great) match against someone who had such a great summer,” Venus Williams said.
Venus Williams, seeded 23rd, advanced to a fourth-round match against either US compatriot Madison Brengle or Estonian qualifier Anett Kontaveit and could face her sister Serena in the quarter-finals.
“I hope we both get to the quarter-finals,” Venus said.
Serena is trying to complete the first calendar Grand Slam since Steffi Graf in 1988 and only the fourth ever while also seeking her 22nd career Slam singles crown, matching Graf’s Open Era record and two shy of Australian Margaret Court’s all-time mark.
This could be the first Grand Slam event in which Serena reaches the final without facing a top-10 opponent.
Venus broke Bencic in the eighth game and held on her fourth ace to take the first set in 33 minutes, having blasted 16 winners to only four by Bencic.
Bencic broke for a 3-1 lead when Venus sent a forehand long but Venus responded with a forehand winner to break back in the seventh game and broke again in the ninth before ending matters with her fifth ace after 78 minutes.
“She played very aggressive,” Bencic said. “She served very good. It was difficult for me to put any pressure on her serve. I tried to fight and hang in there against her but it’s very tough when she goes for her shots all the time.”
Venus, 35, fired 31 winners against 15 unforced errors while Bencic, 18, had 12 of each.
Russian 13th seed Ekaterina Makarova ousted Ukraine 17th seed Elina Svitolina 6-3, 7-5 in a matchup of the top-ranked remaining players in their quarter of the draw.
Makarova, playing with a taped upper right leg, began cramping while serving at match point. Told she could not see a trainer until a changeover, she fought on and advanced on a forehand winner.
“Just at match point it starts cramping,” Makarova said.
“I was scared. It’s the first time I was cramping. She told me she can’t treat me until the changeover. I kept playing and kept trying.”
A Grand Slam record 12 men have retired from matches at this tournament with two women quitting during matches as well, many from heat-related cramping issues.
Makarova will next face France’s Kristina Mladenovic, who was a 6-2, 6-3 winner over injured Maria Sharapova’s replacement, Russian lucky loser Daria Kasatkina.
Mladenovic makes her deepest Grand Slam run after third-round efforts this year at Wimbledon and Roland Garros.