French Open: Serena Williams swats aside Sorana Cirstea to reach fourth round

The world number one is bidding to win only her second singles title at Roland Garros

Friday 31 May 2013 10:46 EDT
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Serena Willams at the French Open
Serena Willams at the French Open (GETTY IMAGES)

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Serena Williams coasted through to the fourth round of the French Open this afternoon as she swatted aside the challenge of Romanian Sorana Cirstea.

The world number one is bidding to win only her second singles title at Roland Garros, 11 years after her first.

Her record on the Paris clay is at odds with her performance at the other grand slams. She is a five-time champion both at Wimbledon and the Australian Open, and has also won the US Open on four occasions.

Yet Williams has reached only one semi-final in the French capital since her victory over sister Venus in the 2002 title match, losing earlier or not entering in every other year. Twelve months ago she suffered a stunning first-round defeat to Virginie Razzano.

The red clay may not be her favourite surface but it was hard to detect a weakness today.

Cirstea got to the quarter-finals four years ago, her best result in a grand slam, but the world number 30 had little answer to Williams as the 31-year-old American swept to a 6-0 6-2 victory in just over an hour on court.

Having dropped just one game to Georgian Anna Tatishvili in the first round, and three to France's Caroline Garcia in the second round, it was routine again for Williams.

She was awaiting the winner of this afternoon's third-round tussle between Czech Petra Cetkovska and Italian 15th seed Roberta Vinci.

PA

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