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Out of Aus

Updated on: 25 January,2020 07:26 AM IST  |  Melbourne
AFP |

Tennis stars Serena, Osaka, Wozniacki stunned on Day Five at Melbourne

Out of Aus

Naomi Osaka, Caroline Wozniacki, Serena Williams. Pics/ AFP

Melbourne: American veteran Serena Williams sensationally crashed out but Coco Gauff, 15, went through as tennis got a glimpse of its past and future at the Australian Open on Friday. Williams' bid for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam was halted by the unlikely figure of China's Wang Qiang, who triumphed in three tough sets—after winning just one game when they played at the US Open in September. Gauff then stepped up her giant-killing Melbourne debut as she ousted Japanese defending champion Naomi Osaka, 22, in dismissive style, winning 6-3, 6-4 in just 67 minutes to reach round four.


Coco Gauff
Coco Gauff


"Oh my gosh. Two years ago I lost first round in the juniors and now I'm here—this is crazy," said the teenager, who upset Venus Williams in the first round. With Williams now 38, 23 years older than Gauff, the two players are at opposite ends of their careers.


'I can equal Court's record'

And with Williams's close friend Caroline Wozniacki retiring on Friday, after defeat to Ons Jabeur, it looked like a changing of the guard. But Williams, who has now had eight winless Grand Slams since returning from childbirth, said she hadn't given up hope of matching Margaret Court's 47-year-old record for Grand Slam titles. 

Ons Jabeur
Ons Jabeur

"I definitely do believe [I can equal it] or I wouldn't be on tour," said Williams, a seven-time winner at Melbourne Park. Williams was the bookies' favourite to lift the trophy for the eighth time but she came unstuck against a determined Wang, who won 6-4, 6/7 (2/7), 7-5.

Her defeat came just minutes after Denmark's Wozniacki was knocked out by Tunisia's Ons Jabeur, bringing a tearful end to the former World No. 1s final tournament before retiring. "I had a dream when I was a kid. I wanted to win a Grand Slam. I wanted to be No. 1 in the world," said Wozniacki, the Melbourne winner in 2018."People thought that I was crazy being from a small country. But I made it happen." Williams' exit removes a major hurdle for Australia's World No. 1 Ashleigh Barty, 23, who had been on course to meet her in the semi-finals.

Barty marches on

Barty, bidding to become the first Australian champion since 1978, hit form in a 6-3, 6-2 demolition of Elena Rybakina. "I felt I needed to be really switched on for this," Barty said. "I feel it's the best I've played this summer so far."

Wang Qiang
Wang Qiang

Gauff had promised she would be less nervous than in her last meeting with Osaka, when she was thrashed in round three of last year's US Open. And so it proved as the teenager broke once in the first set and twice in the second to floor a rattled Osaka and ramp up a rivalry that could run and run.

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