Williams Sisters, Hingis Advance

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Next time, Venus Williams says, she needs a better game plan. <br><br>``At the end, I really just went for the gold and got lucky,&#39;&#39; was her explanation of how she

Monday, January 22nd 2001, 12:00 am

By: News On 6


MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Next time, Venus Williams says, she needs a better game plan.

``At the end, I really just went for the gold and got lucky,'' was her explanation of how she beat Amelie Mauresmo 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 Monday to advance to the Australian Open quarterfinals.

The men's draw lost its fourth seed when Magnus Norman conceded match point on a let to 16th-seeded Sebastien Grosjean. It left the men's pairings without the top four seeds going into the quarterfinals at a Grand Slam tournament for only the third time in the Open era.

After a midmatch flurry of wild hitting, Williams was serving for the match at 5-3.

Mauresmo ended a 26-shot rally with stunning backhand down the line for a break point before Williams, the Wimbledon, U.S. Open and Olympic champion, came back with a forehand winner and two aces.

``I guess we weren't really sure about what we were going to do,'' the No. 3 seed said. ``I'd better walk out with a better game plan next time.''

Williams' younger sister, Serena, was more overpowering in a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Daja Bedanova, the 17-year-old Czech who had knocked out Olympic silver medalist and U.S. Open semifinalist Elena Dementieva.

Top seed Martina Hingis, the most prominent obstacle to a Williams sisters semifinal, advanced to a quarterfinal meeting with Serena Williams by beating Rita Grande 6-0, 6-3.

With nearly 6,000 people watching a doubles match involving Anna Kournikova on Court 1, play was briefly interrupted when a 15-year-old boy threw a smoking orange flare on the court. Security staff turned him over to police, who cautioned and released him.

``I was hitting the ball and suddenly something dropped in front of me,'' Kournikova said. ``I just walked away.''

A streaker interrupted one of Kournikova's doubles matches at Wimbledon last year.

Venus Williams received plenty of help from 1999 Australian runner-up Mauresmo, who committed 44 unforced errors to 43 by Venus in the 1-hour, 41-minute slugfest.

Venus charged the net against Mauresmo's first serve of the match and took the point with two quick volleys. She stayed in command long enough to break serve in the second set's third game.

Then she lost serve in a game with six errors, including two double faults, and was broken again to give Mauresmo a 4-2 lead thanks to four more errors, including her seventh of 10 double faults for the match.

Venus broke in the final set's second game, lost serve in the seventh and gained her decisive break for 5-3.

Next up is No. 10 Amanda Coetzer, a 6-1, 6-4 winner over Argentina's Paola Suarez.

``I've been through a lot of ups and downs in my career,'' Venus said. ``I know how to deal with certain situations. Luckily enough I was able to pull through.''

In the second set, Venus said her sister said, '``Come on Venus, do your best.' That really helped out a lot.''

Venus and defending champion Lindsay Davenport, the No. 2 seed, were mentioned when Hingis was discussing possible obstacles to her first major tournament title in two years.

``There is Serena, too,'' Hingis said of the sister who is seeded sixth and beat her in the 1999 U.S. Open final.

Serena has lost only 19 games in four matches here so far, but Hingis has lost only 12.

``I think if I'm playing well, I have the chance to beat anybody out there,'' said Hingis, who beat Serena 6-4, 7-5 in the quarterfinals of a warm-up tournament two weeks ago.

Hingis also has an excellent record in the Australian Open, where she has won three of her five Grand Slam tournament titles. She lost here to Davenport in last year's final, however, and has not won a Slam since the Australian in 1999.

Hingis was seeking perfection in her match, and threw her racket when Grande started doing better in the second set.

``She was upset because she missed two balls,'' Grande said.

``I kept lobbing her and she kept hitting overheads,'' Hingis said. ``I was like, 'OK, one more and I kill myself.'''

Serena said she already had prepared for her match against Hingis before she landed in Australia.

``I play enough, I win enough,'' she said. ``Obviously, I wish I won more. A lot of people would pretty much kill to do what I've done.''

Bedanova said she wanted to put in more first serves, or come up with harder second serves that Serena couldn't pound away.

``I couldn't get into my game. She didn't give me an opportunity,'' Bedanova said.

In men's matches, Grosjean eliminated Norman 7-6 (7), 6-3, 0-6, 6-4, the final point coming on an ace that a detecting device registered as a let. On the previous point, Norman argued in vain that Grosjean's service winner was out, but he gave Grosjean the decisive point as the umpire told the players of the call while they were shaking hands.

``There was no let. I couldn't take the point,'' Norman said. ``He didn't hear any let, and I didn't hear any let. ... Obviously the ball was a lot above the net.''

Asked if he should win a fair play award for 2001, Norman laughed and said: ``It will be difficult to give it to somebody else.''

Grosjean said, ``He gave me the point. It was very nice for me.''

Grosjean advanced to a quarterfinal with unseeded Carlos Moya, a former top-ranked player who is coming back from injury. Moya beat Germany's Rainer Schuettler 7-6 (2), 6-3, 6-4.

Men's No. 1 Gustavo Kuerten lost in the second round, and No. 2 Marat Safin and No. 3 Pete Sampras in the fourth. The 1999 Australian and French Opens also were missing the top four by the end of the fourth round.

Olympic gold medalist Yevgeny Kafelnikov, the 1999 Australian champion and last year's runner-up, solved the left-handed serves of Sweden's Andreas Vinciguerra and won 7-5, 7-5, 6-1.

The No. 5 seed advanced to a quarterfinal with No. 15 Arnaud Clement, a 6-3, 6-2, 7-5 winner over Greg Rusedski, the man who knocked out Kuerten.
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