Serena Williams US Open semi-final defeat a 'monumental shock'
Serena Williams fell victim to one of the biggest shocks in tennis
history at the US Open, said two-time champion Tracy Austin.
Williams, 33, was two wins from completing the calendar
Grand Slam but lost 2-6 6-4 6-4 to unseeded Italian Roberta Vinci in
the semi-finals.
"This is monumental. It's a shocker," Austin told BBC Sport. "This is one of the biggest upsets in the history of tennis, because of what was on the line." Williams went into Friday's semi-final on a 33-match winning streak in Grand Slams stretching back to Wimbledon 2014. She had hoped to match Steffi Graf's 1988 sweep off all four majors in the same year, and was up against a player she had beaten four times without dropping a set. Vinci, 32, is ranked 43 in the world and was playing in her first Grand Slam semi-final. "Things went her way, the draw opened up, Genie Bouchard hit her head and couldn't play that match [in round four]. It's just the way things happen sometimes. "That's why they put the net up every day. You've got to go out and handle the nerves. "I always said Serena's biggest opponent coming into this year's US Open was going to be her own nerves." 'I don't want to talk about it'"I don't want to talk about how disappointing it is for me," she said. "If you have any other questions, I'm open for that." Tickets for the women's final had sold out before the men's for the first time ever as anticipation mounted in New York.
Her four-year unbeaten run at Flushing Meadows is over but there was a glimmer of positivity after what has been an incredible run at the majors. "I did win three Grand Slams this year," said Williams. "Yeah, I won four in a row. It's pretty good." 'I was a little bit scared'Asked how nervous she felt Williams had become in the third set, Vinci was unequivocal: "A lot."The Italian, who won over the crowd with an extravagant celebration during the final set, had not taken more than four games in a set off Williams in four previous matches. "This is the best match that I played in my life," she said. "At the end when I made a break, 4-3, and served, I was a little bit scared. My arm was like (shaking). I'm not joking. "But in my mind, I say, 'Don't think about this, because maybe you have more pressure. Stay calm, relax, and breathe during every single point. "Don't think that you have Serena on the other side of the court.'" She will now meet her good friend Pennetta in the final, 16 years after they won the French Open junior doubles title together. "It's an incredible moment, but one Italian will win for sure," said Vinci. 'I saw it the first second...'French coach Patrick Mouratoglou was more forthcoming than Williams in discussing her defeat."Today was not a good day, clearly," he said. "I saw it the first second I saw her this morning, but still she could have made it. How many times did it happen and she found a way through?"
"Every loss is very difficult, so it's going to be the same," said Mouratoglou. "When she lost in Toronto [last month] she told me she's tired of losing - she'd lost two matches this year." He added: "In a way it's good. There is still this very high goal to make. In every bad news there is a good one." Other big shocks in the women's gameAustralian Open, 1984: Martina Navratilova loses to 19-year-old Helena Sukova in the semis, two matches from the calendar Slam.Wimbledon 1994: Three-time defending champion Steffi Graf loses to American Lori McNeil in round one. Wimbledon 1999: Top seed Martina Hingis loses to 16-year-old Australian Jelena Dokic in the first round. French Open 2012: Serena Williams loses to Virginie Razzano, her only first-round loss at a Grand Slam.
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