SPORTS Wednesday, July 10, 2019 East Oregonian B3 ‘Something our sport has never seen’: Serena to Wimbledon SF By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer W I M BLEDON, England — Slowed by a balky ankle, trailing by a service break in the third set of her Wimbledon quar- terfinal, Serena Williams appeared to be in trouble Tuesday against an oppo- nent playing the tourna- ment of her life. Williams was down, yes. But out? No way. And now she is two victories from that 24th Grand Slam title that’s been barely elud- ing her. Lifting her play a much- needed notch down the stretch to grab the last three games, capping the comeback with her 19th ace — at 121 mph, no less — Williams reached the semifinals at the All England Club by gutting out a 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 win over 55th-ranked Alison Riske. “I had to just button up and play hard,” said Wil- liams, who owns seven Wimbledon titles. “She was playing her heart out.” That she was. Riske, a 29-year-old from Pitts- burgh, was appearing in her first major quarterfinal. For Williams, this was No. 51. That might have made all the difference. It’s Williams who possesses boundless muscle mem- ory in these situations, who knows what it takes to come through in the tight- est contests on the biggest stages. “I definitely thought maybe I had a peek here and there at a couple open- ings, but Serena really upped her level, as only a champion would,” Riske said. “It was really, actually, very interesting for me to be on the opposite end, because I felt her up her game and her intensity,” Riske said with a smile. “Yeah, I hope she takes the title now.” Next for the 37-year-old Williams will be a match against 54th-ranked Bar- bora Strycova of the Czech AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth Serena Williams celebrates after winning a point against Alison Riske during a women’s quarterfinal match Tuesday at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London. Republic, who reached her first Grand Slam semifi- nal at age 33 with a 7-6 (5), 6-1 victory over No. 19 Johanna Konta of Britain. The other semifinal Thurs- day will be No. 7 Simona Halep of Romania against No. 8 Elina Svitolina of Ukraine. After edging Riske in singles, Williams cooled down by riding a station- ary bike while holding her nearly 2-year-old daughter, Olympia, in one arm. Then Williams went out and joined Andy Murray to win their second-round match in mixed doubles 7-5, 6-3 against Fabrice Martin and Raquel Atawo. Halep, a former No. 1 who won the 2018 French Open, followed up her Daly out of British, can use cart on PGA Tour in Kentucky By DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer John Daly is free to ride a cart during the week of the British Open — just not at Royal Portrush. Daly’s manager said Tues- day he is likely to play the Barbasol Championship next week in Kentucky, and the two-time major champion with osteoarthritis in his right knee already has been granted a cart to use in the PGA Tour event. Andy Pazder, the chief tournaments and competi- tion officer for the PGA Tour, said Daly late last year was approved to use a cart through 2019 at PGA Tour events and PGA Tour Champions events that require walking. Daly, who has not played a regular PGA Tour event since The Greenbrier last sum- mer, also is contemplating the Barracuda Championship in Reno, Nevada, the following week. The R&A announced Tuesday that Daly had with- drawn from the British Open “due to a medical condition.” The nature of that condi- tion — be it his arthritic knee or a spider bite — was not entirely clear. Daly has been dealing with arthritis in his knee, and he says he also was diag- nosed as diabetic. That led him to request a cart for the PGA Championship at Beth- page Black under the Amer- icans with Disabilities Act, which the PGA of Amer- ica approved after Daly sub- mitted the required medical information. The R&A rejected his request for a cart over the weekend, saying it felt walk- ing was an integral part of the tournament. “We must also ensure, as far as possible, the challenge is the same for all players in the field,” it said. Pulling out of the British Open, however, might also be linked to a social media post from Daly on Sunday. In a Twitter note that he described as “My life chap- ter 84k,” Daly says he was on vacation in England last week when he was bitten by a spider without realiz- ing it. He was taken to an emergency room on Fri- day — apparently at Union- town Hospital in Pennsylva- nia, north of the Nemacolin Resort — and taken straight into surgery to remove a major infection in his abdominal area. He says he also was treated for early sepsis from a brown recluse. His post included hashtags that say he was in some seri- ous pain, glad to be alive and the photos were too graphic. Daly won the PGA Cham- pionship in 1991 at Crooked Stick, making him exempt for as long as he wants. He won the British Open at St. Andrews in 1995 and is exempt for that major through 2031 when he is 65. He still has past champion status on the PGA Tour, allow- ing him into tournaments that have room in the field. Follow us on Facebook! elimination of 15-year-old sensation Coco Gauff by defeating Zhang Shuai of China 7-6 (4), 6-1 to get to her second semifinal at Wimbledon. Svitolina will make her debut in that round at any major tour- nament thanks to beating Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic 7-5, 6-4. These sorts of stakes, and this sort of setting, are unfamiliar for Riske, who mistakenly headed to her changeover chair thinking the match’s fifth game was over when the score was just 40-15. Spectators chortled; she grinned and walked back to the baseline. Even if Williams was hardly perfect, she got by, aided by her greatest-in- the-game serve and Riske’s miscues. Most glaringly, Riske double-faulted five times in the final set, at least somewhat a result of trying to do too much against William’s superb returns. “It’s no secret that Ser- ena has an amazing serve. But Serena has an equal- ly-as-amazing return,” Riske said. “I’ve never played anyone that has a return like Serena. That put a lot of pressure on my serve.” Still, Riske played tre- mendously well for most of the afternoon, just as she did while going 14-1 on grass in 2019 until Tuesday. She won two of Wil- liams’ first four service games and finished 5 for 5 on break points. Her deep and flat groundstrokes off both sides jarred Williams repeatedly. Until, that is, Riske wilted late — which was understandable, given that she became the first woman in Wimbledon his- tory to play three-setters in five consecutive matches to open the tournament, according to the WTA. Williams rolled her right ankle and her move- ment was hardly ideal. Late in the second set, she was visited by a trainer, who applied extra tape to the ankle. That was during a stretch when Riske, talking to herself between points, claimed four games in a row to take the second set and lead the third by a break at 1-0. “I thought,” Riske said, “I was very close.” Not close enough. Wil- liams was not going to go quietly. She held at love to lead 4-3, and then came the key game. Riske saved a trio of break points and was a point from 4-all after claiming a point when Wil- liams slipped along the well-worn baseline. First Williams got back to deuce by using a drop shot to set up a volley winner. Then she earned yet another break point on a thrilling 10-stroke exchange, using a drop shot to bring Riske forward and delivering a volley winner. Williams lifted both arms and jutted her jaw. In the stands, her husband leaped from his seat, pointed his index fingers at her and screamed. On the next point, Riske double-faulted, handing over the last break Wil- liams needed. After breaking Steffi Graf’s record for most Grand Slam trophies in the professional era by winning her 23rd at the 2017 Aus- tralian Open while preg- nant, Williams took time off. Since returning to the tour last season, she came close to equaling Margaret Court’s Slam count of 24 — which was accumulated in part against amateurs — but lost in the finals at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Williams dealt with inju- ries and illness this year, playing just 12 matches until last week. “This is the first time since (January) that I actu- ally felt, like, good,” she said at her news confer- ence, while Olympia was held by Williams’ agent at the back of the room. “It’s been a really, really long year for me already, and hard year.” That’s true. Also true: She’s Serena Williams. And so here she is, back in Wimbledon’s semifinals for the 12th time. “She’s something,” Riske said, “our sport has never seen before.”