Second-seeded Maria Sharapova reached the quarter-finals of the $721,000 WTA hardcourt tournament here Wednesday, setting up a possible showdown with Serena Williams. Sharapova, ranked number five in the world, defeated Slovakian Daniela Hantuchova 6-2, 2-6, 6-4 to advance as she tries to build on the momentum of a runner-up finish at Wimbledon. She led a string of seeds into the quarter-finals as third-seeded Marion Bartoli, fifth-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska and eighth-seeded Dominika Cibulkova all advanced.
Sharapova fought her way through despite 11 double faults, finally advancing after 2 hours and 12 minutes. Sharapova admitted she “kind of lost it” in the second set. “I got away from what I was doing well and she had all the confidence and all the momentum going into the third set.” Hantuchova built a 2-0 lead in the third set before Sharapova won four games to wrap it up. “I was frustrated by the fact I wasn’t able to maintain what I was doing into the second set,” Sharapova said.
“I was able to break her back and got the energy going again.” Sharapova fell in the Wimbledon final to Czech Petra Kvitova, but was encouraged that her first appearance in the All England Club final was proof that the injury-plagued years which threatened to derail her glittering career are behind her. “It’s still about improving the little things to get more consistent,” Sharapova said. “I’ve had to make a lot of tough choices in the last year but I’m going in the right direction and, little by little, those choices are paying off.” She next faces either Williams or Russian Maria Kirilenko, who play on Thursday.
Williams, a 13-time Grand Slam champion, is unseeded after an injury layoff of nearly a year saw her ranking plummet. Sharapova had said she would welcome a chance to challenge Williams. Despite the American’s unseeded status, Sharapova said she would be a difficult opponent, but then so could Kirilenko. “I’ve lost to both of them the last time I played them,” Sharapova said. “You can never rest against Serena. She hasn’t played in quite a while but she’s still a great competitor. “At the end of the day she has 13 Grand Slam titles and I have three.
That says a lot. Maria can produce great tennis and beat top players.”