WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Maria Sharapova has advanced to the second
round at Wimbledon, routing Anastasia Pivovarova 6-1, 6-0 in a match
between Russians.
Playing on Court 2 on Tuesday,
Sharapova needed only 54 minutes to wrap things up. She hit 15 winners
and lost only seven of 37 points on her serve .
Pivovarova was playing on grass for the first time. She lost in
qualifying and made the tournament as a lucky loser after another player
withdrew.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)—The time Maria
Sharapova spent away from her job made
her enjoy it more.
She’s back at Wimbledon, healthy again and hoping to display the
grass-court
flair that helped her win the title in 2004 as a precocious 17-year-old.
Sharapova started strong Tuesday, beating fellow Russian Anastasia
Pivovarova 6-1, 6-0 in 54 minutes.
It has been awhile since Sharapova made a run at Wimbledon. Two years
ago,
she lost in the second round to Alla
Kudryavtseva, a Russian ranked 154th. Last
year, following a 10-month layoff because of a shoulder injury, she lost
in the
second round to Gisela
Dulko.
Now, she’s sounding optimistic about an extended stay.
“My body feels good,” she said. “I’m in much better match condition
than
I was last year.”
She’s 18-5 in 2010 with two tournament titles. And she’s having fun.
“My joy in the game is pretty up there with what it was before I got
injured,” she said. “Maybe even more so, because it was taken away from
me for
such a long period of time that it made me realize how blessed you are
when
you’re actually on the court, are able to hit a tennis ball for an hour a
day,
and be good at what you do.”
The former No. 1 dropped out of the top 100 during her layoff. She is
now
17th, still low enough that she becomes a dangerous floater in the draw,
and she
could face defending champion Serena
Williams in the fourth round.
Sharapova’s right shoulder, which required surgery in October 2008,
bothers
her only on occasion.
“If it’s like really, really cold, like almost snowing,” she said.
Wimbledon’s weather can be bad, but there’s no snow in the forecast.
Nonetheless, Sharapova will give herself time to get loose.
“When I was younger, a few years ago, if I wouldn’t play for a few
days, I
would come out, the third, fourth serve I could hit pretty much as hard
as I
can,” she said. “Now it’s like 10, 15, 20 serves by the time it warms
up. It’s just those little things.”
The 6-foot-2 Russian’s serve seemed fine in her opening match. She
won 17 of
18 points on her first serve, which reached 115 mph, and never faced a
break
point.
Granted, it wasn’t much of a test. Pivovarova lost in qualifying,
made the
main draw only because another player pulled out and was making her
grass-court
debut.
“I was expecting to play someone else,” Sharapova said. “Kind of last
minute was playing against her. So I think the goal was to come out and
just try
to figure things out pretty quickly. And I did a good job of that.”
Sharapova hasn’t defeated a top 10 player this year, and she missed
time
this spring with a bone bruise in her right elbow, but she said she has
rebuilt
her game to where she can beat anyone.
It’s merely a question of rising to the occasion—which the three-time
Grand Slam champion has done in the past.
“I don’t think anyone’s going to make 50 backhands or 50 forehands in
a
row,” Sharapova said. “Everyone’s going to make mistakes. But it’s about
your
game plan, and how you execute.”
Others limiting their mistakes in first-round victories included both
top-ranked players, Williams and Rafael
Nadal.
Williams used an overpowering serve to beat 17-year-old Michelle
Larcher de
Brito 6-0, 6-4. Nadal won in his first match since becoming the 2008
champion,
beating Kei
Nishikori 6-2, 6-4, 6-4.
Nadal missed Wimbledon last year because of knee tendinitis.
“I’m enjoying a lot to be back in my favorite tournament,” he said.
Neither French Open women’s finalist survived round one. Roland
Garros
runner-up Samantha
Stosur, ranked a career-high sixth, lost to qualifier Kaia
Kanepi 6-4, 6-4. Surprise French Open winner Francesca
Schiavone was beaten
Monday.
Aside from Stosur, the only seeded woman to lose was No. 25 Lucie
Safarova.
Four seeded men were eliminated: No. 8 Fernando
Verdasco, No. 14 Juan
Carlos
Ferrero, No. 19 Nicolas
Almagro and No. 24 Marcos
Baghdatis.