Serena cruises into third round

MELBOURNE, (Reuters) – Serena Williams said before  the start of the Australian Open that even with just two warm-up  matches under her belt she was ready for Melbourne. More than  ready it seems.

Serena Williams

The American, with lattice-work strapping snaking up from  her injured left ankle to behind her knee, brushed aside Czech  Barbora Zahlavova Strycova 6-0 6-4 in just over an hour to reach  the third round last night.

Five-times champion Williams was unable to defend her 2009  and 2010 titles last year due to injury and there were concerns  she would not be ready for the year’s first grand slam after  pulling out of the Brisbane International quarter-finals with  her sore ankle.

After shaking off the rust in the first round against Tamira  Paszek, Williams was on song from the get-go on Thursday,  blasting baseline winners past Strycova and racing through the  first set in just 22 minutes.

Her Czech opponent won her first service game of the second  set, eliciting enthusiastic applause from the crowd, but the  Williams response was predictable, the 30-year-old winning her  next serve to love and breaking Strycova to go 3-1 up.

Williams had her first wobble while serving for the match at  5-3, giving Strycova a sniff of hope, and the American looked in  trouble when a change of direction left her sitting on the  sun-baked court grimacing.

But Williams got back to her feet and promptly broke  Strycova’s serve to seal the set 6-4 and earn her place in the  third round.

Williams, who racked up her 500th match win with the  victory, said her ankle was still causing her problems, a  potential issue for tougher tests ahead.

“It’s fine, I just have really wobbly ankles,” she said in a  televised interview. “I wasn’t meant to be a ballerina or  anything.”

Williams will play Dominika Cibulkova or Greta Arn in the  next round.