Serena wary of ‘weakness-free’ Zvonareva

LONDON, (Reuters) – Serena Williams may have  preferred the devil she knows in the Wimbledon singles final,  but sister Venus is out, and the defending champion knows only  her best will be good enough against the wily Vera Zvonareva.
With Venus gone in the quarter-finals, and with her the prospects of a fifth all-Williams final, Serena never looked in danger of dashing through the draw and booking her sixth appearance in the showpiece match today.

“I feel like I would almost rather play her (Venus) because at least I know for certain one of us is gonna win something and take something home. But now it’s a 50/50 chance,” Williams told reporters.

But for all her yearning for a Williams victory, Serena was  well aware of the challenge presented by the Russian, at 21 the  second-lowest ranked player to appear in the women’s final at  the All England Club.

“I don’t think she does anything terrible. I think that’s  the best way to describe her game, she does everything so good,”  12-times grand slam winner Williams said.

“It’s tough playing a player like that who doesn’t really  have one weakness and everything pretty much is a strength from  her forehand to her backhand to her movement.”

In a Wimbledon full of surprises, with men’s champion Roger  Federer also departing early, world number one Williams has at  least stuck to the script, powering her way through the draw  without dropping a set and battering down a record 80 aces in  the process.

OVERWHELMING FAVOURITE

However, Zvonareva has already got the better of her once  this tournament with a victory over the Williams sisters on her  way to the women’s double final with partner Elena Vesnina.

“We obviously wanted to win the doubles but it wasn’t the  end-of-the-world kind of thing. It was like, ‘we lost but what  are we going to do about it?’“ Williams said.

She has a 5-1 career record against Zvonareva and is the  overwhelming favourite to win her fourth title but that was one  statistic the 25-year-old economics student from Moscow was  prepared to ignore.

“I know if I play my best tennis I can beat anyone on the  other side of the net. That’s what I’m going try to do on  Saturday. I never look at any odds or comparisons. It’s not  important to me,” Zvonareva, appearing in her first grand slam  final, said.