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Inconsistent Serena ousted in Italian Open

Williams starts slow vs. Schnyder, suffers just third loss of season

Serena Williams returns a backhand to Switzerland's Patty Schnyder. Williams lost in the Italian Open quarterfinals on Friday.
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updated 5:40 p.m. ET May 18, 2007

ROME - Serena Williams hasn’t played the French Open in three years and hardly seems ready for this month’s clay-court major.

She made an array of mistakes Friday in her final match before the French, losing to Patty Schnyder 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 (5) in the Italian Open quarterfinals.

“I’m going to obviously want to work harder and just do some things differently,” Williams said. “Where I am today, in Paris I’ll probably be even better.”

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In the semifinals, Schnyder will face third-seeded Jelena Jankovic, who routed Elena Dementieva 6-2, 6-1. Second-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova beat sixth-seeded Dinara Safina 6-1, 6-3 in an all-Russian match and will next play ninth-seeded Daniela Hantuchova, who beat unseeded Anabel Medina Garrigues 7-6 (8), 7-5.

This was only Williams’ third loss this season. She began 2007 by winning the Australian Open for her first major title in two years.

“I just didn’t make the shots I was supposed to make,” said Williams, who was seeded eighth. “I probably made 50 unforced errors, which is pretty good to get to 7-6 in the third.”

Williams captured her first two matches in Rome in straight sets and won only three fewer points than Schnyder.

“It’s good to be here on the red clay and get some good matches and a lot of long points under your belt,” Williams said.

Last month, Williams retired from a match in Charleston, S.C., because of a with a groin muscle problem and pulled out of a Fed Cup match because of an inflamed right knee. She missed the last two French Opens with knee and ankle injuries.

“Actually, not winning today is going to work well for me,” she said. “I’m going to get even more fit.”

Williams does not plan to play again before Roland Garros, which begins May 27.

“I think the best thing for me now is practice,” she said. “I feel like I’ll really enjoy myself there.”

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Schnyder, seeded 14th and runner-up in Rome two years ago, beat Williams in their only previous match on clay. Williams won the other six meetings

“I have more time to think and I think it’s her weakest surface,” Schnyder said. “I’m extremely happy that I could do it again this year because she’s the champion to beat this year.”

Williams was off on her backhand and committed double-faults in the first set. Schnyder, a Swiss left-hander with a crafty game, simply kept the ball in play.

“I don’t have the big muscles, the height, and so I need to get something special to my game and that’s what I work on,” Schnyder said. “I can play all the spins, the slice and kick and the fast serve.”

Schnyder took a 2-0 lead in the second set before Williams reeled off six straight games to force a third set. Neither player dropped serve in the final set, and Schnyder jumped ahead 5-2 in the tiebreaker. Williams crawled back to 5-5, then netted a forehand on the next point. Schnyder hit a winner on an approach shot on her first match point.

Schnyder reached the German Open quarterfinals last week and will be playing in her first semifinal of the year.

“This win is definitely a breakthrough for me,” she said.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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