Venus Williams crashes out of China Open

Peng Shuai beat seven-time Grand Slam champion 7-5, 6-1 in first round encounter on Monday

Venus Williams of the US serves against China's Peng Shuai during their women's singles first round match at the China Open tennis tournament in Beijing on October 3, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

BEIJING:
Seven-time Grand Slam champion Venus Williams crashed out of the first round of the China Open to Chinese wildcard Peng Shuai on Monday.

World number one Angelique Kerber, meanwhile, continued her stellar season beating qualifier Katerina Siniakova in two sets in her opening match in Beijing.

After a close first set, the former US Open semi-finalist Peng allowed the American veteran player just one game point in the second to win 7-5, 6-1.

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"In the first set I was really trying to fight because I think she got three set points," said Peng after the match. "I think in the second set it's really important when I got the first three points. It gave me more motivation."

Peng, 30, came of age at the same time as China's first -- and only -- Grand Slam singles champion Li Na.

She reached a career high of 17 in 2011, the same year Li won her first Slam at Roland Garros and rose to world number five, taking with her the popularity of tennis in China.

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But Peng's career has since been blighted by injury, which forced her to miss much of 2015 and pushed her to the brink of retirement.

"After the surgery, no one could guarantee I could come back to the court," Peng said. "I'd like to take time to see if I can go further [in tennis]."

Czech Siniakova, 20, played an impressive net game against top seed Kerber but was unable to take control of the match, handing the German a 6-4, 6-4 win.


"She played really well, especially in the first set. I was trying to be patient and waiting for my shots and for my chances," said Kerber after the match.

The German won her second Grand Slam title of the year -- and her career -- at the US Open last month in the same week that also saw her rise to number one, dethroning long-reigning Serena Williams.

Kerber, 28, started the year ranked 10th but reached her first ever Grand Slam final at the Australian Open in January -- and scooped the crown.

Her strong run continued as she reached the final of Wimbledon and bagged an Olympic silver medal in Rio.

Kerber credits changing her on-court demeanour -- which once earned her the nickname "Dun Curr-ber" based on the internet meme for "don't care" -- for her late career renaissance.

"I think it came from a lot of experience... really focusing and trying to (be) more positive on court than negative," Kerber told reporters in Beijing.

"I think this is also one of the keys why I'm playing so good and so consistent, because it's really important to have your mind on the court."

Meanwhile, defending champion Garbine Muguruza booked her spot in the final 16, downing 21-year-old Yulia Putintseva in her second-round match.

The Spaniard has her eyes on making her second consecutive WTA Final -- the elite eight-player season finale -- and needs to reach the final in Beijing to guarantee her qualification.

On the men's side, David Ferrer and fellow Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut both prevailed in their tougher-than-expected first-round matches.
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