BEIJING — Even by the lofty standards of the Williams sisters, three victories at the Olympics is a good day’s work.
They won in singles and doubles Tuesday, and the toughest match was the one they played together. Venus and Serena rallied in first-round doubles to beat Iveta Benesova and Nicole Vaidisova of the Czech Republic 4-6, 7-5, 6-1.
Earlier, the Williamses won second-round singles matches. Serena beat Samantha Stosur of Australia 6-2, 6-0, and Venus swept Benesova 6-1, 6-4.
The sisters could meet in Saturday’s singles final.
“That would be fantastic,” Venus said. “Obviously, it’s a long ways away, but the third round makes it closer. I’m really excited for both of us to be playing really well for the U.S.”
In men’s singles, No. 1-seeded Roger Federer earned an Olympic rematch today against Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic. Federer wept after losing to Berdych in the second round at the Athens Games four years ago.
“He has got a great game,” Federer said. “Obviously I’m aware of the danger.”
This time they’ll meet in the third round. Federer advanced by beating Rafael Arevalo of El Salvador 6-2, 6-4. Berdych, seeded 17th, defeated Andreas Seppi of Italy 6-3, 7-6 (4).
No. 2 Rafael Nadal sustained his summer surge by defeating Australian Lleyton Hewitt 6-1, 6-2.
This year’s French Open and Wimbledon champion, Nadal is assured of climbing to No. 1 in the rankings next week, ending Federer’s 4½-year reign.
Nadal and Federer seek their first Olympic medal, while the Williamses are trying to add to the family collection. They won the gold in doubles at Sydney in 2000, and Venus won the singles that year.
“I’ve never played singles at the Olympics, so this has been really cool for me,” Serena said. “Every time I walk out there, it’s like I’m playing in my match, but at the same time I have the whole U.S. team on my side. It’s good. I really like that feeling.”
First-time Olympian James Blake, the lone remaining U.S. player in men’s singles, beat Dominik Hrbaty of Slovakia 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-3. That gave the Americans a 6-0 record for the day.
“Hopefully it continues (today) and the next day,” Blake said. “And hopefully some of us will hear the national anthem at the end of the week.”
Americans Lindsay Davenport and Liezel Huber won their first-round doubles match, beating Klaudia Jans and Alicja Rosolska of Poland 6-2, 6-1. Davenport said a knee injury that forced her to withdraw from singles last week didn’t bother her in the match.
No. 1-seeded Mike and Bob Bryan of the United States won their opening match in doubles, defeating Mark Knowles and Devin Mullings of the Bahamas 6-2, 6-1.
In women’s singles, new No. 1 Jelena Jankovic beat Ukraine’s Alona Bondarenko 7-5, 6-1. Jankovic supplanted Ana Ivanovic atop the rankings Monday.
On the men’s side, No. 3 Novak Djokovic of Serbia beat Rainer Schuettler of Germany 6-4, 6-2.
With the temperature rising and the sun making its first appearance at the Beijing Games, the stands became a sea of fluttering Chinese fans — the hand-held kind — for Serena Williams’ morning match on cozy Court 1.
“It was early,” she said. “But with the time difference, I’m still waking up, like, at 5 in the morning. So it’s good. I like the early matches.”
She was done in 44 minutes. From 2-2, Williams won 40 of the final 49 points and 10 consecutive games. She whacked service winners, overpowered Stosur from both wings on the baseline and came forward for an overhead slam that prompted an appreciative “Ooooh” from the crowd.
Williams punctuated her best shots with a fist pump. She made the gesture one last time after ripping a backhand return winner on match point, then shouted “Come on!” as she trotted toward the net and into the round of 16.
Williams lost just five points in the second set, and dropped only six points on her serve in the match.
“My way of improving on it is to keep it up,” said Williams, who is seeded fourth. “I played really clean matches in the past, the next one would be kind of streaky. I don’t want to do that any more. I just want to keep playing the same consistency.”
No. 7-seeded Venus Williams was less dominating because she struggled with her forehand and second serve, hitting six double-faults. But she never faced a break point and lost only two of 24 points on her first serve.
“I felt like any time that I needed to serve well, I did — if I was down love-30, or a 30-all point,” she said. “That’s good for me going on in the later rounds, that I’m tough on my serve.”
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