PARIS — Serena Williams’ chest was heaving between points. Her footwork wasn’t quite right. Miscue followed miscue, until she was a set and a break down in the French Open quarterfinals.
And as she so often does, Williams pulled through when she needed to, moving closer to a record-equaling 22nd Grand Slam title by figuring out a way to beat Yulia Putintseva, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1 on Thursday.
“I kept missing, just misfiring. Honestly, at one point, I didn’t see the light at the end of the tunnel,” Williams said. “I guess I was not the most positive mentally, but obviously, I didn’t want to stop.”
How close was she to her earliest exit at a major since Wimbledon in 2014? Putintseva, who is from Kazakhstan and ranked only 60th, twice was a point from serving for the biggest victory of her career.
“I honestly didn’t think I was going to win that in the second set,” said Williams, who will face another unseeded opponent, 58th-ranked Kiki Bertens, in the semifinals. “Somehow, I did.”
Yes, somehow, Williams overcame not only a relentless competitor in Putintseva but also her own shakiness on a cloudy, chilly day that included a brief rain delay.
“The rallies were very long and very tough. She is not used to [this] in matches. Usually after four, five shots, the point is over,” said Williams’ coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, who used to work with Putintseva. “She had to work much more today.”
And Williams must put in more work Friday against Bertens, who, like Putintseva, has a tendency to extend points.
There is no rest for the weary at the wet-as-can-be French Open. If Williams gets to Saturday’s final, it will be her fourth consecutive day of play. The top-seeded man, Novak Djokovic, already will reach that total — Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday — when he meets No. 13 Dominic Thiem in their semifinal.
“The way that the schedule has been going on in the second week,” Djokovic said, “[there] is not much time to really reflect on what you have done.”
The other men’s semifinal will pit Andy Murray against defending champion Stan Wawrinka. Their quarterfinals were held on Wednesday; Djokovic beat Tomas Berdych, 6-3, 7-5, 6-3, while Thiem eliminated David Goffin, 4-6, 7-6 (7), 6-4, 6-1.
The most noteworthy moment of Djokovic’s victory: Angered by missing a shot, he tried to spike his racket, but it flew out of his right hand and sailed not far from where a line judge stood. Djokovic was issued a warning.
“I was lucky there,” Djokovic said.
Williams got so desperate at one point that she shifted her racket to her left hand — and whiffed. At the end of the first set, Williams had made 24 unforced errors to Putintseva’s two. Still, Williams reached her 31st major semifinal.
Bertens became the first Dutch woman to get that far at a Grand Slam event since 1977, beating No. 8 seed Timea Bacsinszky, 7-5, 6-2.
“Mentally, I feel pretty good, but physically, yeah, it was tough today out there,” Bertens said, mentioning a calf problem.
Since Williams earned her fourth consecutive major championship at Wimbledon a year ago for No. 21 overall, she has been beaten in the semifinals of the U.S. Open by Roberta Vinci and in the final of the Australian Open by Angelique Kerber.
This setback would have come against a more unheralded opponent. The 21-year-old Putintseva is 13 years younger than Williams and had never been past the third round at a major until this week.
Yet Putintseva scrambled to nearly every ball and threw her 5-foot-4 frame into deep groundstrokes. The turning point was at 4-4 in the second set, when Putintseva held two break points. If she converted either, she’d be ahead, 5-4, and serve for the match, but she couldn’t do it.
“The match was very close — and very far — from being on my side,” Putintseva said.
When Williams wound up holding with a drop volley winner, she looked up to the gray sky with her palms aloft, reacting in relief.
Williams then broke to take the set. Putintseva dropped her racket and shoved the brim of her white cap over her eyes. They would go on to play another 32 minutes, but that was pretty much it.
“I definitely knew I needed to do something different if I was going to stay in the tournament,” Williams said. “I always try to have a plan B and C and go from there.”
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