KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â"Venus Williams sagged in the wooden changeover chair as if it were a cushy recliner, her head tilted back, her tank on empty.
She rose slowly to play the final two games and lost both, but grinned as she walked to the exit, perhaps because she was headed for a well-deserved rest.
Weary after winning three consecutive three-set matches, Williams was eliminated Wednesday by Agnieszka Radwanska in the quarterfinals of the Sony Ericsson Open, 6-4, 6-1.
âIt was disappointing not to be able to feel my best today,â Williams said. âI was able to keep it close in the first set and try different strategies, but it was definitely a mental battle, and today I didnât conquer the mental part of it.â
Williamsâ serve lacked its usual velocity, and by the final game she wasnât even chasing shots in the corner. The tournament was her first since the U.S. Open last August, where she withdrew after being diagnosed with a fatigue-causing autoimmune disease.
âIt has been a great tournament,â she said. âObviously Iâm disappointed and would have liked to have gone further, but itâs a great start.â
Eager to keep points short in the 85-degree sunshine, Williams charged the net often but frequently had to lunge for shots. She committed 38 unforced errors to 10 for Radwanska, and won only five of 26 points on her second serve.
âIt was pretty hot out there,â Radwanska said. âMaybe that was why she didnât look that good.â
Venus was the second Williams in 18 hours to be eliminated. Younger sister Serena lost Tuesday night to former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki.
Venus needed a wild card to enter the tournament because sheâs ranked 134th. The three-time Olympianâs goal has been improve her ranking enough to qualify for the London Games, and sheâs projected to climb next week back into the top 90.
In the past, the cutoff for making the Olympics has been around 68th. Teams will be chosen based on rankings in early June.
Radwanska, ranked a career-best No. 4, advanced to the Key Biscayne semifinals for the first time. Sheâs 0-4 this year against top-ranked Victoria Azarenka and 24-0 against everyone else.
She beat Williams in 2006 but had since lost five consecutive meetings.
âOf course she had some time off last couple of months,â Radwanska said. âBut sheâs still a great player. I really had to play very well today to beat her.â
Williams overcame a match point in the third round against Aleksandra Wozniak on Sunday night, and said she was up until 4 a.m. afterward. She recovered to beat No. 15-seeded Ana Ivanovic on Monday.
Williams said her ailment requires her to save all her energy for tennis, but she strayed from that approach with a day off Tuesday.
âI should have rested more probably,â Williams said. âAfter a while you start to feel like maybe everythingâs behind you. I definitely learned maybe if youâre doing something right, donât change it.â
Her energy reserve appeared low from the start of the quarterfinal, and she lost the first seven points. Radwanska took advantage of Williamsâ lethargy by hitting several drop shots for winners and pouncing on weak second serves.
When Williams had a chance at an easy overhead, she walked up to the ball flat-footed. Facing break point early in the second set, she mustered only a 72-mph first serve, well below her norm of 110 or more.
Williams lost the final six points, dumped her last shot into the net and began looking ahead to the clay-court season. She plans to play next week at Charleston, S.C.
âIâve definitely learned a lot about ways maybe I could prepare during the tournament,â she said.
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