Melbourne: It was expected to be the match of the round. Angelique Kerber ensured it never became a contest.
The 2016 Australian Open winner routed Maria Sharapova 6-1, 6-3 in the third-round match on Saturday night, meaning she’ll be the only Grand Slam champion in the fourth round of the women’s draw.
Five-time major winner Sharapova was back at Melbourne Park for the first time since 2016, when a failed doping test led to a 15-month ban from tennis.
After two comfortable wins while seeded players fell in upsets in the first two rounds and was growing in confidence but had no answers for Kerber, who is on a 12-match winning streak in a kind of comeback of her own after a sliding down the rankings last year.
“I learnt a lot from the last 12, 24 months. I had a great 2016 and last year was a little tougher,” Kerber said, reflecting on how her year-end ranking dropped from No. 1 to 21 when she failed to defend her Australian or US Open titles. “Anybody who knows me knows I never give up.”
Sharapova said Kerber was the more aggressive on court, and took more risks.
“I gave her the confidence by making a lot of errors on the return games,” Sharapova said. “She’s a confident player at the moment.
“A lot of things I need to get better at and improve on. This is a process. It’s a lot of things that take time.
“Today was not enough (but) ... looking at the overall picture, there’s a lot to build from.”
It was all over in one hour and four minutes, a vast contrast to top-ranked Halep’s 4-6, 6-4, 15-13 win in 3:45 over American Lauren Davis in the opening match on Rod Laver.
The third set took 2:22 and momentum swung. Halep wasted chances to serve for the match in the ninth, 11th and 15th games, then had to save three match points in the 22nd. There were 11 service breaks and two medical timeouts — for Davis to get treatment on both feet — before Halep converted on her first match point.
“I never played the third set so long, so I’m really happy I could stay and win it. I’m almost dead,” Halep said of the match which equalled Chanda Rubin’s win over Arantxa Shanchez Vicario in 1996 — also 48 games — for the Australian Open record in terms of most games.
“I just feel that my muscles are gone,” said Halep, who badly twisted her left ankle in the first round. “My ankle is, I don’t know how it is because I don’t feel it anymore!”
Halep will play Naomi Osaka, who beat 18th-seeded Ash Barty 6-4, 6-2. No. 20 Barbora Strycova beat US qualifier Bernarda Pera 6-2, 6-2, leaving US Open finalist Madison Keys as the only American woman to reach the fourth round.
Keys advanced 6-3, 6-4 over Ana Bogdan and will next play No. 8 Caroline Garcia, who beat Aliaksandra Sasnovich 6-3, 5-7, 6-2. Sixth-seeded Karolina Pliskova beat No. 29 Lucie Safarova 7-6 (6), 7-5.
In the last night match, Hsieh Su-wei followed up her win over Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza by beating No. 26 Agnieszka Radwanska 6-2, 7-5 to return to the fourth round at Melbourne Park for the first time in a decade. Her assignment will get tougher, with Kerber up next.