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Caroline Wozniacki stretches for a return to Varvara Lepchenko during their women’s singles first round match. Image Credit: AFP

London: Australian Open champion and second seed Caroline Wozniacki cruised into the second round at Wimbledon with a 6-0, 6-3 win over American Varvara Lepchenko.

Wozniacki took 59 minutes to complete the victory on Centre Court, finishing it off with a service winner.

The second-seeded Dane has never been past the round of 16 at the All England Club but showed good form on grass by winning her second title on the surface at Eastbourne last week.

US Open champion Sloane Stephens tumbled out earlier in the day, looking rusty and out-of-sorts in her 6-1 6-3 defeat by Croatia’s Donna Vekic.

The 25-year-old fourth seed, who played no grass warm-up tournaments after reaching the final of the French Open on clay, looked uncomfortable on the fast surface, moving awkwardly and failing to find the lines.

Vekic, winner at Nottingham last year and a semi-finalist there last month, looked more footsore and aggressive, serving powerfully and forcing her opponent into errors. After breaking serve twice, the Croatian needed only one set point and 25 minutes to wrap up the first set.

Stephens showed some steel at the start of the second set, winning the first two games to love with some powerful serve-and-volley tennis, but she could not keep the rhythm going.

Vekic, who played in three grass court tournaments coming into Wimbledon, won the next three games, moving nervelessly along the baseline and punishing less-than-pinpoint serves with bullet-like returns.

The Croatian’s own demon — the double fault — came back to haunt her in the sixth game. She served two in the next game out of a total of nine in the match, to offer Stephens a lifeline.

But the listless American could not take it. Her shots continued to fly wide and long off her racket and she produced 26 unforced errors in total in the match.

Vekic earned her first match point in the ninth game when Stephens hit the net. Stephens saved that with a blistering cross court forehand and then successfully defended another two.

She finally succumbed by dumping another forehand into the net on the fourth match point.

“I tried to be aggressive.” Vekic said of her game plan. It was the 22-year-old’s biggest career victory.