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Reuters

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Reuters

MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Defending champion Serena Williams dispelled any doubts about her fitness and form after a four-month break from the game with a tense 6-4 7-5 win over feisty Italian Camila Giorgi to reach the second round of the Australian Open on Monday.

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The world number one had barely swung a racquet in anger since her U.S. Open exit last September and entered a sweltering Rod Laver Arena to face the highest-ranked unseeded player in the draw amid speculation about the condition of her left knee.

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Williams pulled out of her first match at the Hopman Cup in Perth earlier this month due to knee inflammation but the 34-year-old moved freely during a testing opener against Giorgi and said it gave her no problems.

“(The knee is) great. It was an hour and 43 minutes and I didn’t feel it at all,” Williams told reporters.

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“I think I served well today. I think … I got broken once, but other than that I was able to stay focused on that part.”

Showing none of the lethargy that has sometimes dogged her in early grand slam matches, a calm and focused Williams roared to a 4-1 lead as the temperature soared over 32 degrees Celsius (90 Fahrenheit).

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But 36th-ranked Giorgi, a slightly built player packing a meaty forehand, steadied herself to drag Williams into a baseline battle and the American’s screams of frustration underlined the growing tension as the match progressed.

Though a match for Williams in terms of court speed and fire-power, Giorgi landed barely a third of her first serves and gave up the decisive break at 5-5 in the second set with her 12th double-fault.

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Williams needed no further invitation and closed out the match with a customary barrage of booming first serves.

A shock semi-final upset at Flushing Meadows by unseeded Italian Roberta Vinci ended Williams’ bids for both a 22nd major title and a rare calendar grand slam.

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The loss plunged the American into a period of introspection but the win over Giorgi showed she has lost none of her competitive fire.

Williams, who next faces 90th-ranked Taiwanese Hsieh Su-Wei, said the break from the game helped her a lot.

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“I have been going non-stop since the London Olympics, and seeing that this is another Olympic year, I kind of wanted to start the year out really fresh and really go at it again as hard as I can,” she added.

“I just needed that time to just recover the best of my

ability and get really fit … and really train and

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get ready for the season.”

(Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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Dhruv George

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Dhruv George is EssentiallySports’ foremost authority on motorsport and a founding member of the outlet’s NASCAR desk. A Journalism graduate fluent in English and French, he brings over eight years of motorsports journalism experience covering everything from high-octane NASCAR battles to the finesse of Formula 1 and MotoGP. His extensive paddock access has earned him exclusive interviews with top names such as Know more

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