WIMBLEDON, England (AP) – The asphalt courts at the public park where Serena Williams and Angela Haynes learned to swing a racket and the patch of grass where they engaged in a riveting Grand Slam match Tuesday are separated by thousands of miles and so much more.

Yet there they were, the seven-time major champion Williams and the unheralded Haynes, trading powerful groundstrokes and grunts. Haynes practiced beside Williams in Compton, Calif., in the 1980s, looked up to her in recent years, and led her for the better part of two hours in the first round at Wimbledon.

Eventually, Williams’ experience and knack for coming back – not to mention her shotmaking – were too much for the 104th-ranked Haynes in her All England Club debut. So reigning Australian Open champion Williams squeaked by with a 6-7 (12), 6-4, 6-2 victory, avoiding the sort of upset that befell French Open champion Justine Henin-Hardenne earlier in the day.

Just as accustomed as Williams is to rallying from big deficits in big matches, Henin-Hardenne couldn’t manage it this time, losing 7-6 (8), 2-6, 7-5 to 76th-ranked Eleni Daniilidou. That made her the first French Open women’s champion in 43 years to drop her opening match at Wimbledon. It also ended her 24-match winning streak, all on clay.

“Playing on clay and then coming here, it’s so different,” the seventh-seeded Henin-Hardenne said. “You change everything.”

Williams skipped the French Open with a left ankle sprain that has sidelined her since May 11. She called her play against Haynes “rusty,” adding that she “kind of felt like I was feeling my way around.”

It sure looked that way in the tense tiebreaker, when each player had four set points. Williams let three slip away with backhand errors, and Haynes finally grabbed the set when Williams sailed a forehand long.

Williams reacted by driving her racket into the ground and cracking the frame, drawing a warning from the chair umpire. Perhaps that moment of release helped. Or perhaps what helped was when a fan yelled, “Turn up the heat, Serena!”

Both players heard the cry, and Williams heeded it. Haynes faced a break point while serving at 4-4 in the second set, and Williams’ shot was called out by a line judge, who was overruled by the chair umpire. Haynes went from thinking she was out of a jam to right back into one, and when they replayed the point, Williams hit a backhand that clipped the net and fell in for the key break. Then it was Haynes who showed frustration, picking up the ball and flinging it over the net.

Williams held serve to close that set, then broke a tiring Haynes for a 3-2 edge in the third, part of a closing five-game run.

“If I won, it could have changed my whole life,” Haynes said.

Nowadays, Venus is 25, Serena 23, Angela 20 – and all played on the same Wimbledon court Tuesday.

“It says a lot for Compton,” Richard Williams said.

Venus, the 2000-01 Wimbledon champion but seeded merely 14th this year, had a much easier time, defeating Eva Birnerova 6-2, 6-4. The court has become known as “The Graveyard of Champions” because of a litany of upsets; Pete Sampras lost his last Wimbledon match there in 2002’s second round, for example.

Henin-Hardenne didn’t play a match between claiming her fourth Slam title at Roland Garros and coming to Wimbledon, in part because of a right hamstring injury, and in part because she’s committed to taking extra rest after a virus sidelined her in 2004.

Henin-Hardenne double-faulted 11 times, twice in the final game.

Rafael Nadal, the 19-year-old Spaniard who won the French Open in his debut, got off to a solid start at Wimbledon, a 6-4, 6-3, 6-0 victory over Vince Spadea.

, whose bothersome back was massaged twice by a trainer during the second set.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.