Serena Williams blasts past Taylor Townsend in Round 1 of U.S. Open

NEW YORK -- Top seed Serena Williams had no problems with 18-year-old American wild card Taylor Townsend, rolling to a 6-3, 6-1 win in 55 minutes to advance to
Serena Williams blasts past Taylor Townsend in Round 1 of U.S. Open
Serena Williams blasts past Taylor Townsend in Round 1 of U.S. Open /

NEW YORK -- Top seed Serena Williams had no problems with 18-year-old American wild card Taylor Townsend, rolling to a 6-3, 6-1 win in 55 minutes to advance to the second round of the U.S. Open. She'll face another American, Vania King, in the next round. 

Three thoughts on Serena's clean start to her U.S. Open campaign:

This was the perfect start: In a hyped-up match under the lights of Arthur Ashe Stadium against an opponent she had never played before, Serena displayed the level of tennis she needs to win this tournament. If there were any nerves, she showed no signs of them. If there were any doubts, she erased them. Williams continued to build on her lights-out performance in the Western & Southern Open final, serving big and hitting clean off the ground. She was pounding down serves at 122 mph and hit 16 winners to 8 unforced errors. Her footwork was sharp as well.

"I think my game was good for tonight," Williams said. "There's always a little nerves going into the first round, especially as a defending champion. So I feel like I served well. I served the way I wanted to serve." This was a dominant and focused Serena Williams. The field should be worried.

U.S Open Day 2 recap: Federer rolls, American women have a great day

We didn't learn anything new about Townsend, and that's OK

Townsend may have been handed a lesson in power tennis from her idol, but the experience only encouraged her. "I learned that the game style that I want to play can hold up against the best players," she said. "And the reason I say that is because I was really committed to just moving forward. Whenever I got a short ball, whenever I saw a ball that I wanted to take and come in, I did it. And it worked. Even though I got passed, I didn't really care. Because I know with time that will get better."

"If I commit to it and believe in it 100%, then the sky's the limit.... It just kind of put a lot of things in perspective and really kind of helped me realize that I'm doing all the right things. I'm in a great space. I'm looking forward to the tournaments to come to build off that."

Townsend had a U.S. Open debut to remember: Townsend readily admitted to being nervous as she took the court. But who wouldn't be? "I was playing against one of my tennis idols, someone I've been watching for years and years," she said. "Playing in my home, the last slam of the year in front of an American crowd. She won this tournament last year. So it's just a lot of different things that were coming up in my head that I was trying to deal with."

In the end she was able to embrace the moment, enjoy it, and walked off the court with a smile. Debut done and dusted. On to the future. 


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Courtney Nguyen
COURTNEY NGUYEN

Contributor, SI.com Nguyen is a freelance writer for SI.com, providing full coverage of professional tennis both on and off the court. Her content has become a must-read for fans and insiders to stay up-to-date with a sport that rarely rests. She has appeared on radio and TV talk shows all over the world and is one of the co-hosts of No Challenges Remaining, a weekly podcast available on iTunes. Nguyen graduated from the University of California, Irvine in 1999 and received a law degree from the University of California, Davis in 2002. She lives in the Bay Area.