French Open 2018 |
Venue: Roland Garros, Paris Dates: 27 May-10 June |
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Serena Williams' Grand Slam return continued with a three-set comeback win over Australia's 17th seed Ashleigh Barty in the French Open second round.
Williams, 36, gave birth to daughter Olympia in September and has only played a handful of matches since.
The 23-time major champion faced a tough test against Barty.
Australian Barty, 22, took the first set, but Williams' rhythm improved as she fought back to win 3-6 6-3 6-4.
The American will meet 11th seed Julia Goerges in the last 32 after the German beat former French Open quarter-finalist Alison van Uytvanck of Belgium 7-5 7-6 (7-5).
"I lost the first set and just thought 'you know what? I've got try harder'. And Serena came out," she said.
Serena survives tougher test
After her opening match, Williams played down her chances of winning a joint-record 24th Slam, saying she was not putting any pressure on herself to equal Margaret Court's tally so soon into her comeback from a difficult birth.
Williams, who said she was "lucky to survive" the birth, has spoken about Olympia being the main focus in her life, but also made it clear she had not lost any of her will to win.
And it showed against Barty, after it had looked initially as if the American would be exiting at the second stage - something she has not done in a Slam since the 2014 tournament at Roland Garros.
A double fault at 0-30 in the sixth game presented Barty with the first opportunity of the match, one she was gifted when Williams planted a forehand well long.
The former world number one offered little threat on the serve of the Australian, who closed out the opener in 28 minutes.
Barty broke in the opening game of the second set, but Williams showed fight to wipe out that advantage in the next game and win the following three for a commanding 4-1 lead.
With the backing of half-full Chatrier on a late Paris evening, Williams's rhythm continued to improve and she served out the set with an ace as the match ticked past the hour mark.
The American broke in the third game of the decider, but missed a decent chance to break again for 4-1.
Her path to victory, though, was only held up by an extended Mexican Wave from the Chatrier crowd, which had the umpire begging for quiet and left Williams laughing.
She regained composure to hold for a 5-3 lead and, after after missing a match point on Barty's serve, took her second with a thumping backhand winner down the line to the delight of the crowd.
Analysis
Russell Fuller BBC Sport tennis correspondent
The versatile Barty outfoxed Williams in the opening set, and the Australian got off to a flyer in the second when the current world number 451 played an awful service game.
She framed a smash and put a regulation drive volley into the net to drop serve, and yet within a game the whole tenor of the match had changed.
Williams let out a spectacular roar after a backhand service return winner, and a rather uncertain crowd took that as a cue to wake up.
Like so many before her, Barty did start to make more errors in the face of such an intense presence. But in just her second clay court match in two years, there was enough evidence to suggest Williams can also pose a significant threat to others here at Roland Garros.