Serena takes aim at history in Australian final

Published: 30 January 2016, 10:09 AM
Serena takes aim at history in Australian final

Serena Williams will take aim at Steffi Graf`s Open-era record of 22 Grand Slam titles on Saturday when she plays the Australian Open final against Germany`s Angelique Kerber, who is hoping to pull off a major upset.

The world number one is the overwhelming favourite to win her seventh crown at Melbourne Park and match Graf`s career Grand Slam haul, warning she is in even better form than last year, when she won three major titles.

"I think I`m playing better. I know my practices are better. Hopefully I`m playing better," Williams said, adding that at 34 and with the clock ticking, she is making the most of every minute on court.

"I kind of relish every win and every final and every match now. I think maybe in the past I didn`t as much. I was just like going through the motions.

"Even though I was super-excited, I just feel like now it`s even more exciting."

The American has been in imperious form at the season`s opening Slam, easily dispatching the likes of Maria Sharapova and Agnieszka Radwanska, but seventh seed Kerber believes she can spring a surprise.

"She will go out there to win her next Grand Slam. I must be ready to take the challenge to play against the best player right now," said the German, ahead of her first Grand Slam final.

"She`s the world number one, she`s the champion, she`s won everything. I have actually nothing to lose.

"But still I will go out there to try to challenge her, playing good tennis. I know that I won against her once, so I can beat her. But I must play my best I can play."

Williams, the top seed, has a 5-1 record against Kerber and has won their last four matches, with her only loss against the German coming at Cincinnati in 2012.

That loss is still fresh in her memory, and she is taking nothing for granted against a player who won four tournaments last year -- and credits her new-found form to inspirational words from Graf, her fellow German.