SERENA Williams refused to blame a jarred ankle after suffering a remarkable Australian Open collapse in the quarter-finals against Karolina Pliskova.
From a set and a break down, the title favourite turned things around to lead 5-1 in the deciding set and had four match points but lost six games in a row to fall to a 6-4, 4-6, 7-5 defeat.
Williams had her first match point at 5-1 but, after being called for a foot fault on what appeared to be an ace, she jarred her left ankle and did not win another point on serve during the match.
The other three chances came with Pliskova serving at 4-5 but the Czech was rewarded for bravery on her forehand, and Williams insisted afterwards it had been her opponent who had won the match rather than she who had lost it.
Williams said: "There's nothing I did wrong on those match points. I can't say that I choked. She literally played her best tennis ever on those shots.
"I don't really take losses well. But Karolina played lights-out starting 5-1, 40-30. Literally, I've never seen anything like it. If anything, I think that's a little bit easier to know, OK, next time I'm up 5-1 against anybody, I just need to make sure I play lights-out when I have match points.
"It's little things like that that I used to do, always do, that I need matches to know that, OK, this is when you go psycho."
Pliskova was happy to agree with Williams, saying with a smile: "I'm not going to go against Serena.
"Normally I'm having lot of comebacks, but maybe from being a set down or a break down, so nothing like this. I think it's going to be the best comeback ever so far in my life."
Asked why she had not called the trainer after the ankle incident, Williams said: "I really hate calling the trainer out. And at that point I didn't feel like I needed it, or I didn't feel like it would be a big deal. So I just kept going. I like to just kind of tough it out. It was fine."
In the last four, Pliskova will take on fourth seed Osaka, who extended her winning run at the slams to 12 matches with a 6-4 6-1 victory over Elina Svitolina, who was hampered by pain in her shoulder and neck.
The Japanese player is now in pole position to take over as world number one at the end of the tournament, although intriguingly Pliskova and Petra Kvitova are also still in contention.
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