Melbourne: Maria Sharapova overcame some tricky wind conditions to advance to her fourth Australian Open final with a 6-3 6-2 victory over Russian compatriot Ekaterina Makarova on Thursday. The 2008 champion, whose last Melbourne Park final came three years ago, will now meet the winner of the all-American clash between top seed Serena Williams and Madison Keys later on Rod Laver Arena. [caption id=“attachment_2069673” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]  Maria Sharapova of Russia serves to her compatriot Ekaterina Makarova. AP[/caption] Sharapova used her experience and powerful ground strokes to dominate an opponent playing in her first Australian Open semi-final. Makarova, who also reached the last four at the 2014 U.S. Open, had not dropped a set all tournament and her easy win over third seed Simona Halep in the quarter-finals gave her plenty of confidence going into the contest despite her 5-0 losing record against Sharapova. She began strongly as Sharapova had trouble with her ball toss in the swirling wind, serving two double faults, and held two break points in an opening game that lasted 10 minutes before the five-time grand slam champion recovered. The 27-year-old Sharapova immediately broke Makarova and then held to establish a 3-0 lead with the 10th seed yelling at herself as they went to the change of ends. Makarova managed to break in the seventh game as Sharapova again had trouble with her ball toss before the second seed put her foot down and won eight of the next nine points to clinch the set in 48 minutes. Sharapova refused to let up in the second set, while Makarova’s serve faltered and forehand misfired as she failed to put any depth on her shots, allowing her compatriot to dictate the points. The 26-year-old earned two more break points in the sixth game and finally forced Sharapova on the defensive but her forehand again let her down when the court was open and she lost yet another opportunity to get back into the match. Sharapova then wrapped it with a strong service game to clinch her place in the final in 87 minutes. The five-time major winner opened the 2015 season in confident style by winning the Brisbane International title but had a close call in the second round here, having to save match points against No. 150-ranked Russian qualifier Alexandra Panova. Since then, she hasn’t faced a set point. “It’s been a strange road for me to get to the finals, but I’m happy,” said Sharapova, who is now into her 10th Grand Slam final. “Came from behind in a few, really behind in one — saving match points. I felt like I was given a second chance. I just wanted to take my chances.” Agencies
Sharapova won the Australia Open title in 2008 but was comprehensively beaten in the championship matches in 2007, by then unseeded Serena Williams, and in 2012 by Victoria Azarenka.
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