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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 3:19 p.m., Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Tennis: Serena Williams loses in Rome

By ALESSANDRA RIZZO
Associated Press Writer

ROME — A day after insisting she was still the best player in the world despite falling from No. 1 in the rankings, Serena Williams lost to Patty Schnyder in her first match at the Italian Open

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Williams appeared to be moving with difficulty at times during her 6-2, 2-6, 6-1 loss on the clay at the Foro Italico.

"We all know who the real No. 1 is," Williams said Monday. "Quite frankly, I'm the best in the world."

Earlier, Dinara Safina, the player who overtook the top spot from Williams, bumped off Virginie Razzano 7-6 (1), 6-1. Defending champion Jelena Jankovic and French Open champion Ana Ivanovic all advanced to the third round, as play was disrupted by rain and went late into the night.

"It's not luck," Safina said Monday. "Nobody gave it to me — I proved it. I played two Grand Slam finals, and last year I won four titles ... so I think I belong to this, because this doesn't come out of sky."

The 23-year-old Safina, who lost to Serena in the Australian Open final, said Williams is entitled to claim to be the real No. 1 because she has won 10 Grand Slam titles.

"But she's also older than me, so she has more experience than me," Safina said. "So let's see when I'm her age how many titles I'm going to have, and then we can say."

Williams was broken twice in the first set, which wrapped up in less than half an hour for the 30-year-old Swiss. She came back in the second set but went down 5-0 in the third.

This was the first clay-court event of the season for Williams, the 2002 champion here. Schnyder, currently ranked 20th, had won both their previous matches on clay.

Safina overcame a shaky start, allowing Razzano to take the initiative for most of the first set, but she dominated the tiebreaker and then kept the momentum with an early break in the second set before winning the last four games.

She complained that the rain before the match had made the court damp and dangerous to play on.

"I was just so angry, because you can get injured," said the 23-year-old Russian, who fell in the first set as she rushed to the net to retrieve a drop shot, but couldn't slide. "It's soft and you're afraid to play."

She said tournament organizers should "have a little bit respect to us as the players."

Earlier in the day, Jankovic began her defense of the Rome title with a 6-3, 7-6 (6) win over Gisela Dulko. The match was suspended for about 3› hours due to rain.

"It's difficult when it rains and then you have to stop and, you know, focus again and start," Jankovic said.

Jankovic won early breaks in both sets but let her opponent break back both times. In the second set she had to save four set points at 4-5 before rain forced the suspension at 5-5.

After play resumed, the third-seeded Jankovic squandered four match points in the tiebreaker before taking the set and the match.

"I had everything under control, and all of a sudden, she's on top of me and she has set points to win the second set," Jankovic said. "It was difficult, but I managed to somehow stay positive and stay strong and win that second set."

In other matches, Svetlana Kuznetsova beat Daniela Hantuchova 6-3, 6-3, and Nadia Petrova beat Carla Suarez Navarro 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.

Caroline Wozniacki, Flavia Pennetta and Kaia Kanepi also advanced, while 11th-seeded Marion Bartoli and Alize Cornet were both upset.

The 13th-seeded Cornet, last year's runner up, lost 6-4, 6-1 to Kateryna Bondarenko, and Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez beat Bartoli 6-1, 7-5.