NEW YORK —  Victoria Azarenka needed to win the second set twice. She had plenty  left to pull away for a three-set victory at the U.S. Open. The second-seeded Azarenka took 2 hours, 40 minutes to close out Alize Cornet 6-7 (2), 6-3, 6-2 in the third round Saturday. Serving  on game point at 5-3 in the second, Azarenka pumped her fist and  started walking off the court after the 26th-seeded Cornet hit a  backhand into the net. The chair umpire had to get her attention to  inform her that the line judge had called Azarenka’s previous shot out —  replays showed it landed inside the baseline. The umpire overruled the  call, but they still had to replay the point. “Are you freaking kidding me?” Azarenka howled to the chair ump. “What the hell are you doing?” After the match, she put it this way: “That was the most ridiculous thing there is.” On  her second try at set point, Azarenka hit a forehand wide to send the  game to deuce. But she won the next two points to clinch the set, after  all. Then she dominated the third to advance to face 13th-seeded  Ana Ivanovic, who rallied to beat young American Christina McHale in  three sets. “The dynamic of the match was a little bit weird for  me,” Azarenka said. “I felt like I didn’t take my opportunities in the  first set, which was kind of a waste and it gave her a lot of  confidence, and she really came up with the great shots when she needed  with the big serves. I’d actually never seen her serve like that before,  so that’s definitely a big improvement from her side.” Rafael  Nadal has barely been pushed so far at Flushing Meadows. The  second-seeded Spaniard posted his third straight-set victory, beating  Ivan Dodig 6-4, 6-3, 6-3. Nadal has faced only five break points,  saving all of them, through three matches. But he doesn’t think that’s  because he’s serving particularly well. “I am winning because I am playing well from the baseline and I am making the right decisions in the right moments,” Nadal said. Even  with McHale’s tough loss, it’s still been a promising tournament for  the generation of U.S. women who must succeed the Williams sisters. Serena  Williams gets a much-anticipated rematch with 20-year-old Sloane  Stephens on Sunday. They’re joined in the round of 16 by a less expected  American, wild-card Alison Riske. Maybe’s Riske’s run isn’t that  much of a surprise considering her recent surge. The 23-year-old  Pittsburgh native came into the summer having never accomplished any of  these feats: winning a match in a Grand Slam tournament, at a WTA Tour  event on hard courts, or against a top-10 foe. She’s now achieved  all that, her latest breakthrough victory a rout of 2011 Wimbledon champ  Petra Kvitova. Riske won 6-3, 6-0, taking the last eight games against  the seventh-seeded Czech, who was in bed with a fever the day before. “I’ve  got a new confidence in myself,” the 81st-ranked Riske said through  tears in an on-court interview. “I believe that I belong here.” McHale  was one game away from matching Riske in upsetting a former major  champion to reach her first Grand Slam fourth round. The 21-year-old had  a chance to serve out the match at 5-4 in the second set, but Ivanovic  broke back. The 2008 French Open champ then saved two break points  at 5-5, and she broke McHale’s serve in the next game to clinch the  second set. Ivanovic broke McHale again in the final game of the third set for a 4-6, 7-5, 6-4 victory in 2 hours, 26 minutes. McHale has been ranked as high as 24th, but she’d slipped to No. 114 after a bout with mononucleosis. “After  some of the losses I’ve had this year, even though today it hurts to  lose this type of close match, I feel much better about my game,” she  said. Riske was 0-5 at major tournaments before Wimbledon this  year but is 5-1 since. She just broke into the top 100 in late July; now  Riske will likely earn a top-60 ranking. “It’s really tough out here,” she said. “Every week isn’t like this.” She  has always thrived on grass, making the third round at Wimbledon this  year. Now she’s starting to figure out the hard courts. She next faces  an unseeded opponent, Daniela Hantuchova. Kvitova said she tried  to end points quickly, knowing she couldn’t hold up through long  rallies. But Riske stayed calm and played good defense, taking advantage  of Kvitova’s seven double-faults and 27 unforced errors. “She moved quite well,” Kvitova said. “She pushed me to the back. That was tough for me.” It’s  another frustrating finish at Flushing Meadows, the only major  tournament at which Kvitova hasn’t made the semifinals. Two years ago,  she became the first reigning Wimbledon women’s champion to lose her  first U.S. Open match in the same season. “My body wouldn’t let me fight,” Kvitova said. Riske  was all set to play for Vanderbilt in 2009 when a family friend who  owns a chemical company offered to sponsor her. So she turned pro. A year ago at this time, she was questioning the wisdom of that decision. Then she rejoined coach Yves Boulais. “Once  I got back with him, things kind of unfolded themselves,” Riske said.  “I felt really comfortable. I knew that with the tennis I was playing  that things were going to start coming together. I just didn’t know  when.” Saturday’s session opened with two minor upsets: Simona  Halep, seeded 21st, crushed No. 14 Maria Kirilenko 6-1, 6-0, and Flavia  Pennetta beat 27th-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova 7-5, 6-1. The two face  each other in the fourth round. The 21-year-old Halep extended a  sizzling summer with her first trip to a Grand Slam fourth round. She’s  coming off a title at New Haven. On the men’s side, fourth-seeded  David Ferrer needed nearly three hours to down 172nd-ranked qualifier  Mikhail Kukushkin 6-4, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. No. 10-seeded Milos Raonic beat  23rd-seeded Feliciano Lopez 6-7 (4), 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Janko Tipsarevic, seeded 18th, also needed four sets to knock off 20-year-old American Jack Sock 3-6, 7-6 (1), 6-1, 6-2.
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