Catwalk for Venus, cakewalk for Federer in Paris

PARIS, (Reuters) – Venus Williams and her dress were  centre of attention at Roland Garros yesterday but Roger  Federer once again proved his tennis needs no added frills as  both players moved smoothly into the French Open third round.

Williams, the women’s second seed, overpowered tricky  Spaniard Arantxa Parra Santonja 6-2 6-4 wearing a risque outfit  more appropriate for the nearby Moulin Rouge cabaret.

Federer, the mens’s defending champion, relied on his racket  to provide the “Ooh la la” moments on Court Phillipe Chatrier  during a rain-hit 7-6 6-2 6-4 win over Alejandro Falla.

On a day disrupted by frequent heavy showers after three  days of hot sunshine, 2009 women’s champion Svetlana Kuznetsova  also moved forward in the draw, but only after saving four match  points against Germany’s Andrea Petkovic on Court One.

Caroline Wozniacki suffered no such dramas, the third seed  beating Italy’s Tathiana Garbin 6-3 6-1.

Play finally ended for the day at 10pm local time with  France’s Gael Monfils locked at 5-5 in the fifth set against  Italy’s Fabio Fognini who was docked a point at 4-4 after  arguing furiously with the umpire that it was too dark to  continue playing.

Nearly 10 hours earlier the 29-year-old Williams struck the  ball beautifully against Santonja but it was not just her power  game that had a sparse mid-morning crowd buzzing.

Once again, she strode on court wearing a revealing lacy  black corset which at times threatened to reveal a little more  than she wanted, particularly as Wednesday was Children’s Day at  Roland Garros and many of the crowd were school age.

After completing an impressive victory to move a step closer  to a possible repeat of her 2002 final here against sister  Serena, Venus described her latest creation as an illusion.

Her form so far here has been anything but and she looks in  the mood to challenge for a title that has never threatened  since losing to sister Serena in the 2002 final.

Having dispatched wily Swiss Patty Schnyder in the first  round, the seven-times grand slam champion was again in dominant  form against the unorthodox Santonja who plays double-handed on  both wings and is especially tricky on clay.

After fending off a break point in her first service game  she took command, coming through in an hour and 35 minutes.

“She definitely kept me on my toes,” Venus told reporters in  reply to one of the few questions about the match itself.

“Overall, today I just thought I played the bigger points,  especially on my serve, I played those really well, and I think  that was key.”

SARTORIAL ELEGANCE
Asked to explain the outfit that she designed especially for  Roland Garros and which also requires her to wear flesh-coloured  underwear, Venus was happy to oblige.

“It’s really about the illusion,” she said. “The illusion of  just having bare skin is definitely a lot more beautiful.” Federer’s sartorial elegance at Wimbledon is well-known but  really nothing can top the grace and elegance of his tennis.

That was the case again yesterday against Falla although  initially he did struggle with his timing — shanking several  unforced errors off his frame as his south American opponent  made all the early running.

Federer, without a title since the Australian Open, had  managed just three points on Falla’s serve in the first 11 games  but when he needed to find another gear he did, breaking his  opponent when in trouble at 6-5 down before winning a tiebreak.

Twice the players were forced off by rain that interrupted  the schedule all day but Federer kept his game together and  suffered no further alarms.