Master blaster Serena puts Open rivals on notice

Master blaster Serena puts Open rivals on notice

Top seed Serena Williams blasted her way into the Australian Open second round with a power-hitting masterclass on Monday, sending an ominous warning to her rivals at Melbourne Park.

Serena Williams celebrates during her women's singles match against Alison Van Uytvanck during the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 20, 2015. Williams cruised into the second round with a 6-0, 6-4 win over Van Uytvanck

The American has been talking tough ahead of the season-opening Grand Slam and emphatically backed up her words with a 6-0, 6-4 win over world number 106 Alison Van Uytvanck.

The 20-year-old Belgian was like a deer in the headlights as 18-time Grand Slam champion Williams unloaded, effortlessly breaking her opponent's serve and firing down thunderbolts of her own.

Williams took the opening game in just 60 seconds and wrapped up the first set in 21 minutes.

Van Uytvanck rallied in the second to defend her serve but it only delayed the inevitable and Williams pointedly made a "number one" gesture after wrapping up the win in just over an hour.

There was none of the fatigue the 33-year-old showed earlier this month at the Hopman Cup, but early-season form means little to Williams, who won one of her five Australian titles when she was ranked 81 in the world.

"I definitely think I can improve a tremendous amount," she said.

A sixth Australian Open title would take her to clear second on the all-time Open Era Grand Slam winners list behind Steffi Graf's 22, having joined Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova on 18 with her win at the US Open last year.

"It's in the back of my mind, but there's other players who want to win this tournament as well," she said.

"If I could get to 19 in Australia that would be beyond amazing, so we'll see. I have a lot of work to do but I'm just going to enjoy myself."

The American has held on to the top ranking for 100 consecutive weeks, one of only four women to do so, but could lose it if the results do not do her way at Melbourne Park.

She won the last of her Australian titles in 2010 and said ahead of the tournament that the frustrating wait for a sixth meant no other player in the 128-strong field could match her desire to win.

Williams will play Vera Zvonareva in the second round, saying she was wary of the Russian former world number two who she defeated in the 2010 Wimbledon final but who has two career wins over the American.

"To meet such a (formerly) high-ranked player in the second round is not going to be easy for me. It's going to be tough," Williams said.

"She does so many things well. She's on the way back. I know she's been fighting and playing really hard. I have to be ready. I have to come out of the gates ready to go and be the best I can."

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