Tennis: Fired-up Sharapova storms into Open fourth round

Maria Sharapova of Russia hits a return against Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan during their women's singles third round match at the Australian Open 2015 tennis tournament in Melbourne on Jan 23, 2015. -- PHOTO: AFP 
Maria Sharapova of Russia hits a return against Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan during their women's singles third round match at the Australian Open 2015 tennis tournament in Melbourne on Jan 23, 2015. -- PHOTO: AFP 

MELBOURNE (AFP) - Fired-up second seed Maria Sharapova blitzed her way into the Australian Open fourth round on Friday, swatting aside Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan in straight sets.

The Russian five-time grand slam champion crushed the 31st seed 6-1, 6-1 to revive her Open campaign after surviving a massive scare in her previous match against compatriot Alexandra Panova.

The 27-year-old, the 2008 champion at Melbourne Park, ramped up her aggression against Diyaz after being forced to save two match points in the Panova three-setter, sending a message that she is back to her best.

"I started really focused, I knew I had a tough, long match previously, so I wanted to start off strong and finish strong, I think I did a good job of that," she said.

"She (Diyas) is capable of playing really well if you give her the chance. She's young, up-and-coming and has nothing to lose, and sometimes those matches are the toughest ones."

Sharapova said she felt like she had been given a second chance after going to the brink against Panova and responded accordingly.

"You never quite know after such a big challenge," she said.

"You have so many thoughts going through your mind and all of a sudden you're still in the tournament and you feel like you have another life."

Sharapova's fourth-round opponent will be China's Peng Shuai, who made the US Open semi-finals last year.

"We haven't played each other in a long while," Sharapova said. "It's great to play someone who's been going well in the Slams and in particular had such a great run at the US Open.

"She's going to be a tough one."

The world No. 2 was in no mood to hang around against Diyas, taking a break in the first game.

The diminutive Kazakh tried to take on Sharapova from the baseline but was overwhelmed in only her second appearance at Melbourne Park, with the Russian rattling through the first set in just 26 minutes.

Diyaz mixed it up with forays to the net in the second set, taking a break off Sharapova in the first match.

But it was a temporary reprieve and normal service resumed when Sharapova immediately broke back and continued to dominate before closing out the match in just over an hour.

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