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Melbourne: Maria Sharapova advanced to the fourth round of Australian Open tennis with a 6-3, 6-0 victory over Elena Vesnina that was a lot harder than the score indicated.
Defending champion Serena Williams and top-ranked Justine Henin also advanced against opponents with similar games. Williams next faces 12th-seeded Nicole Vaidisova, while Henin puts her 31-match winning streak on the line against Taiwanese qualifier Hsieh Su-Wei.
But 2006 champion Amelie Mauresmo, seeded 18th, fell 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 to Australian Casey Dellaqua, who had a year-end No. 78 ranking and earlier beat No. 15 Patty Schnyder.
Former No. 1 Mauresmo, who has fought nerves before, double-faulted while serving at 4-5, deuce in the third set.
Dellaqua then finished it off with a forehand inches inside the corner that Mauresmo let drop for a winner as the Rod Laver Arena crowd erupted in cheers for the last local hope in the women's draw.
Dellaqua earned a matchup against No. 3 Jelena Jankovic, who had to save match points in her first-round match and a code violation for coaching - by her mother in the players' box - in the second game of the third set of a 6-2, 4-6, 6-1 win over No. 30 Virginie Razzano of France.
On the men's side, second-ranked Rafael Nadal and No. 4 Nikolai Davydenko advanced in straight sets, while No. 6 Andy Roddick was playing in the late match against No. 29 Philipp Kohlschreiber.
Nadal next plays No. 23 Paul-Henri Matthieu, who had a five-set victory over Stefan Koubek, while Daveydenko meets fellow Russian Mikhail Youzhny, who downed No. 20 Ivo Karlovic.
Eighth-seeded Richard Gasquet also advanced and next faces unseeded Jo-Wilfried Tsonga.
After routing Lindsay Davenport in the last round - a match that Sharapova said she prepared for as if it were a final - she seemed puzzled and frustrated that she couldn't put away Vesnina until she finally put it all together and ran off the last nine games.
"I really tried to keep the intensity I had in the previous match, but that's always difficult," said Sharapova, who next faces another Russian, No. 11 Elena Dementieva, who beat Israel's Shahar Peer. "She came out having not really much to lose."
Sharapova grunted louder and louder and hit harder and harder as she was broken twice in the first set by Vesnina, who was in constant trouble on her own serve.
Known for her deliberate routine before she serves, Sharapova also got a warning for taking too much time and double-faulted on the next point.
"When it got close, I felt like I had a huge advantage ... whether that's experience or her being a little tight," Sharapova said. "I still felt like I had the edge in the match."
Finally finding her rhythm, particularly on badly executed drop shots and other softer offerings from Vesnina that turned into little more than target practice, Sharapova had 11 winners to only five unforced errors in the second set, breaking Vesnina for the seventh consecutive time to end the match.
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