Serena Williams, Safina into Australian final (5:10 p.m.)
MELBOURNE, Australia — Serena Williams earned a shot at her 10th Grand Slam title and Dinara Safina moved one win away from her first with semifinal victories at the Australian Open.
Williams, who won the Australian title in 2003, 2005 and 2007, played her best match of the tournament in a 6-3, 6-4 victory over Olympic champion Elena Dementieva on Thursday.
“I haven’t moved like that for a while, so I was a little shocked,” said Williams, still leaving room for improvement. “A perfect match for me? Oh, no, no, no. But it was definitely better.”
She’ll get her chance to extend the alternate-year sequence of titles when she meets third-seeded Safina, who beat fellow Russian Vera Zvonareva 6-3, 7-6 (4) in the other semifinal.
The winner of Saturday night’s final will also replace Serbia’s Jelena Jankovic at the top of the rankings.
“I think we will shake hands after the match and say `You deserve to be No. 1,”‘ Safina said.
Safina’s older brother, Marat Safin, won the title here in 2005, the day after Williams had won the women’s final.
Safin also held the No. 1 ranking in November 2000, meaning Safina has the chance to write the Russian siblings into history.
“Since I was growing up it was my dream to be No. 1,” she said. “I watched my brother winning this tournament. It’s great that I can follow his steps.”
Safina recovered a break early in the second set but again was in trouble with Zvonareva serving for the second set after breaking to pull ahead 6-5.
But Safina broke back at love to force a tiebreaker and, from 4-4, ran off the last three points.
Safina is yet to win a major, losing the 2008 French Open final to Ana Ivanovic in her best previous run. She lost to Williams in last year’s U.S. Open semifinals.
The roof was closed at Rod Laver Arena for both women’s semifinals, protecting the players and fans from outside temperatures topping 44C (111F) degrees.
Williams commended tournament organizers for deciding early to close the roof rather than wait, as they had Wednesday, until after the first set of her quarterfinal against Svetlana Kuznetsova.
“It was really, really hot today,” she said, “and, uhm, it was really hot.”
News updates during the semifinals reported it was the hottest January day since 1939 in Melbourne. The temperature hit 44.3C (112F) at 4:43 p.m.
It was almost as hot Wednesday when Williams was only a game from a quarterfinal exit, having to break Kuznetsova when the Russian was serving for the match.
Twice before, Williams has had to save match points in her semifinals en route to the Australian title.
But the reigning US Open champion found her rhythm quickly against Dementieva, who has not gone past the semifinals at a Grand Slam since 2004.
Williams ended Dementieva’s best bid in four years for a major.
The Russian was on a 15-match winning streak, including two titles and wins over Williams and Safina at the Sydney International.
“I had a good run … (but) I feel like today I was not quick enough,” Dementieva said. “I was not maybe aggressive enough against her. She dictated points.
Roger Federer, seeking a record-equaling 14th Grand Slam singles title to match Pete Sampras’ career tally, was playing American Andy Roddick in the night semifinal.
No. 2 Federer is 15-2 against the seventh-seeded Roddick, who beat defending champion Novak Djokovic of Serbia in the quarterfinals.
Top-ranked Rafael Nadal will play Fernando Verdasco in an all-Spanish semifinal on Friday. (AP)

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