The pair had split their previous two contests, with the 26-year-old Romanian prevailing in the most recent, over three sets on clay in the United States. They had a similar age profile – and had turned professional around the same time – but the gulf in experience was vast. While the European had played just over 100 tour-level matches, Keys had accumulated more than 500, including six grand slam semifinals and the 2017 US Open final.
That showed on Thursday. The first set was over in 32 minutes. Cristian started well – but was gradually overwhelmed by the sheer power produced from the other end of the court. She survived two break points at 1-2 – not helped by an unfortunate net cord – but gave up the third with a double fault.
That gave Keys momentum and she wasn’t looking back. A sizzling return down the line from a decent serve gave her a second break and a 5-1 lead as she found her timing. The American’s mastery was shown at the set point. Keys was pushed out of court – managing a superb retrieval – before producing a crunching winner, despite being off balance.
There was more early in the second set, with one of the best returns of the tournament, cutting the lines deep to the far corner, leaving Cristian shaking her head, given the serve had been decent.
After a brief rain break Keys broke for 2-1, her confidence shown by an angled drop shot from well behind the baseline, before a round of heavier showers saw play suspended again.
Cristian took advantage of the stoppage, forcing her first break of the match. But any momentum didn’t last long, broken back immediately, as Keys found her range. The rest of the set was a procession, with Keys converting her first match point with a crisp ace.
Michael Burgess has been a sports journalist since 2005, winning several national awards and covering Olympics’, Fifa World Cups and America’s Cup campaigns. A football aficionado, Burgess will never forget the noise that greeted Rory Fallon’s goal against Bahrain in Wellington in 2009.