Serena Williams beats Li Na at WTA Championships

Serena Williams of the US prepares to serve to Na Li of China, during their tennis match on the second day of the WTA championship in Istanbul, Turkey, Wednesday, October 24, 2012. AP

ISTANBUL — Serena Williams proved Wednesday at the WTA Championships that even when her serve is malfunctioning, she can still beat a top player.

Williams beat 2011 French Open champion Li Na of China 7-6 (1), 6-3 for her second win in round-robin matches to seal a semifinal spot at the tournament for the top eight players in the world.

In another Red Group encounter, top-ranked Victoria Azarenka saved two match points before rallying past Angelique Kleber of Germany 6-7 (11), 7-6 (2), 6-4 in her first match at the event.

Because that match went to three sets, Williams advanced to the last four.

In the White Grouo, second-ranked Maria Sharapova rallied to beat No. 4 Agnieszka Radwanska 5-7, 7-5, 7-5.

Williams had six double-faults and won only 51 percent of points on her first serve. But Li also struggled on serve – there were eight breaks in the first set and three more in the second.

“My serve just didn’t go in. Every time I got my first serve in, I was surprised,” Williams said. “But knowing I was able to still, for me, zero serve compared to how I normally serve – I think it’s something good I can take out of the match.”

She has won 28 of her past 29 matches and captured Wimbledon, U.S. Open and Olympic titles this year. The highest ranking she can achieve at the end of the year is No. 2 because of injuries and missed tournaments.

At one point, Williams got so frustrated at dropping serve that she uncharacteristically smashed her racket.

“No, I don’t break rackets in matches. Although I didn’t hit it hard,” she said. “Maybe I don’t know my own strength.”

The first set was full of missed opportunities. The eighth-ranked Li took a 4-1 lead before Williams won the next four games. Serving for the set, the American again dropped serve. Li was unable to hold, though, and Williams had another chance to serve out the set – only to lose it at love.

Williams took control of the match in the second set by saving a breakpoint – in a game that lasted nine minutes – to hold and lead 4-1.

The American wasted two match points to break Li, but closed it out on her own serve when the Chinese player sent a forehand long.

Both Azarenka and Kleber smashed rackets in the second, highly entertaining match that lasted 3 hours, 6 minutes and tied the record for most games (36) at the event. The first-set tiebreaker also tied a record for most points.

Sharapova and Radwanska also equaled the record in a match that lasted three hours and 12 minutes and finished after 2 a.m..

Kleber is making her debut in the event after winning two titles and climbing to No. 5 this year after finishing 2011 at No. 32.

She was down a break in the second set, but led 5-4 after prevailing in a game that went to nine deuces and lasted 13 1/2 minutes.

Azarenka then saved two match points before capturing the second tiebreaker. The Belarusian closed it out on Kerber’s serve, hitting a forehand winner on her first match point.

“She provoked a lot of mistakes from me, but on the match points I just thought I had to go for it,” said Azarenka, who needs one more round-robin win to secure the No. 1 ranking for the year. “She will not miss, so I didn’t have to wait for her mistake.

“I had to go for it. I was so determined to make it happen. I wanted to change the momentum. I wanted to take the destiny into my hands. You know, if I would have missed those shots it will be up to me, not up to my opponent.”

Kerber said Azarenka just played the big points better.

“I was 2-6 down in the tiebreak and I won it, so maybe it was the same thing. I had the match points in the second set but she played unbelievable and I could do nothing,” Kerber said.

Earlier, defending champion Petra Kvitova withdrew from the tournament because of a viral illness and was replaced by Samantha Stosur.

The event splits players into two groups, with the top two in each advancing.

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