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Venus Williams struggles past stubborn Jarmila Groth at Wimbledon

Venus, clearly drained after a tougher than expected battle against the lowest ranked woman left in the tournament, agreed, telling her father and coach: "That was crazy."

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Five-times champion Venus Williams had to fight long and hard in blazing sunshine on Monday before taking her place in the Wimbledon quarter-finals with a 6-4 7-6 win over Australia's Jarmila Groth. 

Her father Richard, full of admiration for his daughter's grit and determination, said: "She had to play like a hell-cat to pull that one off."                                           

Venus, clearly drained after a tougher than expected battle against the lowest ranked woman left in the tournament, agreed, telling her father and coach: "That was crazy."

Richard clearly felt a higher power was needed to steer Venus through. Sporting a "Jehovah My God" baseball cap, he kept shouting "Turn it up V" as the ding-dong battle got more and more intense in an intriguing second set.                                           

Venus arrived almost 10 minutes late for her match.

Explaining the delay afterwards, she told reporters: "I didn't know the procediure for Court Two so I was waiting on soemone to get me. No one came. So I eventually just came out."

Once Venus got into gear, one break of serve was enough for the American second seed to take the first set after 35 minutes on a sweltering Court Two.

But her Slovak-born opponent, ranked 92 in the world, refused to be overawed by the woman who was won more grass court titles than any other player on the circuit. 

The second set was an engrossing see-saw battle with Groth fighting tooth-and-nail to stay in the fight.                                           

Groth served for the set at 5-4 and 6-5 but on each occasion Venus thwarted her, and she did well to recover from 4-0 down in the tiebreak before going down 7-5 when the Australian netted a mid-court forehand after an hour and 37 minutes.                   

Venus will now play Bulgaria's Tsvetana Pironkova for a place in the semi-finals.                                           

"She is one of those players that can come up with a win. She's talented and she can beat some top players every now and then."

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