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Tennis

Federer Aces Victory Over Soderling

Roger FedererWIMBLEDON, England (AP) -- Roger Federer found himself in a serving contest Monday at Wimbledon-and won.

The five-time champion hit 23 aces, never lost serve and advanced to the quarterfinals by beating familiar foil Robin Soderling 6-4, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5).

Federer improved to 11-0 against Soderling, including a victory in the French Open final three weeks ago to complete a career Grand Slam.

This time the No. 2-seeded Federer came through on a handful of key points. He earned the only service break of the match in the ninth game of the opening set, when Soderling committed five unforced errors to fall behind for good, 5-4.

Soderling led in the final tiebreaker but double-faulted on the next-to-last point, then hit an errant return.

"Today was hard to get through a really dangerous match," Federer said. "Robin served great throughout the match. Thank God he served a double-fault in the breaker at the end. Otherwise it could have gone easily four sets."

With all 16 fourth-round matches scheduled on another no-rain, no-roof afternoon, the Williams sisters remained on course to play an all-family final for the second year in a row.

Five-time champion Venus led 6-1, love-1 when Ana Ivanovic retired with a left thigh injury. Two-time champion Serena beat Daniela Hantuchova 6-3, 6-1. Venus beat Serena in last year's final.

Soderling had just two break-point chances against Federer-both at 4-all in the third set-and failed to put either return in play. Federer lost only eight points on his first serve and committed only eight unforced errors in the match.

"Today was pretty much a serving contest," Federer said. "There weren't many rallies."

Federer needs three more victories this week for his 15th major title, which would break the record he shares with Pete Sampras. Federer doesn't have to worry about defending champion Rafael Nadal, who missed the tournament with bad knees.

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Greg Couch

Greg CouchGreg Couch is a national columnist and award-winning tennis writer for FanHouse.com. A former ranked amateur tennis player, who dabbled in a few pro tournaments, he came to FanHouse after 12 years at the Chicago Sun-Times. "The best tennis writer in America," according to Jason Whitlock, national columnist and guest host of the Jim Rome radio show.