LONDON, June 27: Muttering and mumbling throughout, Serena Williams looked a tortured soul at Wimbledon before finally reaching the third round on a rain-hit Wednesday.
After rating her first-round performance “two out of 10”, Williams is unlikely to be satisfied with her ragged display on Wednesday when she came back from a break down in each set before beating Australian Alicia Molik 7-6, 6-3.
At least Williams already has two Wimbledon trophies to her name. Fellow American Andy Roddick is still looking for his first.
Third seed Roddick, twice a finalist, has had six failed bids and he moved a step closer to his dream with a 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 defeat of Thailand's Danai Udomchoke.
Danai's defeat completed a bad day for the Asian nations. Ninth seed Martina Hingis survived two match points in her previous match but avoided any such drama in a 6-1, 6-2 thrashing of Japan's Aiko Nakamura.
China's Yan Zi, Taiwan's Hsieh Su-wei and Ayumi Morita of Japan all bowed out in the first round of the women's draw.
French Open champion Justine Henin enjoyed a swift 60 minute workout to overcome Russia's Vera Dushevina 6-0, 6-4 in the second round.
The Belgian's last two victims at Roland Garros, Jelena Jankovic and Ana Ivanovic, are fast becoming used to the spotlight after they were feted by thousands when they went home to Serbia following their Paris exploits.
On Wednesday, however, sixth seed Ivanovic had to make do with a more modest crowd on court 18 and surged past Melinda Czink 6-0, 7-6 in another delayed first-round encounter.
Jankovic was even more ruthless in a 6-1, 6-1 demolition of Slovakian Jarmila Gajdosova.
Williams has been tipped by many, including John McEnroe, to win the title here but she has so far failed to live up to that expectation.
With more loose shots than winners, the seventh seed began berating herself at 4-1 down in the first set.
A woman who defied the rankings to win the Australian Open in January while 81st in the world was not about to roll over, however.
Williams missed a set point on her serve at 6-5 but let out an almighty roar of ‘Come on!’ when she bagged it in the tiebreak with an ace.
She staged another fightback in the second, sealing it with what she thought was a winning volley.
Yet the contest ended in confusion when Molik, after exchanging handshakes with Williams, challenged a call midway through that final rally on the advice of the umpire.
The Australian had no option but to accept defeat when Hawkeye confirmed the line judge's verdict.
Henin also had to put her celebrations on hold when her match ended in similar circumstances.
After firing an ace to finish the contest, she had to wait for Hawkeye to verify the serve was good.
Roger Federer, who is seeking to win a fifth successive Wimbledon title, took a two-sets lead over Argentinian teenager Juan-Martin del Potro in his second round clash before heavy rain arrived to send the players scurrying off court.
If the rain relents, Britain's Tim Henman, fresh from his epic five set win over Carlos Moya in the first round, was due to face another Spaniard, Feliciano Lopez.
Pakistan's Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, the world 279 and who came through qualifying, has the huge task of trying to defeat former world number one Marat Safin.
Aisam is the first Pakistani player to reach the second round since Haroon Rahim in 1976.
Late on Tuesday, Indian tennis starlet Sania Mirza blasted her way into the second round, easing past Russia's Yaroslava Shvedova in straight sets.
Sania, 20, wasted no time on Court 6 as she demolished the 19-year-old Muscovite 6-0, 6-3 in 55 minutes.
However, Sania was frustrated by her opponent at 5-2 up in the final set, being pegged at deuce before world number 80 Shvedova finally won the game.
And she lost two match points in the final game before finally sealing it as the Russian misfired.
Second seed Maria Sharapova was made to work harder before beating Taiwan's Chan Yung-Jan 6-1 7-5.Shocks have been notable by their absence so far and a clutch of A-list contenders eased into the men's second round.
Serbian third seed Novak Djokovic dropped just seven games in a demolition of Potito Starace of Italy while Lleyton Hewitt, the last man to win Wimbledon before Federer took over, beat Briton Richard Bloomfield.
Argentine David Nalbandian, was too good for German Mischa Zverev while 10thh seed Marcos Baghdatis, a semi-finalist last year, beat the fading light to edge out Latvian teenager Ernests Gulbis in four sets.
Wednesday’s results (prefix number denotes seeding):