The Williams sisters are in opposite halves of the draw and could meet in Saturday's final. The two have twice before been in the final, with Serena winning both in 2002 and '03.

Zheng Jie of China reacts during her quarter-final match against Nicole Vaidisova at the Wimbledon tennis championships in London July 1, 2008. Zheng won 6-2, 5-7, 6-1.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
Zheng Jie of China reacts during her quarter-final match against
Nicole Vaidisova at the Wimbledon tennis championships in London
July 1, 2008. Zheng won 6-2, 5-7, 6-1.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

"That would be amazing if we both were in the final," the seventh-seeded Venus said. "I have to take it one more step and keep playing power tennis."

Venus will next face No. 5 Elena Dementieva, who wasted a 5-1 lead and two match points in the second set before beating fellow Russian Nadia Petrova 6-1, 6-7 (6), 6-3 to reach her first Wimbledon semifinal.

Dementieva was a set and 5-1 up after a one-sided encounter that Petrova barely seemed to be taking part in other than to produce a steady stream of forehand errors. With the finishing post within touching distance and serving for the match, Dementieva threw the 21st seed an undeserved lifeline by double-faulting to hand Petrova her first break.

Another break by Petrova followed and what should have been an easy win suddenly turned into a more intriguing encounter.

Dementieva, the highest remaining women's seed in the draw, held two match points in the second-set tiebreak but could not convert them, enabling Petrova to force a decider.

It was a situation all too familiar for Dementieva, who was knocked out of the French Open quarterfinals by Dinara Safina after squandering a match point in the second set.

"I was so close to finishing in two sets and I don't know what happened," she said. "I suddenly started to think about the French Open quarterfinals and it was difficult (to get that out of my head). It was so exhausting."

 

Editor:Xiong