By Xinhua
London : Serena Williams fought off the pain of a calf strain to scrap her way into the Wimbledon quarter-finals while Austrian teenager Tamira Paszek proved a seed killer after knocking out Elena Dementieva.
Serena, coming back from a leg cramp that left her screaming and crying in pain, defeated Daniela Hantuchova 6-2, 6-7 (2), 6-2 in a rain-marred match of tension, drama and high excitement on Centre Court at the All England Club Monday.
She will now clash with top-seeded Justine Henin, who earlier swept through Patty Schnyder of Switzerland 6-2, 6-2 to become the first woman in the quarterfinals.
Paszek, 16, came back from a set down to defeat the 12th seeded Dementieva 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 in 128 minutes.
The result is the second major scalp at this year's Wimbledon for the 54th ranked Austrian, after she put out 17th seed Tatiana Golovin in the second round.
Paszek will have another chance to continue the killer role when she meets fifth seeded former US Open Champion Svetlana Kutnetsova next.
"It's unbelievable," said the Wimbledon newcomer. "I never have any expectations before a tournament.
"I just go out there, try to perform my best and be happy with what happens. I knew I needed to play my best tennis to win that match."
Just after Serena collapsed to the Centre Court grass at 5-5 in the second set, the match was interrupted for 90 minutes by rain, giving her a second chance after the break.
"I was definitely saved by the rain," the seventh-seeded American told a press conference.
Hantuchova, the 10th seed from Slovakia, failed to fully exploit the lack of mobility by the two-time champion, making several unforced errors and allowing her opponent to use her superior power to hit winners.
Williams, who won the Grand Slam tournament in 2002 and 2003 and collected her eighth major at this year's Australian Open, missed last year's Wimbledon and the preceding French Open with a knee injury.
Williams screamed with pain as she received treatment for several minutes.
"I just decided at one point it was over and I was going to die trying," she said, "I figured my heart wouldn't give out, so I had a good chance of making it."
She was treated during the rain delay with ice and massage, and was moving better when play resumed, saving a break point in the final set.
"It's so hard to play somebody you know is suffering," Hantuchova said, "You feel sorry for them but at the same time you have to try to be tough."
Williams was cheered on by her father and coach, Richard Williams; her mother, Oracene Price; and elder sister Venus Williams, who came back from 5-3 down in the third set to defeat Akiko Morigami of Japan earlier on Monday.
Venus, three-time Wimbledon champion, will next play Maria Sharapova in the fourth round Tuesday.
In men's singles, defending-champion Roger Federer got a bye into the quarterfinals when his opponent, Tommy Haas, pulled out with a stomach injury on Sunday.
Second-seeded Rafael Nadal, last year's runner-up, led Sweden's Robin Soderling 2-0 in the fifth set when rain stopped play for the day. Nadal failed to take a match point in the third set before Soderling rallied to take the third and fourth sets.
Czech Tomas Berdych beat South Korea's Lee Hjung-Taik to reach the fourth round, where straight-sets winners Marcos Baghdatis, Jonas Bjorkman and Mikhail Youzhny will join him.
Novak Djokovic, the fourth-seeded Serb, and Russian Nikolay Davydenko were leading in their matches when rain stopped play. Lleyton Hewitt, the 2002 champion, also led Argentina's Guillermo Canas 6-4, 3-6, 3-1.