A disappointed Serena Williams denied 'choking' in her stunning quarter-final loss to Karolina Pliskova at the Australian Open on Wednesday after failing to convert four match points and surrendering a 5-1 lead in the deciding third set.


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The seven-time champion lost a match point at 5-1 and saw another three disappear at 5-4 before crumbling to a 4-6, 6-4, 5-7 defeat to seventh seed Pliskova at Rod Laver Arena.


"It's kind of hard to say because there's nothing I did wrong on those match points," Williams told reporters after her bid for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title ended.


"I didn't do anything wrong. I stayed aggressive. She just literally hit the lines on some of them. One she hit an ace, unreturnable serve. Like I literally did everything I could on those match points. It's not like -- yeah, I can't say that I choked on those match points. She literally played her best tennis ever on those shots," she added.


After serving an ace to bring up the first match point at 5-1, Williams rolled her ankle and put a forehand into the net.


At 5-4, serving to stay in the match, Pliskova saved the second with a searing backhand winner.


Williams lost the third and fourth match points in near-identical fashion, netting forehands after being pushed into the corner by the desperate Pliskova.


From there, the American's dominant serve wavered as she double-faulted to fall to 0-30 at 5-5, and she was broken by an unforced error, allowing Pliskova to serve for the match.


Williams claimed her 23rd Grand Slam title while two months' pregnant at the 2017 Australian Open, but has fallen agonisingly short of another since coming back from maternity leave.


She was beaten by Angelique Kerber in the Wimbledon title-decider and by Naomi Osaka in the controversial U.S. Open final in which she had a major row with the chair umpire.


Williams, seeded 16th at Melbourne, said she would keep "soldiering on" and continue her bid to match Margaret Court's record of 24 Grand Slam titles at the French Open.


Only 10 months into her comeback, the 37-year-old said that she felt she was still short of her best tennis.


"It's hard to say because, like I said, from the first tournament I'm thinking that I should win, which is not practical," she said.


"But I know there's a lot of things that I need to do, a lot of things I need to do to get better, a lot of maybe more just matches. I just feel like, as close as I want to say that I'm there, I know that there's a lot more that I need to do to kind of get there. 10 months, soon to be 11 months, soon it will be 12 months. It just takes time," she added. 


Some 24 years after turning professional in 1995, Williams said that she would absorb the lessons from the defeat against Pliskova.


"Next time I'm up 5-1 against anybody, whether it's her or anyone, I just need to make sure I play lights out when I have match points. The next time that I have a match point ... just go bananas on it," she said.