MONTREAL -- If the fans had their wish, Caroline Wozniacki would be facing local favourite Eugenie Bouchard in the third round of the US$2.44 million womens Rogers Cup on Thursday. Instead, the former world No. 1 from Denmark will play Shelby Rogers, the American qualifier who put a quick end to Westmount, Que., native Bouchards homecoming tournament in the second round. Wozniacki breezed through a second match in a row with a 6-1, 6-2 win over Klara Koukalova on a side court on Wednesday. She has lost only five games in two matches so far at the hardcourt event. "Its my favourite surface," she said. "Ive been playing pretty well lately. "Montreal has always been a good place for me, winning here a few years ago (2010). Im feeling good and hopefully I can keep going." In the evening feature, world No. 1 Serena Williams dispatched Samantha Stosur 6-0, 6-2 in a match interrupted 28 minutes by a sprinkle of rain. Williams, the defending champion who is coming off a victory Sunday at Stanford, then surprised the centre court crowd by doing a courtside interview in French. Wozniacki is coming off her first win of the season at the Istanbul Cup, where she dropped only two games while beating Roberta Vinci in the final. Now ranked 13th, Wozniacki will face the world No. 113 in Rogers, who played the spoiler as Bouchard battled rust and her nerves on Tuesday night. "I know how she looks like, but I dont know much about her game," said Wozniacki. "I will definitely have my team tell me how she plays." It promises to be a quieter match than if it was Bouchard, who had the packed centre court solidly behind her, as well as her Genie Army fan group in from Australia. "I dont really care, to be honest," added Wozniacki. "Obviously, Rogers must have played really well to beat Genie. "With the whole crowd, as well, for Genie, you know it wasnt easy. But for me, its a new match. It doesnt matter whos on the other side." If she keeps winning, it may draw attention back to her tennis game and away from her famous split in May with golfer Rory McIlroy. Both players seem to be doing better since then, with McIlroy following his British Open title with a win at last weeks Bridgestone Invitational. "Ive moved on. I hope everyone else has moved on, too," said Wozniacki, who will be running the New York Marathon in November, when the wedding was to have been. Williams needed only 59 minutes of playing time to improve her career record against Stosur to 7-3. Next she will face 15th-seeded Lucie Safarova, against whom she is 6-0. Safarova beat Magdalena Rybarikova 6-4, 6-2. "She is an interesting player," Williams said of Safarova. "Shes extremely tricky. "Weve had some tough matches. I know weve gone to three sets on occasions. Its definitely not an easy match for me." Williams has won the Rogers Cup three times when it is held on alternate years in Toronto, including last year, but she has not played in Montreal since she retired from the final with an injury in 2000. Odd, since shed be a natural favourite for the mostly French-speaking crowd. "Im really happy to be a part of the tournament this year. Its just really cool," she said. "Ive actually been studying French for most of my life, so yeah, I should be able to speak even better, to be honest. "I love it in Canada because I understand everything. Its a lot easier for me to speak. The accent is much easier for me to understand." In a centre court match, fourth-seeded Maria Sharapova survived a rough first set to down world No. 27 Garbine Muguruza of Venezuela 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. "I was happy that I was able to turn it around," said Sharapova. "I didnt feel good. "I made a lot of errors in the first set. When youre able to finish stronger than your start, thats always a positive because you give yourself an opportunity to keep playing in the tournament." Her next opponent is 14th seeded Carla Suarez Navarro, who got past lucky loser Karolina Pliskova 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. British qualifier Heather Watson upset 10th-seeded Dominika Cibulkova 6-2, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (5). Watson let a 5-2 lead slip away in the third set before rallying for the victory. The 22-year-old will face eighth-seeded Victoria Azarenka in the third round on Thursday. Watson won two qualifying matches on the weekend before downing Tereza Smitkova in the first round. Cibulkova was coming off a first-round win over 17-year-old Francoise Abanda of Montreal. Angelique Kerber, the sixth seed, ousted Caroline Garcia 6-4, 6-1. The two faced one another in Madrid in May, with Garcia winning when Kerber retired in the second set with a back injury. Second seed Petra Kvitova downed Casey Dellacqua 6-3, 6-2 and American qualifier Coco Vandeweghe upset ninth seed Ana Ivanovic 6-7 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-4 in the late matches. In doubles, Muguruza and Saurez Navarro beat Abanda and Stephanie Dubois of Laval, Que., 6-3, 6-4. Cheap Swingman Mavericks Jerseys . "Im very pleased to be able to add a quarterback with Adrians experience and skill set," Calgary head coach and general manager John Hufnagel said in a statement. Cheap Mavericks Jerseys China . The Opening Day starter played 53 games this season hitting .192 with nine home runs and 25 RBI. Red Sox manager John Farrell has decided to start Jose Iglesias at third base as of late instead of Middlebrooks. http://www.cheapmavericksjerseys.com/. The Cavaliers first-year forward will miss at least three weeks with a strained left knee, the latest setback for the No. Dirk Nowitzki Jersey . A wide-eyed 18-year-old visiting North America for only the second time in his young life, Caboclo immediately noticed the "big tower" his new home is best known for. Steve Nash Jersey . The 23-year-old Woods, Tiger Woods niece, closed with a 4-under 69 at Royal Pines to finish at 16-under 276. Lee also shot 69 in the event sanctioned by the European and Australian tours. Woods birdied the par-5 15th to open a two-stroke lead, hitting a wedge from about 120 yards to 4 feet. WINNIPEG -- The Winnipeg Blue Bombers not only finally won at Investors Group Field, they did it by smothering the leagues leading offence with a 25-13 defensive upset of the Saskatchewan Roughriders Sunday. The Riders couldnt score a touchdown and were held to a single point in the second half. Quarterback Darian Durant was sacked eight times as the Bombers fed off 33,500 screaming fans in what is known as the Banjo Bowl, a follow-up to the Labour Day weekend game the teams play. Saskatchewan won that one 48-25 last Sunday. "I took my headset off a few times just so I could just relish the crowd noise," said a smiling head coach Tim Burke. After the game, the Bombers announced they had traded veteran quarterback Buck Pierce to B.C. for non-import receiver Akeem Foster. They said Pierce, who has been on the injured list for much of this season, wouldnt be available until Monday to discuss the move back to the team he left to join Winnipeg in 2010. "Buck has been a true warrior and a consummate professional during his time Winnipeg and we sincerely thank him for his four years of service to our organization," said acting general manager Kyle Walters in the release. They might not have wanted the news to overshadow what was for the struggling team (2-8) a major accomplishment as it tries to rescue this season. "When youre playing against the No. 1 team in the league and defensively we come out and play like that, it just speaks (volumes) about what we can do as a defence," said cornerback Jovon Johnson. "I said this on week two, this could be one of the best defences in the league if we just stick together and play and we showed that tonight man," said Demond Washington, who recovered a fumble and had one of Winnipegs sacks. Will Ford and quarterback Justin Goltz scored touchdowns for the Bombers, while Sandro DeAngelis added a field goal and picked up a single on a miss. It was a complete reversal of last weeks 48-25 loss in Regina with the Riders (8-2) only points coming from four Chris Milo field goals and a single. Goltz and the offence struggled in the first half but found more life in the second and Burke gave new offensive co-ordinator Marcel Bellefeuille credit for some halftime adjustments. For Goltz, making his second straight start after last weeks 48-25 loss in Regina, it was also sweet. "We needed this so bad, our city needed it and our fans needed it," said the quarterback, who Burke said will likely start the next game as well. For Durant, it was a crushing loss after what has up until now been a tremendous season. "Youve got to give those guys a lot of credit they played at a level that we just didnt match today," said the veteran.dddddddddddd "In front of their home crowd, a game they really, really wanted, and they went out and got it." As for how the Winnipeg blitz seemed able to shred the Riders offensive line, he said they will dissect what went wrong by looking at recordings of the game. "Ive got to give a lot of credit to (defensive co-ordinator) Casey (Creehan)," said Burke. "He came up with a really good blitz plan against these guys." Burke also praised his secondary, which has received a lot of criticism lately. He said he knew the defence was tired because of the time they spent on the field in the first half. The Bombers had the ball for only about three minutes in the first quarter. "In the fourth quarter we just asked them to gut it out," Burke said. The Winnipeg offence struggled at first but the stingy defence and special teams kept the Bombers alive, despite a slew of penalties. Goltz threw his first pick at 1:35 and managed only two complete passes out of seven tries and 12 yards in the entire first half. He finished the game with eight completions out of 17 tries and 129 yards. Durant completed 15 of 35 but managed only the same 129 yards. The loss leaves the Riders tied with the Calgary Stampeders for the lead in the West Division and the CFL. Milo scored first for Saskatchewan. The only touchdown of the first half came on a 98-yard kickoff return by Ford, making his debut as a starter at tailback for an injured Chad Simpson, just over six minutes into the first quarter. Milos next two field goals gave the Riders a 9-7 lead until Bombers defensive back Marty Markett recovered a fumbled punt return. Goltz connected with a diving Clarence Denmark in the end zone but the ball hit the ground first and it was ruled incomplete. Winnipeg had to settle for a field goal and a brief 10-9 lead but Milos fourth put the Riders back on top 12-10 as the half ended. In the third quarter, Saskatchewan took a couple of costly penalties that killed an interception and set up Winnipegs second touchdown of the game on a three-yard run by Goltz to make it 17-12. Saskatchewan picked up a single on a punt but then a Durant fumble at the end of the third quarter set up Goltzs second touchdown of the game at the opening of the fourth to make it 24-13. It capped a six-play 62-yard drive that was Winnipegs most solid of the game to that point. DeAngelis missed at 40 yards and settled for a single to finish the scoring. Goltz threw only one interception and Durant added another to make his season total two. 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