Last updated on .From the section Tennis

Serena Williams won the most recent of her 23 Grand Slam titles at the Australian Open in 2017

Australian Open 2019 Venue: Melbourne Park Dates: 14-27 January Coverage: Daily live commentaries on the BBC Sport website, listen to Tennis Breakfast daily from 07:00 GMT on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra and watch highlights on BBC TV and online from 19 January.

Serena Williams swatted aside Canada's Eugenie Bouchard in straight sets to continue her quest for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title at the Australian Open.

The American 16th seed made a rapid start on her way to a 6-2 6-2 victory over the 2014 Wimbledon finalist.

Not everything went the 37-year-old's way, but she demonstrated why she is considered the tournament favourite.

Ukraine's Dayana Yastremska, ranked 57th, awaits her in the third round.

Williams the woman to beat?

Williams, 37, started her pursuit for a record-extending eighth Australian Open title - and equalling Margaret Court's all-time Grand Slam tally - with a 49-minute stroll against fellow mother Tatjana Maria on Monday.

Bouchard, ranked 79th in the world, provided little more resistance.

Williams is playing in her first competitive tournament since her defeat by Naomi Osaka in the controversial US Open final last September, yet looks to be the woman to beat at Melbourne Park as she targets her first major win since giving birth.

Although careless with her service game in the first set, she went on to crack 22 winners in a dominant performance.

"It wasn't an easy match - Genie has been to final of Wimbledon and other Grand Slam semi-finals," Williams said.

"I've not had many matches since last year but it is OK."

Starting after 9pm local time after a lengthy day session, there was an ominous start for 24-year-old Bouchard when she coughed up her serve inside two minutes after successive double faults.

Backed up by a hold to love and another break, most inside Rod Laver Arena feared they would get little for their money as Williams looked set to win with ease.

Then the match took a strange twist, with neither player able to hang on to their serve in any of the next five games.

Williams eventually broke that pattern to seal the opener, cranking up her serve and holding for only a second time in the set to go ahead.

Any signs of hope for Bouchard?

Bouchard burst on to the scene in 2014 when she reached the Australian Open semi-finals as a teenager, backing that up with another last-four appearance at the French Open and going one better at Wimbledon before being outclassed by Petra Kvitova in the final.

Understandably she was touted as the sport's next female superstar - but that has failed to materialise.

The Canadian reached number five in the world soon after that run, yet her tumble down the rankings since - exacerbated by injury problems last year - almost resulted in her dropping out of the top 200.

In the build-up Williams praised her fighting spirit and Bouchard did show a glimpse of that at the start of the second set.

After failing to hold serve in the opener, she finally found some form with her serve in the early stages of the second, holding twice as her first-serve percentage rocketed from 56% to 86%.

But Williams reasserted her control from 2-2 onwards, losing just six more points as she claimed five games in a row to win in 70 minutes.