terça-feira, 2 de novembro de 2010

Elena Dementieva Retires: Farewell to the last Girl Scout

World No.9 Elena Dementieva has announced her surprise retirement from tennis while still near the top of the game, a 6-4, 6-2 loss to Francesca Schiavone at the WTA Championships counting as the last of the consistent Russian's 847 matches over 13 seasons.

The Beijing Olympic gold medallist and two-time grand slam finalist revealed her decision at an emotional on-court presentation attended by her peers, having qualified for the championships for the 10th time in 11 years. Dementieva, 29, won 16 career titles, including two — the Sydney International and Paris Indoors — in 2010, and was runner-up at both the French and US Opens in 2004.

She reached a career-high No.3 in singles in April, 2009 and was also a top-five player in doubles. Her serve was often a liability, but her groundstrokes and athleticism among the best in the game over a sustained period.

"This year is very special for me becuase this is my last tournament," Dementieva told the crowd at the Khalifa Tennis Complex, as the likes of Kim Clijsters and Victoria Azarenka shed tears near the net. She paid tribute to her mother Vera, who has also been her coach and constant companion, while compatriot Vera Zvonareva paid tribute to Dementieva's contribution to the game.

Her 576th and last match win was against Australian Sam Stosur on Thursday night

sexta-feira, 29 de outubro de 2010

Muster celebrates Tour comeback at 43

By ERIC WILLEMSEN
Associated Press Writer
Associated Press Sports

VIENNA (AP) -Former top-ranked Thomas Muster will celebrate his return to the ATP Tour at the age of 43 at the Bank Austria Trophy on Austria's National Holiday.

Muster will play fellow Austrian Andreas Haider-Maurer on Tuesday in his first match back on the tour since losing in the first round of 1999 French Open.

Muster was handed a wild card and was scheduled to play fifth-seeded Ernests Gulbis, but organizers said Monday that the 24th-ranked Latvian had withdrawn for "personal reasons" and will be replaced by lucky loser Haider-Maurer.

"For me, every opponent would have been a huge challenge," Muster said before being told of Gulbis's withdrawal. "I have one advantage - I won't freeze when I enter the Stadthalle. It's a usual feeling to me."

Muster first played in the Vienna event 26 years ago, reaching the final three times but failing to win the tournament.

The 157th-ranked Haider-Maurer pulled out of qualification with a thigh injury earlier Monday but expected to be healthy again for Tuesday's match.

"I will only go on court when I am 100 percent fit," the 23-year old Haider-Maurer said. "On paper, Thomas Muster is one of the easiest draws in the first round but with his experience and the spectators getting behind him, he will play his best tennis."

Muster became Austria's most successful tennis player ever by winning 44 titles, most notably the French Open in 1995, and holding the No. 1 spot for six weeks the next year.

By then, Muster had already staged a remarkable comeback to professional tennis.

His career was almost ruined when he severely damaged his left knee when his car was hit by a drunk driver before the final of the 1989 Key Biscayne tournament. He was back on tour less than six months later.

Muster never formally retired from professional tennis but said in 1999 he would "go on a holiday."

Muster has since been playing on the Champions Tour but suddenly announced his comeback to competitive tennis in June.

"(I'm) getting better every day, feeling the ball well, playing great shots, that still gives me a kick," said Muster, who managed just one win in seven matches on the second-tier Challenger circuit this season.

"I won't set my goals too high but will just play my best tennis and we'll see where it brings me," he said. "Many players ask me if I want to train with them. That's the biggest reward I could possibly get."

Muster returns to the main tour at 43, the same age as Jimmy Connors when he retired in 1996.

Manager Ronnie Leitgeb, who coached the Austrian in his heyday, is skeptical about his former pupil's comeback.

"I am really worrying that he might overdo it physically," Leitgeb said. "He is at an age now with physiological borders, which you can't and shouldn't pass."

Muster, who earned career prize money of more than $12.2 million, denied that his return to top-level tennis is a one-off and said he aims to play as many as 25 tournaments in 2011.

"Next season will be a mix of Challenger events and some of these (like Vienna)," Muster said.

Muster said he has been working hard on coordination and physical fitness but admitted he is lacking match practice.

"It's like completing a puzzle," he said. "There still are several pieces which have to fit in."

The final four at WTA Championships, Doha

DOHA, Qatar - With an ace on match point, Kim Clijsters defeated Victoria Azarenka in a competitive three-setter, 64 57 61, and locked in the final four line-up at the WTA Championships - Doha 2010. Clijsters, Samantha Stosur, Caroline Wozniacki and Vera Zvonareva will be in the semifinals.


After losing an incredibly tight 65-minute second set it was all Clijsters in the third, as she needed just 26 minutes to prevail, her ninth win in a row on the WTA (she went 7-0 to win the US Open and also won her first match here).

"It's a matter of time. It's work, and I know I'm going to improve. I just need more time," Azarenka said after the match. "Next year I'm going to be stronger."



Clijsters is now 2-0 in her group, as is Zvonareva; the two will meet on Friday, with the winner to finish No.1 in their group and the other No.2. Azarenka and Jelena Jankovic, both 0-2 so far, will also play to determine No.3 and No.4.

The Top 2 in the other group were settled, with Stosur No.1 and Wozniacki No.2. Elena Dementieva and Francesca Schiavone will play for No.3.

sábado, 23 de outubro de 2010

Victoria Azarenka reaches Kremlin Cup final in Moscow


From BBC News


Victoria Azarenka booked her place in the final of the Kremlin Cup with a 6-3 6-3 win over Spain's Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez in Moscow.

The Belarussian, in her fourth final of the year, will play Maria Kirilenko, who beat Vera Dushevina 6-1 6-1.

Azarenka is chasing her fifth career win and second this year after beating Maria Sharapova in Stanford in July.

The 21-year-old has already qualified for next week's season-ending WTA Tour championships in Doha.

Azarenka saved two break points in the opening game and did not face another one in the rest of the match. She broke the 28th-ranked Sanchez in the sixth game of the first set and in the first and eighth games of the second.

"Sanchez is such a player that you never know what to expect from her," said Azarenka, who lost to the Spaniard twice earlier this season.

"I've chosen the right tactics against her today and didn't allow her to change the rhythm or advance to the net to attack as she likes doing. I've fought for every ball and that was the key to my victory."

On the men's front, Uruguay's Pablo Cuevas takes on Serbian Viktor Troicki in the first semi-final followed by fourth-seeded Cypriot Macos Baghdatis against Uzbekistan's Denis Istomin.

quarta-feira, 20 de outubro de 2010

Victoria Azarenka secures WTA Tour final place

Source: BBC News

Victoria Azarenka secures WTA Tour final place

Victoria Azarenka has clinched her place in next week's season-ending WTA Tour Championships for the second year in a row.

The Belarussian world number 10 achieved the feat by beating Andrea Petkovic in three sets to reach the second round of the Kremlin Cup.

Azarenka will replace Serena Williams in the event which starts on Tuesday in Doha, Qatar.

Williams withdrew on Tuesday because of a re-torn tendon in her right foot.

Azarenka and Li Na of China were the two substitutes for the tournament, but Li, who was five points ahead of Azarenka in the standings, lost in the first round in Moscow and will remain top substitute.

Azarenka, who won the last five games of the match to beat Petkovic 6-4 2-6 6-1, said afterwards: "My nerves were right on the edge.

"Every player wants to play in Doha and I'm happy I turned the match my way in the third set."

The men's tournament lost three of its leading players after Russian defending champion Mikhail Youzhny pulled out with a virus after losing a doubles match while top seed Nikolay Davydenko and eighth seed Janko Tipsaravic were knocked out.

Davydenko was shocked 7-6 (8-6) 7-6 (7-5) by Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay while Tipsaravic, who struggled with pain in his lower back, was upset by Horacio Zeballos of Argentina 4-6 6-4 6-3.

domingo, 12 de setembro de 2010

Kim Clijsters Wins U.S. Open After Beating Vera Zvonareva

NEW YORK — Kim Clijsters' 2 1/2-year-old daughter, Jada, spent Saturday evening in the stands at Arthur Ashe Stadium, munching on a thick slice of watermelon, then savoring some candy.

Sort of like "Take Your Daughter to Work Day" – except how many children get to watch Mom win a Grand Slam title?

Her game as good as can be on hard courts, Clijsters won a second consecutive U.S. Open championship and third overall by easily beating Vera Zvonareva 6-2, 6-1 in a final that lasted 59 minutes and lacked any drama – perfect for a tot's short attention span.

"I'm glad to be standing here as the winner now. New York is an amazing place for me," said the 27-year-old Clijsters, a Belgian whose husband is from New Jersey. "The U.S. Open brings nothing but happiness to my tennis life."

She is the first woman since Venus Williams in 2000-01 to win the title in Flushing Meadows two years in a row. And Clijsters' U.S. Open winning streak is actually up to 21 matches because she also won the 2005 title. She missed the tournament in 2006 because of injuries, including wrist surgery, and skipped it the next two years while taking time off to get married and have a baby.

"It's been an incredible year being back. This is the first time I've been able to defend my title here at the U.S. Open," Clijsters said, reaching down to fix Jada's hair, getting mussed in the breeze. "The conditions have been very hard the last two weeks with wind – I've always tried to keep her curls down. I'm always hoping."

Last year in New York, when Jada pranced around the court during the postmatch ceremony, Clijsters became the first mother since Evonne Goolagong Cawley in 1980 to take home a Grand Slam trophy.

On Saturday, in addition to another championship, Clijsters was awarded $2.2 million – the winner's check of $1.7 million, plus another $500,000 for finishing second in the U.S. Open Series standings that take into account hard-court tuneup tournaments.

"I've always felt more comfortable on this surface. Not just this year, but even when I was 14, 15, 16," Clijsters said in an interview the week before the U.S. Open began. "Everything comes easier."


Sure does, nowadays.

After losing the first four Grand Slam finals of her career, Clijsters has won her last three. Perhaps that will give some hope to Russia's Zvonareva, who is now 0-2 in major championship matches, after losing to Serena Williams in the Wimbledon final in July.

Not since 1995 has a U.S. Open women's final lasted three sets, and this one wasn't about to end that trend. Indeed, you have to go back to 1976 to find a women's final in which the loser won only three games.

Put simply, the second-seeded Clijsters was too dominant; the seventh-seeded Zvonareva too shaky.

"She didn't really give me chances to get into the match," Zvonareva said. "But I also think that physically today she was just much better."

Over and over, Clijsters would scramble to balls that seemed out of reach and get them back over the net, sometimes doing full splits right there along the baseline. She compiled a 17-6 edge in winners, and made nine fewer unforced errors than Zvonareva, 24-15.

Clijsters broke twice to take the first set, and she did it by letting Zvonareva cause her own problems. Clijsters needed only four winners in that set, because Zvonareva made 13 unforced errors, including dumping a backhand into the net on the last point.

After that mistake, Zvonareva told a ballkid to get out of the way, so she could take a practice swing on her backhand side.

Didn't work.

When Zvonareva failed to get to a backhand and fell behind 40-love in the opening game of the second set, she cracked her racket against the court twice, breaking it, and earning a warning from the chair umpire.

"I was trying to find a way to pump myself up, to change something up," Zvonareva explained later.

But things only got worse for Zvonareva, known for losing her temper during matches.

She yelled at herself after two unforced errors in the second game of that set, and proceeded to double-fault to get broken at love and trail 2-0. All things considered, it was nothing compared to the tantrum Zvonareva threw in her fourth-round loss at last year's U.S. Open, when she wasted six match points. She bawled. She pounded her palm on her leg while sitting on the court. She slammed her racket against her leg. She begged the chair umpire to let her have some scissors so she could cut tape off her knees.

Zvonareva seemed to be much better at harnessing her emotions of late, perhaps thanks in part to her habit of placing a towel over her head during changeovers to block out distractions. That worked wonders at Wimbledon this summer, and for nearly two weeks at the U.S. Open.

But Clijsters never gave her a chance to get into this match. It was so lopsided, CBS analyst John McEnroe felt compelled to tell viewers early in the second set: "This might be the most I've ever wanted Kim Clijsters to lose serve. She's such a great person, but this is difficult to watch right now."

It wouldn't get any better from Zvonareva's perspective.

She never had made it past the fourth round at the U.S. Open before, but she won all 12 sets she played to get to the final, including during her upset of No. 1-seeded Caroline Wozniacki in the semifinals.

About a half-hour before the final, Zvonareva and her coach, Sergey Demekhin, were alone on a patio outside the stadium, warming up with some stretching and hand-eye-coordination exercises. For a few minutes, Zvonareva made like a circus performer and juggled three tennis balls.

Once out on the court with Clijsters, though, one ball was more than Zvonareva could handle.

Her victory complete, Clijsters picked up Jada, cradling her in the crook of her left elbow, while holding the U.S. Open trophy in her right hand as photographers snapped away.

Moments later, after being plopped in a chair by Mom, Jada pointed to the nearby cameras and said, "No photos."

segunda-feira, 30 de agosto de 2010

Kim Clijsters advances at U.S. Open 2010 1st Round

NEW YORK -- Defending champion Kim Clijsters struggled to find her footing on a windy day before recovering in time to win her 15th straight match at the U.S. Open.

The second-seeded Belgian beat Hungary's Greta Arn 6-0, 7-5 in the first round Monday. She fell behind 4-0 in the second set, and the 104th-ranked Arn had a chance to serve out the set at 5-4. But Clijsters got the break, then did it again to clinch the straight-set victory.

Kim Clijsters fell behind 4-0 in the second set, but rallied to beat Greta Arn 6-0, 7-5 on Monday.
"I'm just glad to finish that second set off and not let it go three sets," she said.

Clijsters said she had some trouble adjusting her strokes when she was playing with or against the wind. What wasn't troubling her much was the left hip that bothered her during a tuneup tournament earlier this month.

A year ago, Clijsters was a wild-card entry in only her third tournament back after 2½ years away from the sport. Now she's one of the favorites to win the Open.

Melanie Oudin and Francesca Schiavone also know how quickly perceptions can change. Oudin struggled with higher expectations since her crowd-pleasing run to the U.S. Open quarterfinals last year. So did Schiavone after her breakthrough French Open title in June.

But neither showed any signs of the pressure in cruising to dominant first-round wins.

Oudin, the 18-year-old from Marietta, Ga., needed just 56 minutes to beat Olga Savchuk of Ukraine 6-3, 6-0. Schiavone, the Italian who won her first Grand Slam weeks before her 30th birthday, dispatched Ayumi Morita of Japan 6-1, 6-0 in 58 minutes.


If anything, Schiavone seems to be having fun in the spotlight. Asked why she's a fan favorite, she playfully replied, "I attract them because I'm beautiful."

Schiavone acknowledged that maybe she's a bit more motivated at a Grand Slam than at other tournaments. She was pleased that her first-round match was in the grandstand -- a year ago, she was relegated to an outer court.

"I like to do it, because adrenaline is coming up and I enjoy much more than play in faraway court," she said with a laugh. "Maybe because I am 30 years old and now I want to enjoy with people."

Also in action on Day 1 were former No. 1s Dinara Safina and Ana Ivanovic, as well as Sam Stosur, who lost to Schiavone in the French Open final.

The 43rd-ranked Oudin won the last nine games against Savchuk, a 143rd-ranked qualifier. Oudin's success last year earned her the opening match in Ashe, where the sparse crowd gave her a warm ovation when she took the court a little after 11 a.m.

Oudin snapped a four-match losing streak and won for only the fifth time in her past 18 matches. A year ago, she became the darling of the tournament, upsetting Maria Sharapova and Elena Dementieva en route to becoming the youngest U.S. Open quarterfinalist since Serena Williams in 1999.

Schiavone, seeded No. 6, had been just 3-6 since winning at Roland Garros. She lost in the first round at Wimbledon and dropped her opening match at three other tournaments. Her only three victories came against opponents outside the top 65.

Schiavone had no difficulty against the 83rd-ranked Morita, facing just one break point and hitting 28 winners.

Russia's Dementieva, the No. 12 seed, also advanced easily, beating Olga Govortsova of Belarus 6-1, 6-2.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.