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Payback time for Mauresmo as Serena falls
NEW YORK—Amelie Mauresmo settled old scores with Serena Williams at the
US Open to keep alive her drive for a third Grand Slam title of the
year.
The French top seed has suffered more than most at the hands of the
former world No.1 over the last few years and came into their fourth
round tie with a dismal 1-9 losing record.
But in a match that fluctuated from the sublime to the sorry, Mauresmo
steadied her nerves to pull through 6-4, 0-6, 6-2 and qualify for a
quarter-final tie against Dinara Safin of Russia.
Second, third and fourth seeds Justine Henin-Hardenne of Belgium, and
Maria Sharapova and Elena Dementieva, both of Russia all took their
alloted slots in the last eight.
But another Russian 2004 champion Svetlana Kuznetsova fell to the
slowly-improving Serb Jelena Jankovic.
Former winner Lindsay Davenport kept home hopes alive with a straight
sets win over Patty Schnyder, with the other quarter-final spot going to
Mauresmo's compatriot Tatiana Golovin.
In the last eight, Mauresmo plays Safina, Sharapova takes on Golovin,
Jankovic goes up against Dementieva and Davenport faces Henin-Hardenne.
In the men's tournament, second seed Rafael Nadal of Spain reached the
quarter-finals for the first time and was joined by Andy Roddick of the
United States and Mikhail Youzhny of Russia.
Roddick had the satisfaction of downing Benjamin Becker, the German who
brought Andre Agassi's career to an end on Sunday.
He will next play another former champion in New York, Australia's
Lleyton Hewitt, who battled past rising French star Richard Gasquet 6-4,
6-4, 4-6, 3-6, 6-3 in the featured night match with a berth in the
semi-finals the prize for the winner.
Serena Williams came into her match against Mauresmo with a distinct
psychological edge given their previous encounters.
But their fortunes have swung dramatically this year with the American
sidelined by a knee injury and the French woman enjoying success at last
with wins in the Australian Open and at Wimbledon.
Mauresmo won a tight first set, but lost her focus completely in the
second dropping six games in a row.
She stopped the rot after saving a break point in the first game of the
decider in a match which saw both players showing their lack of match
fitness through a succession of glaring mistakes.
It needed either player to take charge and it was Mauresmo who stepped
forward at 3-2 ahead setting up break point in a marathon rally and then
clinching it as Williams hit a backhand inches long.
Two games later it was all over, Mauresmo running down a drop shot on
match point to deliver one of her own that Williams could not reach.
The top seed is aiming to become the first woman since Serena Williams
in 2002 to win three Grand Slam titles in the same year.
"I am happy with the third set but less so with the second. I played
badly in that," Mauresmo said.
"I think all the experience and maturity I have gained this year helped
me to focus at the start of the third set."
Williams said she had been confounded by Mauresmo's tactics of blocking
back her shots.
"The blocking just became more and more, more balls being blocked back,"
she said. "Just was a game I hadn't worked on in a long time."
Sharapova, who is on course for a semi-final meeting with Mauresmo, went
1-4 down to China's top player Li Na before hitting top gear and winning
in straights sets for the fourth straight game.
"I don't feel I can go into every single match and play great," she
said.
"There are going to be a lot of days in my career where I go out and
start slow. But I figured out a way to beat her playing not great."
Henin-Hardenne barely raised sweat in her 6-1, 6-0 rout over Israel's
Shahar Peer taking advantage of her dominance to put in some
serve/volley tactics which she says she has been working on for the last
few weeks since her Wimbledon final loss to Mauresmo.
The Belgian's next opponent, Davenport, said she was surprised to have
got so far in the tournament bearing in mind the back injury that has
laid her low for most of the year.
The American has lost her last six matches against Henin-Hardenne and
says she has yet to work out how to turn the tables.
"I'm not going to outrun her, and I don't have tons of backup options,"
she said.
"I'm going to have to try and get the first hit on the rally and try to
keep the points shorter rather than longer." |