Sunday, January 29, 2012

5:53 to History



Maybe Robert Downey Jr. should play Novak Djokovic in the movie. They could call it "Iron Man Does Melbourne."

For all world #1 Djokovic had accomplished over the past eighteen months -- the 43-match winning streak, Davis Cup title, 9-1 record against Rafael Nadal & Roger Federer and three slam titles -- he didn't have one of THOSE. You know, the sort of epic match that marks a player's career forever, standing as a testament to his abilities and heart. Against Nadal in the singles final of the 100th Australian Open, the Serb, with a whole lot of help from Rafa, more than took care of that.

Coming into the match with one less day to rest after his semifinal match -- a 4:50 marathon against Andy Murray -- than Nadal had to recover from his own four-set win over Federer, AO defending champion Djokovic seemed to be set up to have his back placed firmly against the wall from the outset. But as the two met in an Open era record third straight slam final, the fact that Djokovic compiled a 6-0 (all in finals) record against Rafa in '11, and sported a 9-2 mark against him since the summer of '09, lingered. The opportunity seemed to be there for Nadal, in the 30th meeting between the two, to finally turn the tide of the sport's current top rivalry back in his favor. If he couldn't do it under these circumstances, it seemed, then when would he?

In the early-going, Djokovic didn't seem quite himself, either. His game was spotty and, after winning the opening game of the match, he saw Nadal take four of the next five. Djokovic, his game slowly improving, got his lost break back, but Nadal swept the final three games to take the 1st set. Nadal's 133-1 record in slam matches after winning the opening set stood as another bit of history to contend with.

But Djokovic's ability to outhit and outmanuever Nadal soon proved too much. The Serb grabbed the next two sets 6-4 and 6-2, as no matter how well Rafa played, it didn't seem as if it would be enough to make a dent in Djokovic's ever better game. In the 4th set, as Djokovic went up 4-3, 40/love on Nadal's serve, the match seemed to be on the verge of ending. Only Nadal surged back and turned the match into one for the ages. After holding serve for 4-4, the coming rains caused a short delay as the roof on Rod Laver Arena had to be closed and the court dried. With the match suddenly moving inside for an air-conditioned and less humid atmosphere, the balls began to bounce just a bit higher than before, giving a reinvigorated Rafael an edge as the Aussie crowd spurred him on, wanting to see a five-set final. The set went to a tie-break, and Djokovic again seemed on the way to victory, leading 5-3 and having one serve remaining on his turn in the rotation. But Nadal got the mini-break, preventing Djokovic from reaching match point, then held his own two serves. One point from forcing a 5th, Nadal got another mini-break to take the tie-break at 7-5.

In the deciding set of the first 5th set the two have ever played against each other, Nadal's momentum continued as he took a 4-2, 30/15 lead against the seemingly tiring Serb. At that point, Rafa ran toward the net to reach a short ball and fired a backhand down the line into the open half of the court... and missed. Rather than have two game points for a 5-2 lead, it was 30/30 and Djokovic had been given the gift of life. He didn't turn it down. In fact, one point later it was apparent that his groundstrokes had suddenly regained their previous sting. The Serb's new life would prove deadly for the Spaniard, who was broken to get the set back on serve at 4-3. From there, Djokovic did what he did so often in '11, upping his game in a match's latter stages and taking home the victory. After three consecutive holds by the two, Djokovic got another break to go up 6-5. Serving for the match, he missed an overhead as he tried to quickly slip it into the open court past a charging-from-the-opposite-doubles-alley Nadal. But the momentum would not be turned again. Djokovic held, winning 5-7/6-4/6-2/6-7/7-5 to defend his AO title, collapsing onto his back when it was finally over.

Afterward, the Serbian "Iron Man" ripped off her shirt and howled toward the crowd, transforming from one superhero into another -- "The Incredible Hulk," only without the green body paint (though, I guess there's always one of his post-slam celebratory parties for that later). In the unending (2am was quickly approaching in Melbourne) post-match ceremony, as both players leaned against the net for support, looking as if they were ready to collapse (some kind soul finally gave them chairs and bottles of water), master of ceremonies Sandy Roberts called Djokovic a "man of steel." Keeping in line with the theme, I suppose Superman works just as well, also. But, of course, if Djokovic's performance is akin to a caped superhero, what should be said of Nadal's?

The fact is, Nadal literally willed this match into what it ultimately became, the longest (5:53) slam final in Open era history, as well as the latest (1:37am) to finish. It never really should have gone beyond four sets, and seemed fated to be seen as simply the latest example of Djokovic's mastery over the former #1. In the end, Djokovic DID win his fifth career slam, but the final will now go down as one of those matches where both players, in the eyes of the public, won on some level... even if the reality of the result will cut deeply for Nadal, who must now fully realize how Federer felt when he triumphed over his Swiss rival in "The Greatest Match Ever Played" at Wimbledon in 2008. While the Spaniard has managed to string together four consecutive appearances in slam finals, the current storyline on the ATP Tour revolves around the fact that he's now 0-3 in the last three against Djokovic.

Welcome to the new world where the Serbian former "prince" is threatening to become an all-time king. He'll head to Paris with a chance to make due on his one undelivered '11 promise and win at Roland Garros. It'd complete a Career Slam, string together a non-calender year "NoDjokoSlam" (hey, I keep tryin') and maybe make a TRUE season Grand Slam a possibility.

A month ago, it seemed pretty obvious that Djokovic could never top his ridiculously great '11 season with something even better in '12. I mean, HOW COULD HE? But, umm, well, maybe we should hold off on that sort of talk, huh?



=DAY 14 NOTES=
...Bethanie Mattek-Sands & Horia Tecau won the Mixed Doubles title, taking down Elena Vesnina & Leander Paes (robbing the Indian of a two-title grab at this AO) in a match-deciding super-tiebreak. Thus, first-time slam winner BMS wins Backspin's "Doubles Star" award, as well.

...DAY 14 LIKES:

1) Vika in the stands for the Men's Final

2) Djokovic's long-time girlfriend, living and dying on every single solitary blessed point during the entire 5:53 affair. Of course, since the camera decided to key in on this particular trait of her's on seemingly every third point or so, by the end of the match, I was a bit less enamored with her actions than I had been about five hours earlier.

...and, finally, look for the complete wrap up of the season's first month next in the "Dorothy Tour Awards," along with picks for this coming weekend's start of Fed Cup competition.




*WOMEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR def. #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS 6-3/6-0

*MEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Novak Djokovic/SRB vs. #2 Rafael Nadal/ESP 5-7/6-4/6-2/6-7/7-5

*WOMEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
Kuznetsova/Zvonareva (RUS/RUS) def. #11 Errani/Vinci (ITA/ITA) 5-7/6-4/6-4

*MEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
Paes/Stepanek (IND/CZE) def. #1 Bryan/Bryan (USA/USA) 7-6/6-2

*MIXED DOUBLES FINAL*
#8 Mattek-Sands/Tecau (USA/ROU) def. #5 Vesnina/Paes (RUS/IND) 6-3/5-7 [10-3]

*GIRLS SINGLES FINAL*
#14 Taylor Townsend/USA def. #4 Yulia Putintseva/RUS 6-1/3-6/6-3

*BOYS SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Luke Saville/AUS def. Filip Peliwo/CAN 6-3/5-7/6-4

*GIRLS DOUBLES FINAL*
Andrews/Townsend (USA/USA) def. #1 Khromacheva/Kovinic (RUS/MNE) 5-7/7-5 (10-6)

*BOYS DOUBLES FINAL*
#6 Broady/Ward-Hibbert (GBR/GBR) def. Pavlasek/Veger (CZE/CRO) 6-3/6-2

*WHEELCHAIR SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Esther Vergeer/NED vs. #2 Aniek van Koot/NED 6-0/6-0

*WHEELCHAIR DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Vergeer/Walraven (NED/NED) def. #2 Buis/van Koot (NED/NED) 4-6/6-2/6-4



**AO "DOUBLES STAR" WINNERS**
2006 Yan Zi & Zheng Jie, CHN/CHN
2007 Liezel Huber, USA
2008 Alona & Kateryna Bondarenko, UKR/UKR
2009 Sania Mirza, IND
2010 Cara Black, ZIM
2011 Gisela Dulko & Flavia Pennetta, ARG/ITA
2012 Bethanie Mattek-Sands, USA

**AO MIXED DOUBLES CHAMPIONS - since 2002**
2002 Daniela Hantuchova & Kevin Ullyett
2003 Martina Navratilova & Leander Paes
2004 Elena Bovina & Nenad Zimonjic
2005 Samantha Stosur & Scott Draper
2006 Martina Hingis & Mahesh Bhupathi
2007 Elena Likhovtseva & Daniel Nestor
2008 Sun Tiantian & Nenad Zimonjic
2009 Sania Mirza & Mahesh Bhupathi
2010 Cara Black & Mahesh Bhupathi
2011 Katarina Srebotnik & Daniel Nestor
2012 Bethanie Mattek-Sands & Horia Tecau

**WON THREE CONSECUTIVE SLAMS - MEN**
[men]
1969 - Rod Laver, AUS (4 con.)
1993-94 - Pete Sampras, USA
2005-06 - Roger Federer, SUI
2006-07 - Roger Federer, SUI
2010 - Rafael Nadal, ESP
2011-12 - NOVAK DJOKOVIC, SRB

**CAREER SLAM FINALS - ACTIVE MEN**
23...Roger Federer (16-7)
15...RAFAEL NADAL (10-5)
7...NOVAK DJOKOVIC (5-2)
5...Andy Roddick (1-4)
4...Lleyton Hewitt (2-2)
3...Juan Carlos Ferrero (1-2)
3...Andy Murray (0-3)
2...Robin Soderling (0-2)

**DJOKOVIC vs. NADAL IN SLAM FINALS**
2010 US Open - Nadal 6-4/5-7/6-4/6-2
2011 Wmbledon - Djokovic 6-4/6-1/1-6/6-3
2011 US Open - Djokovic 6-2/6-4/6-7/6-1
2012 Australian Open - Djokovic 5-7/6-4/6-2/6-7/7-5

**AO MEN'S TITLES*
[Open era]
4...Andre Agassi
4...Roger Federer
3...NOVAK DJOKOVIC
3...Mats Wilander
2...Boris Becker
2..Jim Courier
2...Stefan Edberg
2...Johan Kriek
2...Ivan Lendl
2...John Newcombe
2...Pete Sampras
2...Guillermo Vilas
[all-time]
6...Roy Emerson
4...Andre Agassi
4...Jack Crawford
4...Roger Federer
4...Ken Rosewall
4...Pat Wood
3...NOVAK DJOKOVIC
3...Rod Laver
3...Adrian Quist
3...Mats Wilander




TOP QUALIFIER: Paula Ormaechea/ARG
TOP EARLY ROUND (1r-2r): #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
TOP LATE ROUND (SF-F): #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1: Bibiane Schoofs/NED d. Yaroslava Shvedova/KAZ 6-4/3-6/11-9
TOP EARLY RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 2nd Rd. - Greta Arn/HUN d. #17 Dominika Cibulkova/SVK 6-2/3-6/10-8
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 4th Rd. - #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL d. #5 Li Na/CHN 4-6/7-6/6-4 (saved 4 MP)
TOP LATE RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.): SF - #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS d. #2 Petra Kvitova/CZE 6-2/3-6/6-4
TOP LAVER NIGHT MATCH: 4th Rd - #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS d. #15 Sabine Lisicki/GER 3-6/6-2/6-3
=============================
FIRST WINNER: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR (def. Heather Watson/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #19 Flavia Pennetta/ITA (1st Rd.- lost to Nina Bratchikova/RUS)
UPSET QUEENS: Russians
REVELATION LADIES: Germans
NATION OF POOR SOULS: Great Britain (0-4 in 1st Round, all on Day 1)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Nina Bratchikova/RUS (3rd Rd.)
LAST WILD CARDS STANDING: Casey Dellacqua/AUS & Olivia Rogowska/AUS (2nd Rd.)
LAST AUSSIES STANDING: Casey Dellacqua, Jelena Dokic & Olivia Rogowska (2nd Rd.)
IT: Ekaterina Makarova/RUS
MS. OPPORTUNITY: Sara Errani/ITA
COMEBACK PLAYER: #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
CRASH & BURN: #5 Samantha Stosur/AUS (lost 1st Rd. to Sorana Cirstea/ROU)
ZOMBIE QUEEN: #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL (down 6-4/3-1, 5-1 in 2nd set tie-break and 4 MP vs. Li, 4th Rd.)
LADY OF THE EVENING: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
DOUBLES STAR Bethanie Mattek-Sands/USA
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: Taylor Townsend/USA




All for now.

Read more...

Saturday, January 28, 2012

The Verisimilitude of Vika



Vika, you may now join everyone at the big table. Yeah, that's right. Don't just wait for someone to offer you their seat... just take one for yourself.


"Go on, little nightingale, go on." - Hans Christian Andersen


The women's singles final at the 100th Australian Open promised a hard-hitting, hard-shrieking and hard-driving battle for a grand slam title and the #1 ranking. The public images of the finalists presented a respected 24-year old former champion with a persona that has come to be embracable, yet also sometimes (by her choice) unknowable, as well as another of a coltish and driven, but oft-misrepresented, 22-year old recent newcomer to the latter stages of grand slam competition. Both came to Melbourne looking to overcome their respective career's past troubles. Russian Maria Sharapova, the outwardly-refined former #1 and '08 AO champion, was getting her second chance in the past seven months to win her first slam crown since undergoing career-threatening shoulder surgery nearly four years ago. Meanwhile, demonstrative Belarusian Victoria Azarenka, known for too long for her physical fragility and the overly-emotional, anger-fueled spin-outs of her recent past, was attempting to show that all her hard work to improve her body, game and spirit over the last two years had finally reached the point where she could take her place at the "big WTA table" by claiming her first career slam.

Both had found themselves and their trademark shot-punctuating shrieks the focal point of criticism over the previous two weeks in Melbourne, from mocking catcalls in the stands to commentating booth rants and even post-match press conferences from a few oh-so-suddenly-annoyed players. The pair's reactions to the overhyped hubbub had ranged from disdain to disregard, but both had more than managed to come off as far more level-headed, sincere and well-mannered than their detractors, noting that they weren't doing anything that they hadn't always done, no matter the recent "epiphany" from within the tennis community that their "noisy" play was somehow the biggest public relations issue faced by women's tennis since some turn of the century player first decided to buck tradition and roll up her bloomers so high that spectators could almost see her ankles.

Sharapova and Azarenka, though, had done more than enough on the court -- with their rackets -- to override whatever other storylines some might have wanted to highlight. The Russian had more than passed the "eye-test" necessary for everyone to believe that she'd finally managed to corral her occasional post-surgery serving mistakes and not allow them to infect the rest of her game. In her semifinal (Roland Garros) and final (Wimbledon) slam runs at slams over the past year, such was not the case, as her wish to become the first player to overcome such a physical ailment and lift a slam championship trophy came up just short. Though she always outwardly appeared confident during those slams, her's was actually a tenuous hold. At this AO, though, she'd seemed to finally believe that the fates were aligned for her return to the winner's circle. The ankle injury she'd carried into Australia never became an issue during the tournament, and her outdueling of SW19 champ, and Sharapova conqueror, Petra Kvitova in the semifnals proved the Russian's mettle, just as the Belarusian's ability to better handle herself in the clutch during her three-set SF win over defending champion Kim Clijsters had done the same for her. 11-0 on the season and competing in her fourth straight singles final going back to the '11 season, Azarenka had shown an ability to dominate opponents (in the first two rounds, she lost the opening game of her matches, then reeled off twelve straight games to take the match) and quickly put poorly-played stretches (such as her near-bagel 2nd set against KC) behind her like the single-minded, goal-oriented player she's become ever since her achy, so-teen-like attitude had led her beloved grandmother to sit her down a few years back and remind her "how great a life" she was actually living on tour.

Sharapova's big slam match experience seemed to give her the edge, but Azarenka's own experience turned out to be even more important. Armed with the memory of two recent, straight-sets hard court victories (in 2010 & '11) over Sharapova, the Belarusian knew what she had to do to seize the spotlight on Rod Laver Arena court. In many ways, it was the same gameplan that Kvitova had had against Sharapova at Wimbledon, as well the one that Sharapova herself had had at the All-England Club when she took down Serena Williams to claim her first own major title in '04. What goes around usually comes around if a player sticks around long enough, and the Russian is learning that the same show-no-fear, pressure-your-opponent, take-control-and-dare-her-to-take-it-back gameplan cuts both ways. Sharapova's experience didn't matter last summer in London, and it didn't on this particular summer night in Melbourne, either.

Of course, it didn't appear that that was the case in the match's early going. Azarenka committed two double-faults in the opening game, then missed a backhand to give Sharapova an immediate break. Sharapova then held to take a 2-0 lead and, in retrospect, one has to wonder if she might have lost a bit of her edge, thinking that Azarenka might not be ready for her slam moment.

If so, she was sorely mistaken.

In Game #3, Azarenka hit her third double-fault and fell down love/30, but Sharapova's misses brought the game back into play. An Azarenka winner gave her her first hold of serve, and the Belarusian was off to the races. Days after Martina Hingis had talked of the need for world #1 Caroline Wozniacki to move forward into the court if she's to ever win a slam, Azarenka had no such worries about leaving any slam stones unturned. SHE was inside or riding the baseline from the start. Starting in Game #4, the practive began to pay dividends, and Sharapova's answers to the tactic began to prove fruitless. Up 40/love on Sharapova's serve, Azarenka elicited a long shot from the Russian and broke her at love for 2-2. After falling down 15/30, Sharapova hit an ace to hold for 3-3. But it was to be her last "winning" moment of the evening, as Azarenka was primed to take over the night.

In Game #7, Sharapova was pulled to the net by an Azarenka drop shot, and her reply was easily put away by the Belarusian with a lob for a 4-3 lead. One game later, a Sharapova double-fault opened the door wide for her opponent. A second DF sent the service game to deuce. Azarenka saved a game point with her doubles-inspired net play, then used another volley to get a break point. A drop shot, then another easy volley, got the break for 5-3 and gave Azarenka a chance to serve for the set. She quickly grabbed a 40/15 lead, then held to claim the set 6-3, winning her sixth of seven games since her slow start. Maybe more frightening for Sharapova, through, was that Azarenka was by no means flinching from the Russian's power. In fact, she was relishing it. Just as Kvitova had at Wimbledon last July.

In the 2nd set, things got even worse for the Russian. A long backhand put her down 15/40 on serve in Game #1, and Azarenka smacked a routine setter at the net for a winner to break and take a 1-0 lead. Erasing a love/30 hole, Azarenka held for 2-0. With an on-her-heels Sharapova seeing the match quickly slipping away, she tried to hit even harder groundstrokes. It didn't work. And as the Russian's errors began to pile up, Azarenka's naturally athletic strut (so similar to Martina Navratilova's, by the way) began to underwrite the whole endeavor. Up 40/15 on Sharapova's serve, another error led to a break for 3-0. Azarenka could see the finish line by now, and hopped over her final hurdles without a blink.

She held for 4-0, as Sharapova's desperation became her own worst enemy. A long forehand made it 5-0. The Russian had no answers for Azarenka's game, and there were no longer any questions, either. With her big lead relieving her of much of the pressure of serving for the title, it was just a matter of time.



Finally, the inevitable moment arrived. The last of Sharapova's errors failed to cross the net, and a dazed-looking Azarenka dropped her racket, sank to her knees and buried her face in her hands. She gazed up at her coach and friends in the players box with a "What happened?" look on her face, even mouthing the words that expressed her disbelief. For a player with an outward on-court air about her that practically screams "MORE!," this was the first time over the past two weeks in Melbourne that she didn't seem to believe that an Australian Open singles title was within her grasp. But it was. The 6-3/6-0 scoreline proved it, and her emphatic claiming of twelve of the final thirteen games of the match after having fallen behind 2-0 was more than enough to shut down any detractors she might have left. Hailing from Minsk, by way of Scottsdale, Arizona, the WTA's twenty-first #1-ranked player has been discovered, and she's a true 21st CENTURY champion, too.

For grand slams aren't dispensed by birthright or current ranking. They are taken.

"In the days of Moses and the prophets such a (wo)man would have been counted among the wise (wo)men of the land; in the Middle Ages (s)he would have been burned at the stake." - Hans Christian Andersen


Azarenka's "sometimes too much" style hasn't always been accepted by some fans, and surely that notion nearly came to a head a few times Down Under. But the single word she uttered after she stepped up to the microphone in the post-match trophy ceremony was brilliant in it's simplicity.

"Wow," said Azarenka, throwing in a tentative giggle for punctuation this time rather than a powerful shriek, proving that even a player with as much desire to win as her's can be flattened, at least a little, by the heady reality of actually managing to pull off the accomplishment that she's spent most of her 22 years chasing.

With the whole "Whack-a-Vika" campaign in Melbourne having proven to have the opposite effect on the player in question, Azarenka thus joins the likes of other slam winners who've discovered that some people associated with the sport choose to take issue with precisely some of the things that have helped them become a champion in the first place. Next to the "too cheeky" Hingis, the "too disrespectful" Serena, the "too hungry" Justine Henin and the "too imperial" Sharapova, we can add the "too EVERYTHING" Azarenka. Now, the Belarusian's mission will be to be embraced by the masses. Or not. It doesn't really matter.

Of course, in her address to the assembed crowd, Azarenka DID almost dare those not in her corner to find something about her misunderstood personality to embrace. Take, for example, her seemingly promising future in food services. She thanked all the tournament drivers, noting how she always enjoys bringing them doughnuts (even apologizing for making them gain weight) to make them smile, but not even thinking to bother to mention her just-as-expert delivering of a bagel to her Russian opponent tonight. A good sport, she even proved playful with the crowd, once again showing the ability to not take herself as seriously as some members of the tennis establishment have come to take themselves, especially during WTA head Stacey Allaster's still-in-it's-early-stages reign. In calling for and getting one of those meant-to-ridicule shrieks from the stands, and enjoying every second of it, she might have turned the spiteful, mocking act into a fun, future "battle cry"... in her favor. Well, maybe not, but one can dream, right?

Vika once did. And today that dream came true.





=DAY 13 NOTES=
...did you hear that? I think it's Carl. He's still jumping up and down for having correctly picked Azarenka to win this title two weeks ago. Geez, now I'll never hear the end of it.

...so, the tour hierachy continues its shaking-out process. The new rankings will show Azarenka at #1, Kvitova at #2, Sharapova at #3 and former #1 Caroline Wozniacki at #4. It's quite a shot to the Dane, for sure, who has now seen a second player from her generation reach the slam winner's circle ahead of her. If she can't learn from yet another example about how slams are taken, not given, then she never will. Still, as far as the rankings go, everyone is still close enough for multiple exchanges of the #1 spot to occur over the course of this season. So, let's just set the bar now: the most swaps of #1 in a single season is eight, and the most different players to hold the position in a season is five. After a month of '12 action, we're at two on each count.

We'll soon see -- possibly as early as next weekend -- how well Azarenka takes to her new role as the #1-ranked player and a slam champion. We'll eventually see whether her offseason training regimen will prevent a recurrence of the niggling injuries that have plagued her in the past, but she has to be encouraged that she was able to outlast opponents -- both physically AND mentally -- throughout this AO.

As for Sharapova, she has to recognize that her career might just end up playing out between a rock and hard place. Not old enough to be considered in the veterans' generation, she's surely not a NextGen player, either, even though she IS just two years older than Azarenka. Sharapova came onto tour in the era that would be dominated by the Sisters and Belgians, saw her shoulder injury prevent her from dominating in the "softer" middle years, and now has already suffered at the hands of two young twentysomethings in slam finals over the past year (her game total in this AO final was the same meager three she got against Serena in the "Destruction Heard 'Round the World" Melbourne final in '07). She's not going anywhere anytime soon, but she knows the reality of just how hard it is to win a slam. Time means nothing... opportunity, and the seizing of it, are far more important.

A certain Dane should take note of that inarguable fact, too.

A FEW MORE NOTES: Azarenka's jump from #3 to #1 in one fell swoop is a WTA first, and her title means we've had five different winners at the last five slams -- and four of them have been first-time slam champs. Of course, the flip side to that is that the last four slam winners, starting with Clijsters at last year's AO, have failed to advance beyond the second round at their next slam. After this AO, it's still a fact that no slam final with a Russian woman involved has ever gone three sets (that's 0-for-17). Azarenka's slam singles title gets her within striking distance of joining just Serena, Venus and Sam Stosur as active players with slam wins in all three disciplines -- singles, doubles and mixed. She'd already be able to be included in the group if she and Maria Kirilenko hadn't lost that set a 4-1 lead in the '11 AO final against Dulko/Pennetta. Azarenka, it should be noted, has a REALLY diverse slam trophy case. She also won junior singles and doubles slam titles, including both the AO Girls Singles and Doubles back in '05.

...speaking of junior slam title sweeps. In the Girls Singles final, Taylor Townsend completed HER own sweep of the junior titles by defeating Yulia Putintseva 6-1/3-6/6-3. Townsend, after Grace Min last fall at Flushing Meadows, is the second consecutive Bannerette to claim a junior Girls slam crown.

Luke Saville, who was the AO Boys runner-up in '11, defeated Filip Peliwo to take the title this year. The Aussie also won the Wimbledon Boys last year.

...Leander Paes and Radek Stepanek prevented the Bryan twins from continuing their AO dominance and getting a record 12th slam crown. The pair won the Men's Doubles in straight sets. It's Stepanek -- know in these parts as Mr. Nicole Vaidisova -- first slam title, and Paes' overall fourteenth Doubles or Mixed slam championship. He's won those titles with eight different players -- Mahesh Bhupathi (3), Cara Black (3), Lukas Dlouhy (2), Martina Navratilova (2), Martin Damm (1), Lisa Raymond (1), David Rikl (1) and Stepanek (1).

...and, of course Esther Vergeer (NED) won her 20th career slam Wheelchair Singles title, and she did it by showing her usual dominance, taking out her Dutch countrywoman, #2 seed Aniek van Koot by a 6-0/6-0 score.

...DAY 13 LIKES: that ESPN2's coverge wasn't as scream-heavy as I'd feared it might be. Of course, that the likes of Cliff Drysdale and Brad Gilbert -- who tend to squawk as much as all those birds flying over Rod Laver looking for a tasty insect meal -- weren't involved in the telecast, so maybe that had something to do with it. Pam Shriver, on three different occasions (including once when she tried to place undue importance on a single spectator who'd yelled out "turn down the volume," obviously -- accoring to the all-knowing PS -- showing how much of a protesting mood the Aussies were when it came to the issue, overlooking the fact that many thousands of others DIDN'T put their full "jerkery" on display), DID try to pipe in from courtside and broach the subject in an attempt to throw the broadcast off on an action-ignoring tangent (a practice of her's that goes back ten years, when she'd spend half a Jelena Dokic match talking about Damir rather than what was going on on the court), but Chris Fowler and Chris Evert consistently failed to take the bait and derail the telecast. Good for them. The network, led by Patrick McEnroe (shocker!) did spend time during pre-match coverage on the topic, but I chose to just turn the sound down to avoid being offended (hmmm, now there's an idea), only turning it up to hear the press conference comments from the two players, including Azarenka linking her sound to how she breathes on the court, and Sharapova noting that she hasn't heard anything "from anybody important enough" to change anything on her side of the net.

I will continue to believe it's all much ado about nothing, or at least nothing that hasn't been the case for about twenty years, when Monica Seles came upon the scene. Ultimately, nothing was done then (other than Seles trying to consciously make no sound in one match, and putting forth an awful performance in the process), and players on tour now who have grown up exhaling loudly during points shouldn't suddenly be penalized now because a few people suddenly have a wild hare up their butt about the subject. But, if the various organizations want to begin to institute something on the junior levels, much like Major League Baseball's lower-level phasing out of tobacco use, that will insure that the coming generation won't grow up with the same noisy habits, then I'd have no problem with it. But that'd be a measured, intelligent way to deal with the situation, unlike the crazy-ass (thank you for that phrase, Oprah Winfrey) practice of trying to use on-court decibal meters and making certain players -- including the newest #1 -- the object of derision in the media. Of course, the more attention-getting way would prove to be more self-serving for the likes of Stacey Allaster and the talking heads at ESPN2, so I'm not particularly confident that cooler heads will prevail.

...and, finally, the WTA spotlight will surely be on the Fed Cup next weekend, but not necessarily on the 1st Round. Belarus will be hosted by the United States in World Group II action, with Azarenka AND the Williams Sisters scheduled to participate. Sometimes, things just work out perfectly, you know?




*WOMEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR def. #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS 6-3/6-0

*MEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Novak Djokovic/SRB vs. #2 Rafael Nadal/ESP

*WOMEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
Kuznetsova/Zvonareva (RUS/RUS) def. #11 Errani/Vinci (ITA/ITA) 5-7/6-4/6-4

*MEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
Paes/Stepanek (IND/CZE) def. #1 Bryan/Bryan (USA/USA) 7-6/6-2

*MIXED DOUBLES FINAL*
#5 Vesnina/Paes (RUS/IND) vs. #8 Mattek-Sands/Tecau (USA/ROU)

*GIRLS SINGLES FINAL*
#14 Taylor Townsend/USA def. #4 Yulia Putintseva/RUS 6-1/3-6/6-3

*BOYS SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Luke Saville/AUS def. Filip Peliwo/CAN 6-3/5-7/6-4

*GIRLS DOUBLES FINAL*
Andrews/Townsend (USA/USA) def. #1 Khromacheva/Kovinic (RUS/MNE) 5-7/7-5 (10-6)

*BOYS DOUBLES FINAL*
#6 Broady/Ward-Hibbert (GBR/GBR) def. Pavlasek/Veger (CZE/CRO) 6-3/6-2

*WHEELCHAIR SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Esther Vergeer/NED vs. #2 Aniek van Koot/NED 6-0/6-0

*WHEELCHAIR DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Vergeer/Walraven (NED/NED) def. #2 Buis/van Koot (NED/NED) 4-6/6-2/6-4




**WEEKS AT WTA SINGLES #1**
[w/ titles & slam titles]
377...Steffi Graf (107/22)
331...Martina Navratilova (167/18)
260...Chris Evert (154/18)
209...Martina Hingis (43/5)
178...Monica Seles (53/9)
122...Serena Williams (39/13)
117...Justine Henin (43/7)
98...Lindsay Davenport (55/3)
67...Caroline Wozniacki (18/0)
39...Amelie Mauresmo (25/2)
26...Dinara Safina (12/0)
22...Tracy Austin (30/2)
20...Kim Clijsters (41/4)
18...Jelena Jankovic (12/0)
17...Jennifer Capriati (14/3)
17...Maria Sharapova (24/3)
12...Ana Ivanovic (9/1)
12...Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario (29/4)
11...Venus Williams (43/7)
2...Evonne Goolagong (68/7)
1...VICTORIA AZARENKA (10/1)
[pre-computer rankings year-end #1's]
Margaret Smith-Court (92/24)
Billie Jean King (67/12)

**MOST SLAMS TO FIRST TITLE**
45 - Jana Novotna (1998 Wimbledon)
39 - Francesca Schiavone (2010 Roland Garros)
34 - Samantha Stosur (2011 US Open)
31 - Amelie Mauresmo (2006 Australian Open)
29 - Jennifer Capriati (2001 Australian Open)
28 - Kerry Melville-Reid (1978 Australian Open)
26 - Lindsay Davenport (1998 U.S. Open)
25 - VICTORIA AZARENKA (2012 Australian Open)

**FIRST-TIME SLAM CHAMPS AT AUSTRALIAN OPEN**
[Open Era]
1977 Kerry Melville-Reid, AUS
1978 Chris O'Neil, AUS
1979 Barbara Jordan, USA
1980 Hana Mandlikova, CZE
1995 Mary Pierce, FRA
1997 Martina Hingis, SUI
2001 Jennifer Capriati, USA
2006 Amelie Mauresmo, FRA
2012 Victoria Azarenka, BLR

**WTA SINGLES TITLES - 2010-12**
12...Caroline Wozniacki, DEN
7...VICTORIA AZARENKA, BLR
6...Kim Clijsters, BEL
6...Petra Kvitova, CZE
4...Maria Sharapova, RUS
4...Roberta Vinci, ITA
4...Serena Williams, USA

**ACTIVE PLAYERS w/ SLAM SINGLES/DOUBLES/MIXED TITLES**
[singles-doubles-mixed]
Serena Williams [13-12-2]
Venus Williams [7-12-2]
Samantha Stosur [1-2-2]
[singles players closest to matching]
Victoria Azarenka [1-0-2]
Kim Clijsters [4-2-0]
Svetlana Kuznetsova [2-2-0]
Vera Zvonareva [0-2-2]

**RECENT GIRLS SLAM CHAMPIONS**
[2009]
AO: Ksenia Pervak, RUS
RG: Kristina Mladenovic, FRA
WI: Noppawan Lertcheewakarn, THA
US: Heather Watson, GBR
[2010]
AO: Karolina Pliskova, CZE
RG: Elina Svitolina, UKR
WI: Kristyna Pliskova, CZE
US: Daria Gavrilova, RUS
[2011]
AO: An-Sophie Mestach, BEL
RG: Ons Jabeur, TUN
WI: Ashleigh Barty, AUS
AO: Grace Min, USA
[2012]
AO: Taylor Townsend, USA

=ACTIVE OVERALL SLAM TITLES - MEN=
18...Bob Bryan
16...Roger Federer
14...LEANDER PAES
13...Mike Bryan
11...Mahesh Bhupathi
11...Rafael Nadal
8...Max Mirnyi
8...Daniel Nestor
7...Nenad Zimonjic
4...Novak Djokovic

=AO MEN'S DOUBLES CHAMPIONS - since 2002=
2002 Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor
2003 Michael Llodra / Fabrice Santoro
2004 Michael Llodra / Fabrice Santoro
2005 Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett
2006 Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan
2007 Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan
2008 Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram
2009 Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan
2010 Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan
2011 Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan
2012 Leander Paes / Radek Stepanek




TOP QUALIFIER: Paula Ormaechea/ARG
TOP EARLY ROUND (1r-2r): #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
TOP LATE ROUND (SF-F): xx
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1: Bibiane Schoofs/NED d. Yaroslava Shvedova/KAZ 6-4/3-6/11-9
TOP EARLY RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 2nd Rd. - Greta Arn/HUN d. #17 Dominika Cibulkova/SVK 6-2/3-6/10-8
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 4th Rd. - #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL d. #5 Li Na/CHN 4-6/7-6/6-4 (saved 4 MP)
TOP LATE RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.): xx
TOP LAVER NIGHT MATCH: none
=============================
FIRST WINNER: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR (def. Heather Watson/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #19 Flavia Pennetta/ITA (1st Rd.- lost to Nina Bratchikova/RUS)
UPSET QUEENS: Russians
REVELATION LADIES: Germans
NATION OF POOR SOULS: Great Britain (0-4 in 1st Round, all on Day 1)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Nina Bratchikova/RUS (3rd Rd.)
LAST WILD CARDS STANDING: Casey Dellacqua/AUS & Olivia Rogowska/AUS (2nd Rd.)
LAST AUSSIES STANDING: Casey Dellacqua, Jelena Dokic & Olivia Rogowska (2nd Rd.)
IT: Ekaterina Makarova/RUS
MS. OPPORTUNITY: Sara Errani/ITA
COMEBACK PLAYER: #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
CRASH & BURN: #5 Samantha Stosur/AUS (lost 1st Rd. to Sorana Cirstea/ROU)
ZOMBIE QUEEN: #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL (down 6-4/3-1, 5-1 in 2nd set tie-break and 4 MP vs. Li, 4th Rd.)
LADY OF THE EVENING: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
DOUBLES STAR Nominees: Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Elena Vesnina
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: Taylor Townsend/USA




All for Day 13. More tomorrow.

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Friday, January 27, 2012

AO.12- The (Shrieks) of Fortune



Ready, Maria? Ready, Vika? Do the Scream Police have their earplugs in (though we secretly know they all really LOVE the noise... thou doth protest too much, I think)? Have you deleted your Twitter account? Is the extra-strength duct tape positioned over the mouths of some ESPN2 announcers?

Whew! Okay, then MAYBE we're ready to go.

Maria Sharapova has so-far passed the necessary "eye test" for her to be in slam-winning form, and she even might have history going for her if you consider that the last time she won a slam Down Under the Patriots and Giants were preparing to play in the Super Bowl. Those same two teams are currently doing the same this year. For her, the return to the #1 ranking for the first time in about three and a half years (it'd be the third-longest time between stints, behind only Serena and Clijsters' approximately five-year stretches) would be secondary to the notion of finally proving that everyone who doubted that she could fully recover from shoulder surgery were wrong. And we might even see her readily admit that she sort of doubted it herself for a brief period, as well.


"First, you undergo such a terrible amount of suffering, and then you become famous." - Hans Christian Andersen


Before the season, I said that Victoria Azarenka was the real wild card in the WTA's race for #1, and that she could very well shoot through the gap from her #3 position and take the top spot away from BOTH of them. With one more win, she will, too. She was getting far less attention than Wozniacki, Kvitova and others in the #1 discussion, but her drive is equal to or greater than either them at any particular moment. Having survived the game of "Whack-a-Vika" that has gone on at this Australian Open, from the top of the sport on down to the ESPN2ers who have so painstakingly tried to mold public opinion on the whole on-court noise issue, a win for the Belarusian would be great on oh so many "uncomfortable" levels. Stacey Allaster wouldn't have enough places to stick it.

The ball-bashing style of the two finalists may not be the one most preferred by all, but there is no reason for any right-thinking person to not love the desire to win at all costs that will reside within BOTH players who'll take the court tonight. Although I'm sure some will take issue with it, at least with the less familiar-in-the-spotlight Azarenka, and then spend far too much valuable time trying to measure the court noise created by the pair of finalists. At the very least, hopefully this final will come close to the fun we saw in the semis. On that note, it's a good sign to point out that the AO is currently riding a two-year run of three-set women's finals. It's quite the opposite of the two-set streaks at the other slams that have reached five (Wimbledon), ten (Roland Garros) and -- yikes!! -- SIXTEEN (U.S.) years. Although, no slam final involving a Russian woman has ever gone three sets.

So, settle in and... hmmm, what's that?

Oh, no. Brad Gilbert found a way to remove the tape! I thought I'd provided him with enough shiny objects to divert his attention for a few hours. He's teaching the others to remove THEIR tape, too. While I love the sight of evolution beginning to take place right in front of my eyes, I have to say that I'm feeling afraid right now. Very afraid.

I guess I'll just have to remember to keep repeating the phrase I've got knocking around inside my head: "It's going to be all right. It's going to be all right."



=DAY 12 NOTES=
...it was a great SF rematch of the '11 AO final between Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray today, and it'll surely lead to more talk about the Scot, especially now with Ivan Lendl in his coaching corner, eventually winning a slam in the Djokovic-Nadal-Federer era. Still, it should be noted that, in the Serb's 6-3/3-6/6-7/6-1/7-5 win, Murray DID blow a two sets to one lead and, although he came back from a 5-2 hole in the 5th, he failed to put away any of three break points (after taking a 40/15 lead) on Djokovic's serve at 5-5 in the deciding set, then was broken to end the match. For any changes evident in Murray, and there do seem to be a few, he's still doing some very Murray-in-a-slam like things in the end. Jimmy Connors was never able to instill enough of himself into Andy Roddick to get the American over the slam hump for a second time, and Lendl might not be able to ultimately do the same with the still-slamless Murray.

Meanwhile, Djokovic now faces Nadal in their fourth overall meeting in a slam final. This is the third straight slam final that will be contested between the two, with Djokovic having defeated Rafa both at Wimbledon and the U.S.Open (two of the six finals the Serb bested the Spaniard in last season). This will be the eighth straight slam won by one of the two men, the longest two-player string in ATP history, behind only an 11-slam stretch where either Nadal or Federer were crowned champions. If the Serb wins, he'll head to Rafa's Kingdom -- Roland Garros -- looking to complete a DjokoSlam... or would it be JokerSlam, or maybe NovaSlam? Hmmm.

...Roberta Vinci can surely share Murray's good/bad thoughts for Day 12. She came into the day having reached the Women's Doubles final, as well as the Mixed semifinals. As she went to sleep tonight, though, that was all she got. She and Sara Errani lost in three sets to Svetlana Kuznetsova and Vera Zvonareva in the WD final as the first champions of this AO were crowned. It's Sveta's second slam Doubles title, and Vera's fourth overall Doubles/Mixed crown at a slam. Vinci & Danielle Bracciali lost in the Mixed SF to Elena Vesnina & Leander Paes, as well. So, Vesnina/Paes don't get the filled-with-storylines opponents that Mirza/Bhupathi would have provided in the final (Mirza is Vesnina's doubles partner, and ex-partners Bhupathi & Paes HATE each other now, while the spots/teamings on the Indian Olympic team revolving around those three players will surely be an issue down the line), and will instead face Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Horia Tecau.

With Vesnina and Mattek-Sands both going for their first slam crown, the winner will get the "Doubles Star" award for this AO.

...Petra will have to tell Adam Pavlasek that things will be all right after his bad day on Friday. Not only did he lose his Boys semifinal match the #1-seed Luke Saville, but he and Filip Veger dropped the Boys Doubles final to Brits Liam Broady & Joshua Ward-Hibbert, too. The Girls Doubles champs were crowned, as well, and it's a pair of Bannerettes -- Taylor Townsend & Gabrielle Andrews -- who defeated top-seeded Irina Khromacheva & Danka Kovinic.

Speaking of Townsend, she had a GREAT day. She won the Doubles title, and took out fellow American Krista Hardebeck in the Girls Singles SF. Thus, the #14 seed reaches the final... and wins this slam's "Junior Breakout" honors. She'll face Hordette #4-seed Yulia Putintseva (my pre-tournament pick, so the American's chances to win are probably pretty good) in the final.

Saville will face Canada's Filip Peliwo in the Boys final. Peliwo defeated American MacKenzie McDonald, who I forget to mention yesterday when I noted the dominant North American presence in the junior singles SF (filling five of the eight slots).

...Esther Vergeer will play in the Women's Wheelchair final on Day 13. She's now won 436 straight matches, including 19 slam singles crown. Today she picked up the Doubles title, her 20th slam Doubles championship.

...DAY 12 LIKES: the realization that I got through the entire two weeks without being forced to listen to the grating Hannah Storm on ESPN2. Best thing about the network's oft-mangy coverage of this slam, I'd say.

...and, finally, I'm making this an earlier-posted recap of Day 12 partly because there wasn't as much to cover for Friday... but also because I think I need the additional time to gird myself for the sure-to-come overflow of "scream chat" during the women's final tonight. Who knows? Maybe the ESPN2ers will even talk about the match, too. I know... I'm too much of a dreamer sometimes.




*WOMEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR vs. #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS

*MEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Novak Djokovic/SRB vs. #2 Rafael Nadal/ESP

*WOMEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
Kuznetsova/Zvonareva (RUS/RUS) def. #11 Errani/Vinci (ITA/ITA) 5-7/6-4/6-4

*MEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Bryan/Bryan (USA/USA) vs. Paes/Stepanek (IND/CZE)

*MIXED DOUBLES FINAL*
#5 Vesnina/Paes (RUS/IND)
vs. #8 Mattek-Sands/Tecau (USA/ROU)


*GIRLS SINGLES FINAL*
#14 Taylor Townsend/USA vs. #4 Yulia Putintseva/RUS

*BOYS SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Luke Saville/AUS vs. Filip Peliwo/CAN

*GIRLS DOUBLES FINAL*
Andrews/Townsend (USA/USA) def. #1 Khromacheva/Kovinic (RUS/MNE) 5-7/7-5 (10-6)

*BOYS DOUBLES FINAL*
#6 Broady/Ward-Hibbert (GBR/GBR) def. Pavlasek/Veger (CZE/CRO) 6-3/6-2

*WHEELCHAIR SINGLES FINAL*
#1 Esther Vergeer/NED vs. #2 Aniek van Koot/NED

*WHEELCHAIR DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Vergeer/Walraven (NED/NED) def. #2 Buis/van Koot (NED/NED) 4-6/6-2/6-4




**AO "JUNIOR BREAKOUT" WINNERS**
2007 Madison Brengle, USA
2008 Jessica Moore, AUS & Arantxa Rus, NED
2009 Ksenia Pervak, RUS
2010 Karolina & Kristyna Pliskova, CZE/CZE
2011 Japanese girls
2012 Taylor Townsend, USA

**AO DOUBLES CHAMPIONS - since 2000**
2000 Lisa Raymond & Rennae Stubbs
2001 Serena Williams & Venus Williams
2002 Martina Hingis & Anna Kournikova
2003 Serena Williams & Venus Williams
2004 Virginia Ruano Pascual & Paola Suarez
2005 Svetlana Kuznetsova & Alicia Molik
2006 Yan Zi & Zheng Jie
2007 Cara Black & Liezel Huber
2008 Alona Bondarenko & Kateryna Bondarenko
2009 Serena Williams & Venus Williams
2010 Serena Williams & Venus Williams
2011 Gisela Dulko & Flavia Pennetta
2012 Svetlana Kuznetsova & Vera Zvonareva

**MOST CAREER SLAM DOUBLES/MIXED TITLES - ACTIVE**
14...Serena Williams
14...Venus Williams
10...Cara Black
10...Lisa Raymond
7...Liezel Huber
6...Katarina Srebotnik
4...Daniela Hantuchova
4...Samantha Stosur
4...VERA ZVONAREVA

**AUSTRALIAN OPEN GIRLS FINALS - since 2000**
2000 Aniko Kapros/HUN def. Maria Jose Martinez-Sanchez/ESP
2001 Jelena Jankovic/SRB def. Sofia Arvidsson/SWE
2002 Barbora Zahlavova-Strycova/CZE def. Maria Sharapova/RUS
2003 Barbora Zahlavova-Strycova/CZE def. Victoriya Kutuzova/UKR
2004 Shahar Peer/ISR def. Nicole Vaidisova/CZE
2005 Victoria Azarenka/BLR def. Agnes Szavay/HUN
2006 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova/RUS def. Caroline Wozniacki/DEN
2007 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova/RUS def. Madison Brengle/USA
2008 Arantxa Rus/NED def. Jessica Moore/AUS
2009 Ksenia Pervak/RUS def. Laura Robson/GBR
2010 Karolina Pliskova/CZE def. Laura Robson/GBR
2011 An-Sophie Mestach/BEL def. Monica Puig/PUR
2012 Yulia Putintseva/RUS vs. Taylor Townsend/USA

**FIRST-TIME SLAM CHAMPS AT AUSTRALIAN OPEN**
[Open Era]
1977 Kerry Melville-Reid, AUS
1978 Chris O'Neil, AUS
1979 Barbara Jordan, USA
1980 Hana Mandlikova, CZE
1995 Mary Pierce, FRA
1997 Martina Hingis, SUI
2001 Jennifer Capriati, USA
2006 Amelie Mauresmo, FRA

=LONG ATP SLAM TITLE STREAKS - TWO PLAYERS=
11 - Federer/Nadal, 2005-07
8 - DJOKOVIC/NADAL, 2010-12
6 - Sampras/Bruguera, 1993-94
5 - Borg/Connors, 1974-75

=MOST SLAM FINAL MATCH-UPS - MEN=
8 - Federer/Nadal
5 - Agassi/Sampras
5 - Lendl-Wilander
4 - Borg/Connors
4 - Borg/McEnroe
4 - DJOKOVIC/NADAL
4 - Federer/Roddick

=MOST OVERALL FINAL MATCH-UPS - MEN=
20 - Lendl/McEnroe
19 - Federer/Nadal
16 - Agassi/Sampras
16 - Becker/Edberg
15 - Connors/McEnroe
13 - Becker/Lendl
12 - Borg/Connors
12 - DJOKOVIC/NADAL




TOP QUALIFIER: Paula Ormaechea/ARG
TOP EARLY ROUND (1r-2r): #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
TOP LATE ROUND (SF-F): xx
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1: Bibiane Schoofs/NED d. Yaroslava Shvedova/KAZ 6-4/3-6/11-9
TOP EARLY RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 2nd Rd. - Greta Arn/HUN d. #17 Dominika Cibulkova/SVK 6-2/3-6/10-8
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 4th Rd. - #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL d. #5 Li Na/CHN 4-6/7-6/6-4 (saved 4 MP)
TOP LATE RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.): xx
TOP LAVER NIGHT MATCH: none
=============================
FIRST WINNER: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR (def. Heather Watson/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #19 Flavia Pennetta/ITA (1st Rd.- lost to Nina Bratchikova/RUS)
UPSET QUEENS: Russians
REVELATION LADIES: Germans
NATION OF POOR SOULS: Great Britain (0-4 in 1st Round, all on Day 1)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Nina Bratchikova/RUS (3rd Rd.)
LAST WILD CARDS STANDING: Casey Dellacqua/AUS & Olivia Rogowska/AUS (2nd Rd.)
LAST AUSSIES STANDING: Casey Dellacqua, Jelena Dokic & Olivia Rogowska (2nd Rd.)
IT: Ekaterina Makarova/RUS
MS. OPPORTUNITY: Sara Errani/ITA
COMEBACK PLAYER: #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
CRASH & BURN: #5 Samantha Stosur/AUS (lost 1st Rd. to Sorana Cirstea/ROU)
ZOMBIE QUEEN: #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL (down 6-4/3-1, 5-1 in 2nd set tie-break and 4 MP vs. Li, 4th Rd.)
LADY OF THE EVENING: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
DOUBLES STAR Nominees: Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Elena Vesnina
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: Taylor Townsend/USA




All for Day 12. More tomorrow.

Read more...

Thursday, January 26, 2012

AO.11- The Brave Tin Soldiers



Welcome to the "new" WTA, absent the "soft" #1's and mentally cracked slam contenders who make it too easy for criticism and crankiness to drown out the actual accomplishments of the players involved. Welcome to a world where players play with fire and a will to not only win, but also to grab for a major title with both hands rather than expect it to be handed to them. Oh, yeah... and for most of those things to eventually be drowned out by whiners complaining about how much noise said players make on the court.

Well, no one ever said any was a perfect tennis world, right?

Setting aside all the "el stupido" handwringing and overzealous preoccupation with the unimportant traits of some of the players in question, it was great to actually see a pair of semifinal matches on Day 11 that lived up to the advance (hoped for) billing. I'd almost forgotten what it was like to see the latter stages of a slam actually LOOK like the latter stages of a slam. No head-shaking emotional collapses occurred. There were no overmatched pretenders in attendance, either. Instead, we got a game, but (thank you, Kim) not overly-sentimental, soon-to-exit defending champion and three players who actually looked like they were willing to do whatever was necessary to win a slam and, in turn, claim the #1 ranking in the women's game. It's such an overused phrase, but there really did turn out to be no "losers" in this hard-hitting quartet. Rather than hope for their opponent to lose, they tried to win, all managing to turn seemingly-bad in-match situations back in their favor by imposing their will on their opponent. But while all four thrived, of course, only two survived.

The first semifinal of the day pitted defending champ Kim Clijsters, 28, in what she says will be her last Australian Open, against 22-year old Victoria Azarenka, seeking the triple-whammy of her first slam final, maiden slam title, and the #1 ranking if she can lift the championship trophy this weekend. Immediately, the Belarusian jumped on Clijsters' second serve, breaking the Belgian for a 2-1 lead in the 1st. Throughout the opening set, the younger player saw her chances backed against the wall, but met the pressure with some of her own. Saving four break points in Game #4, she held for 3-1. Using her groundstrokes to keep Clijsters from moving forward, Azarenka overcame Clijsters' early service game leads, following the aggressive gameplans of previous first-time slam winners of recent seasons. Clijsters never let Azarenka run away with the set, though, forcing her to emotionally hold firm. She did, too, and won the set 6-4.

With her first major final a set away, though, Azarenka did suffer a 2nd set letdown. Clijsters broke her at love in Game #2 thanks to the Belarusian's errors, grabbing a 2-0 lead and running off a string of what would be eight straight points. KC only led by a single break, and Azarenka had an opportunity to get it back. But when she missed an overhead shot that would have given her break point, then Ciljsters held for 3-0, a chance for a quick day was lost. In Game #4, Azarenka's first serve simply deserted her. The Belgian broke for 4-0, and held for 5-0. But Azarenka, maybe very importantly, pulled her game together to avoid a 2nd set bagel, holding serve to take a game and a avoid a possibly attitude-defeating freefall. Clijsters knotted the match with a 6-1 win, but it was Azarenka's getting a late foothold that led to her momentum carrying over into the 3rd.

In the opening game of the deciding set, Azarenka found herself break point down, but she managed a hold, then broke Clijsters at love. A poor service game from the Belgian (and, in particular, a poor decision to go for a drop shot during a long rally) ended with a double-fault that handed the break, and a 3-1 lead, to Azarenka. At that point, KC's shots began to fly in all directions, but the player who saved quadruple match point in the Round of 16 against Li Na had one more surge left in her. Azarenka led 4-2, 40/love on serve, but failed to convert six game points. Once Clijsters got her first break point of the game, she took advantage and closed to within 4-3. So, this appeared to be the moment when the Belgian's seemingly-fated run to the women's final would become a reality, right? Ah, not so fast.


"Then she saw a star fall, leaving behind it a bright streak of fire." - Hans Christian Andersen


Clijsters opened the next game with a double-fault, and Azarenka built up a 40/love lead. After going 0-for-8 in game and break point opportunities over the nearly two-game stretch, Azarenka finally put away a volley to take a 5-3 lead and give herself a chance to serve for the final. Would she prove worthy of the moment, or crack under the pressure? The answer seemed to be foreshadowed when she started off with a service winner. Moments later, she was up 40/love. A single double-fault delayed the Belarusian's gratification, but Clijsters' final error ended the match. Azarenka won 6-4/1-6/6-3 to reach her first major final.

After the match, Azarenka held up a (maybe a bit premature?) #1 finger, while Clijsters quickly slipped away from what will likely be her last AO. There was no tearful on-court interview with the Belgian, dubbed "Aussie Kim" so many years ago, and for that maybe she should be commended. The story of this match was not her, it was Azarenka, a player we've seen arriving at this moment for quite a few years now, only for her achy breaky body and anger issues to sometimes trip her up along the way. But, having largely conquered both problems from her past, the fiery, often demonstrative Belarusian with the sort of desire to win that makes some people (you know who they are) uncomfortable, will now finally get her moment to rise or fall on the game's biggest stage. Having proven she can climb onto the platform, no matter what happens next, it won't likely be her last trip there.

While the first match served as a nice coming out party for another young twentysomething, the second match between Maria Sharapova and Petra Kvitova, especially the 3rd set, stood out as the true jewel of the women's semifinals. Even more so than the Azarenka/Clijsters match, this one came down to its closing games, even points, with the final result totally in question, even when match points were on the line. What was going to happen was anyone's guess, but everyone sure knew they wanted to see it all play out on the court of Rod Laver Arena.

Kvitova, 21, held at love to start the match, but the Czech's penchant at this tournament to sometimes have trouble holding her serve for large stretches of time continued against Sharapova's grand return game. The two exchanged momentum in the early going. Kvitova missed an overhead and was broken in Game #3, when the 24-year old Russian tossed in a double-fault and error to break herself back the next game. Using her return reflexes to attack Kvitova's FIRST serve, Sharapova went up a break again at 3-2. At 4-2, she showed the sort athleticism that she's never really been known for. Reacting quickly to a Kvitova drop shot attempt, the Russian went into full sprint from behind the baseline and easily got to the ball, putting away a winner. She'd soon break for a 5-2 lead then, after falling down love/40, hold serve to claim a 6-2 set. With a 112-5 slam record when she wins the 1st set, and with the Czech visibly frustrated (tossing her racket down more than once, an act that wasn't seen from her last year, but has become her "go to" in bad stretches this season), Sharapova seemed set for a very good day.

But then Kvitova did what she's done so well at this AO -- quickly rebound and impose her power game on her opponent. Just as she did in the Wimbledon final last July, she did it again to Sharapova in the 2nd set. Sending a message with a big return to start Sharapova's service game, she was gifted a double-fault from the Russian one point later. With the score at 40/love, Sharapova's fifth DF of the match broke herself to give Kvitova a 2-0 advantage. The set ultimately played out like a SW19 redux, even down to the Czech's ace on set point that matched her final winner on match point at the All-England Club. She won 6-3, knotting the contest at one set each.

The 3rd began just as the 2nd had ended, with Kvitova whacking balls with great force. It seemed like many other matches she plays -- her's to win. She broke Sharapova to go up 2-1, gave it back a game later, but saw her game remain firm during the series of ball-blasting rallies that characterized the set. Kvitova nearly got the break back in Game #5, but Sharapova managed an important hold for 3-2. In a very long Game #7, the Russian did the same.

At 4-4, it was apparent that crunchtime was upon the two. Hall of Fame Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs always called it "gut check time," and Kvitova, her motor revving up at every turn, seemed to be the one checking off every gutsy item on the list required for her to reach her first AO final and play for the #1 ranking. She went up 30/love on Sharapova's serve and the end seemed to possibly be near. But THIS Sharapova, as we've seen since the early rounds of this tournament when she began to pass the required "eye test" that always marks whether or not she's a SERIOUS slam contender, isn't the same Russian who's been lost in the slam wilderness since her shoulder surgery nearly four years ago. In Melbourne, she's been the former champion driven to return to the winner's circle to prove, as much to herself as others, that she CAN do it again after all her career has endured over the 48 months since she last lifted a slam championship trophy. Who's to say what the dialogue inside Sharapova's head sounded like when the still-improving-and-hardly-yet-a-finished-product Czech looked like she was going to able to take her down in yet another slam, especially the one in which the Russian has looked so much like the 20-year old who claimed the Daphne Akhurst Trophy on this same court in 2008 to complete her third leg of a career Grand Slam.

"Even the open, transparent lake has its unknown depths, which no divers know." - Hans Christian Andersen


Two points from serving for the final, Kvitova saw Sharapova's shot sail long and the game score move to 40/love in the Czech's favor. She was so close now. But something happened on the way to Kvitova's instant immortality -- the Russian challenged the call. Then, everything changed. The ball had grazed the line, and the replay may have turned out to be the biggest moment of the entire match, and maybe even the tournament. If the always seemingly-composed Sharapova had developed any lingering doubts about her ability to defeat the Czech, and her rare-for-her looks into the players box seemed to hint that she maybe had, then that moment seemed to evaporate them. Surviving the close call of being in such a deep hole, she suddenly turned super-steady in the match's closing moments. It might have been THE key to victory. Kvitova, meanwhile, who seemed so sure of her path to a win that she'd even managed to smile to herself at the audacity of the angle of one of her powerful winners in an earlier point, seemed to maybe catch wind of maybe fate NOT being on her side, after all. Whatever actually happened, things WERE different from that moment forward.

Sharapova went on to hold serve and, rather than serve for the match at 5-4, Kvitova was serving to stay in it at all. She committed a forehand error to start the game, and Sharapova grabbed a 30/15 lead. Even after the Czech netted a backhand off a Sharapova drop shot, nothing seemed settled. Kvitova was just as likely to catch fire yet again as she was to be broken with the match on the line. But, one long rally later, as Kvitova's shot sailed long, Sharapova walked off with a skin-of-her-teeth, why-she's-likely-to-win-slam-#4-in-two-days victory by the score of 6-2/3-6/6-4. In the end, the Russian had played the biggest points better. Kvitova was just 3-of-14 on break points attempts, including 1-of-5 in the 3rd set, while Sharapova had gone a remarkably impressive 5-for-5 (I actually didn't even trust the ESPN2 number, and had to go look at the official match stats to be sure it was true), especially so against a player with as big a serve as the Wimbledon champ's. One has to think that Kvitova will have to figure a way to work past the belief that she should have somehow found a way to do MORE with her serve in this match, and the fact that she hadn't been able to do so probably (at least temporarily) robbed her of her second slam title and the #1 ranking.

"An eternal night awaited her." - Hans Christian Andersen


Kvitova outpaced Sharapova 29-18 in winners, but had 41 errors to the Russian's 30. Once again, as well, Sharapova, didn't allow any service miscues (10 DF) to bring down the rest of her game. In the end, she won 86 points to Kvitova's 84. The difference between an 85-85 split? That overturned shot in Sharapova's final service game, which, if it'd gone the way it'd been originally called, would have probaby led to a totally different end result in this match.

So, still looking the part, Sharapova moves on to the final, where she'll try to reclaim the #1 ranking and become the first player to win a major title following career-threatening shoulder surgery, and waiting for her there will be another woman trying to find slam glory and reach #1 in Azarenka. It'll be a hard-hitting, fist-pumping display of dualing wills to win a slam rarely seen on any WTA stage in recent years. Maybe even decades, for that matter. Of course, many will be distracted from the great nature of this "Scream Queen" final because they won't be able to avoid slipping into their "Noise Nazi" regalia. But, let them eat cake, I say. I know I'll enjoy the spectacle for the legitimate one it'll be, filled with concussive sounds emanating from ALL corners of the court... but none of the sounds as great as the desire to win that will resound inside both players.

Hey, it's the "new" WTA. I think I'll take it.



=DAY 11 NOTES=


...in the capper to what turned out to be one of the best slam semifinal days in recent memory, Rafael Nadal ended Australia Day by taking out Roger Federer in four sets, 6-7/6-2/7-6/6-4, to reach his second AO singles final. The Spaniard is now 18-9 in the twenty-seven career meetings between the two, and 8-2 in slams.

...in the junior singles competition, as opposed to what happened in the regular draws, North America is dominating. Especially in the Girls draw, where three of the final four hail from the continent.

Unseeded Bannerette Krista Hardebeck took down yet another biggie in the QF, eliminating #1-seed Irina Khromacheva in straights to reach the semis, where she'll meet her countrywoman (girl?), #14-seeded Taylor Townsend (who also reached the Girls Doubles final with American Gabrielle Andrews). The other SF pits Russian Yulia Putintseva (#4) against Canada's Eugenie Bouchard (#2).

There's a Canadian (Filip Peliwo) in the Boys semifinals, as well. But, even with #1-seed Luke Saville the last remaining Aussie in any of the AO draws, the bigger story is probably Czech Adam Pavlasek, Kvitova's boyfriend. He took out #4 Kaichi Uchida to reach the singles SF (he'll face Saville), and also advanced to the Boys Doubles final with Croatia's Filip Veger.

...the Bryan twins reached the Men's Doubles final, where they've already picked up the AO title five of the last six years. A sixth win will break their current tie with Mark Woodforde & Todd Woodbridge for the most slam Men's Doubles titles in the Open era. Both teams currently have eleven. Title #12, by the way, would also actually tie the all-time men's mark for slam wins held by John Newcombe & Tony Roche (who won just seven of their twelve titles in the Open era).

...well, Sania Mirza and Elena Vesnina ended up going 3-0 against Liezel Huber and Lisa Raymond, as Vesnina & Leander Paes took out Raymond & Rohan Bopanna in the Mixed QF. Doubles team Mirza & Vesnina could end up facing off with each other in the Mixed final.

...as difficult as it is to believe, Esther Vergeer has once again reached the women's wheelchair final.

...DAY 11 LIKES: Azarenka having, perhaps, the "temerity" in the face of all the talk of her on-court shrieking, to complain to the umpire about fans talking during a point in her match with Clijsters. Oh, that's so very Vika-ish, isn't it? I love the, "You don't like it? I don't care. I don't like it... and that's what matters to me right now." attitude about it all she has. If she wins the final, maybe she hold up another single finger to all the people who'd want to ignore her actual accomplishments and focus on the noise she makes when she swings a racket. Hey, absent a black-hatted Justine, the tour could use a "villain," real or imagined, to spice things up a bit. Why not embrace and go all the way with it?

Of course, rather than see the natural humor in the situation, from Azarenka's complaint to (I think) her sounds, the ESPN2's were more offended than amused. No surprise, considering (yet again) they spent a five-minute stretch in the 1st set griping about how much noise Azarenka makes, completely overlooking the fact that a MATCH to reach a slam final was going on... while crazy-noisy jet fighters were flying back and forth across the Melbourne sky in Australia Day activities, it should be noted. And if that particular tangent wasn't enough, ten minutes later Cliff Drysdale saw fit to inform everyone of the "breaking news" that Patrick McEnroe was reporting to him that... fans (CUE IMPORTANT NEWSREADER VOICE) were Tweeting him right then and there about how much they hate all the noise the players make on court. Because, as you know, the only opinions that matter are those of the people with nothing better to do but Tweet some loud-mouthed TV tennis commentators and tell them what they want to hear.

...and, finally, I can't express how glad I am that I don't actually have to keep up with any AO women's singles action on Day 12. Ah, the refeshing end is near.


"Brave soldier, never fear. Even though your death is near." - Hans Christian Andersen


Hey, now, Hans. I'm just talking about the end of the TOURNAMENT. Sheesh.



*WOMEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR vs. #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS

*MEN'S SINGLES SF*
#1 Novak Djokovic/SRB vs. #4 Andy Murray/GBR
#2 Rafael Nadal/ESP def. #3 Roger Federer/SUI


*WOMEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
#11 Errani/Vinci (ITA/ITA) vs. Kuznetsova/Zvonareva (RUS/RUS)

*MEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Bryan/Bryan (USA/USA) vs. Paes/Stepanek (IND/CZE)

*MIXED DOUBLES SF*
Vinci/Bracciali (ITA/ITA) vs. #5 Vesnina/Paes (RUS/IND)
#6 Mirza/Bhupathi (IND/IND) vs. #8 Mattek-Sands/Tecau (USA/ROU)


*GIRLS SINGLES SF*
Krista Hardebeck/USA vs. #14 Taylor Townsend/USA
#4 Yulia Putintseva/RUS vs. #2 Eugenie Bouchard/CAN


*BOYS SINGLES SF*
#1 Luke Saville/AUS vs. #10 Adam Pavlasek/CZE
MacKenzie McDonald/USA vs. Filip Peliwo/CAN


*GIRLS DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Khromacheva/Kovinic (RUS/MNE) vs. Andrews/Townsend (USA/USA)

*BOYS DOUBLES FINAL*
Pavlasek/Veger (CZE/CRO) vs. #6 Broady/Ward-Hibbert (GBR/GBR)




**SLAM FINAL LEADERS**
[career slam finals - active women]
17...Serena Williams (13-4)
14...Venus Williams (7-7)
8...Kim Clijsters (4-4)
6...MARIA SHARAPOVA (3-2)
4...Svetlana Kuznetsova (2-2)
3...Ana Ivanovic (1-2)
3...Dinara Safina (0-3)
2...Li Na (1-1)
2...Francesca Schiavone (1-1)
2...Samantha Stosur (1-1)
2...Vera Zvonareva (0-2)
1...VICTORIA AZARENKA (0-0)
1...Petra Kvitova (1-0)
1...Marion Bartoli (0-1)
1...Jelena Jankovic (0-1)
1...Caroline Wozniacki (0-1)
[career AO finals - active women/men]
5...Serena Williams (5-0)
5...Roger Federer (4-1)
3...MARIA SHARAPOVA (1-1)
2...Novak Djokovic (2-0) *
2...RAFAEL NADAL (1-0)
2...Kim Clijsters (1-1)
2...Andy Murray (0-2) *
--
* - to play in AO SF
[Russian women in slam finals]
6...MARIA SHARAPOVA (3-2)
4...Svetlana Kuznetsova (2-2)
3...Dinara Safina (0-3)
2...Elena Dementieva (0-2)
2...Olga Morozova (0-2)
2...Vera Zvonareva (0-2)
1...Anastasia Myskina (1-0)
-
NOTE: no slam final w/ a Russian woman has ever gone three sets
[all-time slam finals - men]
23...Roger Federer
19...Ivan Lendl
18...Pete Sampras
17...Rod Laver
16...Bjorn Borg
16...Ken Rosewall
15...RAFAEL NADAL




TOP QUALIFIER: Paula Ormaechea/ARG
TOP EARLY ROUND (1r-2r): #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
TOP LATE ROUND (SF-F): xx
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1: Bibiane Schoofs/NED d. Yaroslava Shvedova/KAZ 6-4/3-6/11-9
TOP EARLY RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 2nd Rd. - Greta Arn/HUN d. #17 Dominika Cibulkova/SVK 6-2/3-6/10-8
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 4th Rd. - #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL d. #5 Li Na/CHN 4-6/7-6/6-4 (saved 4 MP)
TOP LATE RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.): xx
TOP LAVER NIGHT MATCH: none
=============================
FIRST WINNER: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR (def. Heather Watson/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #19 Flavia Pennetta/ITA (1st Rd.- lost to Nina Bratchikova/RUS)
UPSET QUEENS: Russians
REVELATION LADIES: Germans
NATION OF POOR SOULS: Great Britain (0-4 in 1st Round, all on Day 1)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Nina Bratchikova/RUS (3rd Rd.)
LAST WILD CARDS STANDING: Casey Dellacqua/AUS & Olivia Rogowska/AUS (2nd Rd.)
LAST AUSSIES STANDING: Casey Dellacqua, Jelena Dokic & Olivia Rogowska (2nd Rd.)
IT: Ekaterina Makarova/RUS
MS. OPPORTUNITY: Sara Errani/ITA
COMEBACK PLAYER: #4 Maria Sharapova/RUS
CRASH & BURN: #5 Samantha Stosur/AUS (lost 1st Rd. to Sorana Cirstea/ROU)
ZOMBIE QUEEN: #11 Kim Clijsters/BEL (down 6-4/3-1, 5-1 in 2nd set tie-break and 4 MP vs. Li, 4th Rd.)
LADY OF THE EVENING: #3 Victoria Azarenka/BLR
DOUBLES STAR Nominees: Roberta Vinci, Kuznetsova/Zvonareva, Bethanie Mattek-Sands, Elena Vesnina
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: Nominees: Krista Hardebeck, Taylor Townsend, Eugenie Bouchard




All for Day 11. More tomorrow.

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