Monday, November 30, 2009

ITF Backspin (Wk.47)- Another Date with History, eh

The regularly-scheduled WTA season is over, but the comebacks keep chugging along.


ITF PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Kimiko Date-Krumm/JPN
...
tennis' favorite almost-fortysomething was at it again over the weekend, winning a $75K challenger in Tokyo with victories over Marina Erakovic, Ksenia Lyskina, Tamarine Tanasugarn and Bojana Jovanovski in the final. It's Date-Krumm's second ITF singles title this season, to go along with her WTA crown in Seoul. She's one of five players to pick up titles on both circuits this year.
=============================
RISER: Olivia Rogowska/AUS
...
a week ago, 18-year old Rogowska defeated Alicia Molik in the finals of a challenger in Esperance, Australia. This weekend, she reached another ITF singles final in Kalgoorlie (love the Aussie city names) and found Molik there once again. The teen didn't get the best of her elder this time, losing in straight sets in their fourth meeting in their last four tournaments, but she's certainly working up some fine late-year momentum to carry into 2010.
=============================
SURPRISE: Marina Erakovic/NZL
...
last season, Erakovic put on a spirited push to raise her ranking while fighting to earn a spot on the New Zealand Olympic team. She got an early season win over Melanie Oudin in Memphis this February, but then her season hit the skids as hip and ankle injuries put her off the tour from April until early October (causing her season-ending rank to drop from #60 to #232 between 2008 and '09). In Tokyo, the 21-year old lost in the 1st Round to Date-Krumm, but she rebounded to win the doubles title (in her first doubles action since March) with Tamarine Tanasugarn. She even got a small measure of revenge against the Japanese vet, as Erakovic and Tanasugarn knocked off Date-Krumm and her fellow "didn't-you-used-to-be?" comeback star Yayuk Basuki (by the way, today is her 39th birthday) of Indonesia in the SF.
=============================
VETERAN: Alicia Molik/AUS
...
Molik has reached the singles finals of five of the six events (with a SF in the other) so far in her Down Under comeback, winning two. Her Kalgoorlie $25K win came courtesy of a 7-6/6-3 victory over Rogowska, which was made possible by previous wins over two more young Shielas -- Jessica Moore and Sally Peers, the latter of which Molik defeated in the final of her first post-retirement singles tournament.
=============================
FRESH FACES: Naomi Broady/GBR & Amanda Carreras/GBR
...
the British are coming! The British are coming! Or at least, recently, it seems that way. The Lass Brigade isn't confined to Laura Robson and Heather Watson, either. This weekend, 19-year old Naomi Broady won the $25K in Puebla, Mexico with a win in the final over Ajla Tomljanovic; while Carreras, also 19, reached the $10K singles final in Vallduxo, Spain (losing to Pastry Laura Tharpe) and won the doubles title with Lara Arruabarrena-Vecino.
=============================
DOWN: Serena Williams/USA
...
I mean, you know, theoretically. The Holmsian investigation into the "mystery" of what happened at the U.S. Open in September finally yielded a punishment -- an $82,500 fine and a two-year behavior probation at the slams (if she has another major infraction in 2010-11 she'll be suspended from the next U.S. Open and have her fine doubled). Much like the Dubai "fine" earlier this year, this set a WTA monetary record when it comes to punishment. But it should be noted that Williams earned $350,000 at the Open for her singles SF result alone and just set a tour record for single season prize money. So, of course, that $82K fine is REALLY gonna hurt. Ouch.
=============================
JUNIOR STAR: Lauren Davis/USA
...
the 16-year old American won the G1 Yucatan World Cup, defeating Canada's Gabriela Dabrowski in the final, 6-7/7-5/6-1. Davis was one of the surprise unseeded Girls singles quarterfinalists at the U.S. Open this summer.
=============================


1. $25K Puebla Final - Broady d. Tomljanovic
...7-6/6-3.
This was the first ITF final for the 16-year old Croat, currently the #10-ranked junior in the world.
=============================
2. $75K Tokyo 1st Rd. - Date-Krumm d. Erakovic
...6-4/6-2.
With Sacha Jones' recent accomplishments, New Zealand suddenly has TWO young players to watch now that Erakovic has finally gotten off I.R..
=============================
3. $25K Kalgoorlie Final - Molik d. Rogowska
...7-6/6-3.
Molik is 3-1 against Rogowska in her round of challenger appearances the last couple of months.
=============================
HM- $10K Lima Final - Carla Lucero d. Veronica Cepede Royg
...5-7/6-3/7-5.
In Peru, the 19-year old Argentine took out the 17-year old from Paraguay. It was a virtual cornucopia of tennis, South American style.
=============================


**WTA & ITF SINGLES TITLES IN 2009**
KIMIKO DATE-KRUMM, JPN - 1 WTA/2 ITF
Alexandra Dulgheru, ROU - 1 WTA/3 ITF
Andrea Petkovic, GER - 1 WTA/1 ITF
Yanina Wickmayer, BEL - 2 WTA/1 ITF

**PLAYERS WITH WTA & ITF TITLES IN SAME SEASON**
2003 - 2
2004 - 5
2005 - 2
2006 - 2
2007 - 5
2008 - 3
2009 - 4

**RECORDS vs. ALICIA MOLIK IN 2009 SINGLES FINALS**
2-0...Sacha Jones
1-1...Olivia Rogowska
0-1...Sally Peers


All for now.



NEXT: What If Parody: In Search of "Citizen Anna"

Read more...

Sunday, November 29, 2009

2009 WTA Year in Review



The time has come. (As always, thoughts and words brought to you free of charge.)

2009: THE RISE AND FALL AND RISE of Miss Serena Williams

"You should never be surprised by anything that I do." - Serena Williams, in January




The Student Council election campaign got ugly at times this year, with the individual who was considered to be the odds-on favorite to win the office of Class President often lagging behind in early poll results, and then making a concerted effort to "call out" the leader and denigrate her multiple (though comparably minor) accomplishments. As it turned out, this individual DID manage to top the exit polls on Election Day. But a unique combination ticket put together by the clever Italian contingent at Backspin Academy was able to cobble together enough combined support to overthrow the spirit of the single-candidate system and place themselves into the multi-seat of power.

Naturally, the "popular vote" winner is now demanding that changes be made in the voting system. Hmmm, maybe in 2010. After all, a former President has decided to once again throw her hat into the ring, and we can't be having these sorts of discussions EVERY year.

=STUDENT COUNCIL=
CLASS PRESIDENTS: Flavia Pennetta, Francesca Schiavone, Sara Errani & Roberta Vinci


CURRENTLY TRYING TO GET A HEARING IN THE COURT OF THE TENNIS GODS: Serena Williams
VICE PRESIDENT: Dinara Safina
PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE: Svetlana Kuznetsova
VALEDICTORIAN: Caroline Wozniacki
SALUTATORIAN: Kim Clijsters (STILL the second-highest rated Belgian, even without you-know-who around... yet)
CLASS TREASURER: Maria Sharapova (though her unique money-counting skills were questioned this year)
SCHOOL SPIRIT COORDINATOR: Liezel Huber
ASSISTANT SCHOOL SPIRIT COORDINATOR (BY DEMAND OF Mrs. Huber): Cara Black
STUDENT/FACULTY LIAISON: Larisa Savchenko
IN ONE-YEAR DETENTION (though she's appealing her punishment, and hoping that Judge Shriver doesn't get the case): Yanina Wickmayer

"I love my job. I love hitting balls, running and jumping, chasing after the ball. I love what I do, so I think that's what keeps me motivated." - Venus Williams




Backspin Academy's humble and hardworking staff occasionally undergoes some upheavel, but the student body (which sometimes includes a few of our instructors, who pull double duty in order to show how much they care) is generally pleased with those entrusted with molding their impressionable minds like the blocks of clay that they are (or so says our lovable Ms. Jankovic... though, to be honest, she might have just been talking about FEELING like a square block of clay back in January, but we've long since agreed to simply let her speak her mind even if we sometimes don't understand some of the things she says -- it seems to work out better for all of us).

=FACULTY, STAFF, DEPARTMENT HEADS & APPOINTEES=
Co-DEANS OF STUDENTS (and part-time students): Nuria Llagostera-Vives & Maria Jose Martinez-Sanchez (though Serena vehemently protested MJMS's appointment)
GUIDANCE COUNSELOR: Piotr Wozniacki
FIRST-YEAR PROFESSOR WHO IS EVERYONE'S FAVORITE EDUCATOR... this year, at least: Mary Joe Fernandez (Serena insists that her multiple absences from MJF's class were NOT unexcused)
ATHLETIC TRAINERS: position vacant (apparently, these former staff members did a severe disservice to our lovely Miss Jankovic, so we have omitted their names out of fear of a libel suit... though it should be noted that they claim they THOUGHT they were "doing the right thing at the time")
SCHOOL NURSE: Student Vera Zvonareva (her advice to all the young girls on campus: when in Charleston, always wear protection)
INTRODUCING...: Stacey Allaster (a new hire, I hear her first class will be called "Cleaning up the Public Relations Disasters of Others 101")
ACADEMY HISTORIAN: Bud Collins (always and forever)
(GARBLED) COMMUNICATION DIRECTORS: Schlomo Tzoref & Samantha Stevenson (their young charges, Julia Glushko & Alexandra Stevenson, should listen... and learn what NOT to say and do)
ON ADMINISTRATIVE SUSPENSION FOR CONDUCT DETRIMENTAL TO THE ACADEMY: Pam Shriver (we are SO sorry... so please stop dumping out all the chocolate and waffles outside the front gate)
SUBSTITUTE TEACHER OF THE YEAR: Student Carly Gullickson (says Carly: "I was just in the right place at the right time.")
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS & MARKETING (all classes currently held off-campus): Anna Kournikova (forever in absentia)
SO LONG, FAREWELL... and pleae keep in touch: Long-time students/teachers Nathalie Dechy, Jamea Jackson, Tzipora Obziler, Virginia Ruano Pascual, Ai Sugiyama (and tell Ms. Mauresmo that she missed the party, so she needs to return in order to receive a proper send-off next semester)
R.I.P.: Leo Clijsters

*RECENTLY-APPOINTED LANGUAGE ARTS DEPT. HEADS*
UNORTHODOX RUSSIAN: Vitalia Diatchenko (we don't know how she learned to do things the ways she does, but we're intrigued)
CHINESE DEMOCRACY: Li Na, Peng Shuai, Yan Zi & Zheng Jie (currently collecting 92% of their salaries, but they're able to finally set their own schedules)
FRENCH-101: Aravane Rezai
GERMAN-101 and 102: Sarah Gronert
INTRODUCTION TO SPEED READING: Kim Clijsters (be sure to catch her lecture entitled "Planned Parenthood on the WTA Tour," with guest lecturer Lindsay Davenport, who assists Kim via e-mail)
MODERN ANCIENT JAPANESE: Kimiko Date-Krumm
CONVERSATIONAL (but not confrontational) ENGLISH: Serena Williams

CHARM SCHOOL DIRECTOR: Caroline Wozniacki


ADVANCED BULGARIAN-to-KAZAKHSTANI MATHEMATICS: Sesil Karatantcheva (for the next three years)
ANGER MANAGEMENT: Victoria Azarenka (a court-ordered appointment... apparently, she needs to learn to "walk" before she can "run">
"HOW TO MARRY INTO A NICE COUNTRY": Jarmila Groth (née Gajdosova)
PRINCIPLES OF GEOGRAPHY: Yanina Wickmayer (some of the students snidely call her class "Where in the World is Yanina WICK-mayer"... or was that Professor Shriver?)
THE THEORY OF TIME TRAVEL: we haven't hired a professor yet, but we'er interviewing prospective "educators" from NBC (although, we did talk to former NBC employee Dick Enberg... but we were too afraid that he might say something that would embarrass the Academy)
COMING THIS JANUARY!!!: Christina McHale delivers an address in our ongoing Lectue of the Month series: "The Benefits of Hydration"

"The desire is back." - Kim Clijsters, in April




"The fire within burns again." - Justine Henin, in September


Our student body is a talented crop, and always on the look-out for rewarding extracurricular activities to take up their valuable time.

=CLUB HEADS=
DRAMA CLUB: Jelena Jankovic, star of "Jelena's World (Jelenin Svet)," namesake of a far-off star and a "smile ambassador"
NUDE FIGURE MODELING: Serena Williams


TENNIS DRESS MODELING: Caroline Wozniacki (attire courtesy of Stella McCartney)
CHOIR: Vania King
FASHION/DESIGN: Venus Williams
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Dinara Safina & Ana Ivanovic
DEBATE CLUB/IMPROMPTU SPEECHMAKING: Laura Robson (she somewhat shirked her duties last school year, but we like the cut of her jib)
SHAKESPEARE CLUB: Elena Vesnina
SWIMSUIT MODELING III (bikinis required): Maria Kirilenko, Daniela Hantuchova & Tatiana Golovin


*"THE MANY FACES OF CAROLINE"*
[an award-winning exhibition from Miss Wozniacki]
FUN C-WOZ: in Eastbourne, with Aleksandra Wozniak
TITLE-WINNING CAROLINE: in Ponte Vedra Beach, keeping her head while Elena Vesnina was losing her's
HURTING C-WOZ: cramping at the SEC in Doha
HEART OF A LIONESS C-WOZ: triumphant at the SEC in Doha
HAPPY C-WOZ: at Flushing Meadows... Charming in the City
(Too) NICE C-WOZ: in Luxembourg, with Anne Kremer
SWEET CAROLINE: vs. Melanie Oudin at the U.S. Open, acknowledging a pro-American crowd but playing hard and hoping for people to cheer her next time out
ANGRY, HEAD-OVER-TEAKETTLED, BUT COMPOSED C-WOZ: vs. Elena Dementieva in Charleston
HUNGRY FOR EVEN MORE: in 2010?

"Everybody says the third time is the charm, but for me it's the fifth." - Victoria Azarenka, after winning her first WTA singles title in her fifth appearance in a final


=RUSSIAN CHESS CLUB=
CHAIRWOMAN: Svetlana Kuznetsova (to the victor goes the spoils)


ASSISTANT TO THE CHAIRWOMAN: Elena Dementieva (a year ago she looked great in Gold, but this year she came up a little short in grass-green)
(Still) THE NEXT BIG THING: Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
STAR-CROSSED: Vera Zvonareva
RESURRECTED FROM LENIN'S TOMB?: Maria Sharapova
FULL OF LIFE: Dinara Safina (just not in slams)
STILL FIGHTING THE GOOD FIGHT: Nadia Petrova
TEAM LEADER: Alisa Kleybanova (according to everyone she plays doubles with)
NextGEN HORDETTES: Evgeniya Rodina, Ksenia Pervak, Ksenia Lyskina, Yana Buchina, Daria Gavrilova & Olga Putintseva

"It's my brain." - Dinara Safina




"If I keep playing like this, I can get as high as anything." - Melanie Oudin, at the U.S. Open


=JUNIOR/SENIOR PROM COMMITTEE=
PROM QUEEN: Melanie Oudin
LADY-IN-WAITING (still): Victoria Azarenka
JUNIOR QUEEN: Kristina Mladenovic
QUEEN'S COURT: Sabine Lisicki, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Alexa Glatch, Magdalena Rybarikova, Sorana Cirstea, Laura Robson, Alexandra Dulgheru, Urszula Radwanska, Michelle Larcher de Brito
JUNIOR QUEEN'S COURT: Noppawan Lertcheewakarn, Heather Watson, Sloane Stephens, Christina McHale, Olivia Rogowska, Richel Hogenkamp
PARTY-CRASHERS, circa 2026: mini-Clijsters Jada and mini-Davenport Lauren


EARLY-BIRD (gets the ace?): Madison Keys, averaging over 100 mph per serve before her 15th birthday
SUDDEN WALLFLOWER: Alize Cornet
SCHEDULED PROM ADVISOR: Shahar Peer (too bad she couldn't make it through the security at the door)

"So the ball hit her body, and therefore she should have lost the point... instead of cheating." - Serena Williams, on Maria Jose Martinez-Sanchez


=CLASS FAVORITES=
MOST WELL-LIKED: Flavia Pennetta
(Still) MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED: Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
POWER COUPLE-NO-MORE: Chris Evert and Greg Norman
MOST COOLED-OFF RUSSIANS: The Hordette Fed Cup team
PERSONALITY PLUS: Jelena Jankovic, naturally
MOST CHARMING SMILE: Caroline Wozniacki
MOST ENDEARING HEART: Caroline Wozniacki (quite a back-to-back combination, I'd say)
QUIETEST '09 SLAM SINGLES SEMIFINALIST: Dominika Cibulkova
QUIETEST '09 SINGLES CHAMPION:Andrea Petkovic
QUIETEST (Down Under) COMEBACK:Alicia Molik
QUIETEST BACK-TO-BACK TITLES:Venus Williams (Dubai's non-debacle & Acapulco)
PERPETUAL HEARTBREAKER NO LONGER: Samantha Stosur
MOST LIKELY TO BE A FUTURE DIPLOMAT: Vera Zvonareva
MOST LIKELY TO IMPERSONATE A ROCKER: Mashona Washington, a Bronze Medalist in the Backspin Games' tearing up a hotel room competition
MOST ADMIRED: Liezel Huber
LATE BLOOMER: Melinda Czink
MAYBE NOT SO LOST A CAUSE, AFTER ALL: Agnes Szavay (fingers crossed)
HOPING TO PROVE MARRIAGE NEED NOT LEAD TO TENNIS DEATH: Bethanie Mattek-Sands
NEW/OLD KID: Jelena Dokic
SMARTEST: Samantha Stosur (singles is not selfish on the Road to Osaka)
MOST MISSED (due to injury): Tatiana Golovin, Good and Bad
MOST MISSED (by Backspin): Kim Clijsters' "clean slate" (hmmm, yeah... um, not really)
MOST MISSED (no more... soon): Justine Henin
ENDANGERED: any Wimbledon official who leaks the we-already-know-it's-true-but-you-still-shouldn't-admit-it tournament policy of giving bigger courts to the tour's most beautiful players. On second thought, he's probably the safest employee at the Club. So, make it "EXTINCT"... and rainy days at Centre Court.


FRIENDS ON THE MOVE: Caroline & Sorana
NOT FRIENDS ANYTIME SOON: Serena Williams and Dinara Safina, and Maria Jose Martinez-Sanchez, and that linesperson and...
MOST TALKED-ABOUT FASHION STATEMENT: footwear with a message

BEST SYMMETRY: Serena Williams mocks Dinara Safina's tournament titles while everyone agrees that SHE, not the Russian, is the "true #1" player on tour
WORST SYMMETRY: Serena Williams mocks Dinara Safina's "inconsequential" tournament title in Rome, while not thinking about the fact that the Russian defeated sister Venus there in the semifinals before winning that particular event
MOST TELLING SYMMETRY: Comeback Kim Clijsters wins U.S. Open... Justine Henin announces comeback soon afterward. Coincidence? Ah, lova ya, La Petit Taureau!

*HUH...?*
STARTING POINT: in February, Yanina Wickmayer is defaulted from a challenger event in Clearwater, Florida after smacking a ball that hit a linesperson. Having advanced to the singles and doubles finals, she must forfeit ranking points and prize money. She isn't suspended.
AND WE MOVE ALONG: Serena Williams talks about how a "dead person" could be fined by the WTA for skipping a tournament
WE GET THIS: Richard Gasquet is suspended for testing positive for cocaine, but has the penalty lifted when he says he simply kissed a cocaine-using girl at a Miami nightclub the night before the test. Apparently, Martina Hingis' two-year ban for a positive cocaine test came after the Swiss Miss was detected to have even less of the drug in HER system than the Frenchman did.
AND THIS: Tamira Paszek isn't suspended for undergoing a "blood enrichment procedure"
AND WHO COULD FORGET THIS?: Serena Williams makes threatening gestures toward a linesperson, resulting in a verbal abuse point penalty on match point. She is fined, but with the incident still "under investigation," she has not been handed a suspension as of the end of the '09 season.
AND, YES, EVEN THIS: An injured Caroline Wozniacki's retirement one game away from defeating Anne Kremer, right before the start of the SEC, is flagged for investigation after possible online betting irregularities... never mind the ridiculous notion that to suspect player wrongdoing would be to assume the Dane was the stupidest/most naive person on the face of the earth to think she could slide "under the radar" while retiring up a set and 5-0.
WE GET THIS: Yanina Wickmayer is suspended for a year by the World Anti-Doping Association after failing to report her whereabouts so she that she could be located in the event that she was called upon to take a drug test. No test was failed, and an appeal is underway. Yet, damage to the Belgian's reputation is a foregone conclusion.
Hmmm, WHAT AM A MISSING? Oh, yeah...: "New Starting Point": press releases, right before Wickmayer's suspension, for Andre Agassi's autobiography recount how he tested postive for crystal meth, but told a tall tale to ATP drug "investigators" and got off scott-free.
OH, NOW I UNDERSTAND... my neighbor's sins are my downfall: Though I'm not sure what it all means, or whether this little chronological rundown was necessary to make whatever the point may be.

"You're be playing Yanina WICK-mayer. (pause, after being booed by the crowd, then with faux confusion) What'd I say?" - a snide Pam Shriver, interviewing Caroline Wozniacki after her quarterfinal victory at the U.S. Open




"I'm back. I want to bring excitement back to tennis." - Jelena Jankovic, in Cincinnati


Not everything is subjective, though. G.P.A.'s and S.A.T. scores are important, too.

=HONOR SOCIETY ROLL CALL=
HARD COURT PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Elena Dementieva (by way of her pre-Oz & pre-U.S. Open results)
CLAY COURT PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Svetlana Kuznetsova
GRASS COURT PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Serena Williams
INDOOR PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Amelie Mauresmo (finally, she'll always have Paris)
FED CUP PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Flavia Pennetta

"It's really emotional to win today. What I had to go through. It's really great to have this win. I don't think a lot of people know what it means to me. It's great to be here at a slam." - a tearful Jelena Dokic, at the Australian Open, after ending her six-year long drought of grand slam main draw wins, courtesy of a whole heap o' frustration and heartbreak




"If I could I'd shove this tennis ball down your throat and kill you." - Serena Williams, at the U.S. Open


*"TELEVISION PROGRAMS & THEIR STARS"*
[courtesy of Backspin Academy's "Future Casting Directors" program]
"CSI:New York": Serena Williams
"HEROES": Shahar Peer & Andy Roddick
"the forgotten (no longer)": Justine Henin
"The Price is Right": Larry Scott
"Lost": Nicole Vaidisova
"The Young and the Restless": Ana Ivanovic
"General Hospital": Sabine Lisicki
"The View (from the frontline)": Shahar Peer
"All My Children": Lindsay Davenport
"Glee": Caroline Wozniacki
"Make Me A Supermodel": Daniela Hantuchova, Maria Kirilenko & Tatiana Golovin
"Law & Order": Mashona Washington
"10 Things I Hate About You": Kim Clijsters (all right, that's a little HARSH, guys)
"Wipeout": Dinara Safina
"So You Think You Can Dance": Martina Hingis & Monica Seles
"Cougar Town": Kimiko Date-Krumm
"Life on Mars": Jelena Jankovic
"Dr. Oz": Jelena Dokic
"Judge Judy": Yanina Wickmayer
"Accidentally On Purpose": The American Fed Cup Team
"America's Got Talent": Vania King
"Survivor": Venus Williams

Thanks for your contribution, ladies. You're almost and long-winded as our Academy President.

"I just thought, 'My eyes! My innocent eyes!'." - Serena Williams, talking about her match which was interrupted by a streaker


=BACKSPIN ALL-STAR TEAMS=
*ALL-BEAUTIFUL*
Venus at the All-England Club, even as runner-up
=============================
"Believe" on Little MO's shoes
=============================
The U.S. Open on ESPN, as it turned out
=============================
Caroline in the Desert... through pain comes wisdom, and maybe one day even legend

=============================
Monica Seles in the Hall of Fame
=============================
Maria Sharapova's serve in Tokyo (Supernovic Hope springs eternal)
=============================
The unapologetic boldness of Serena Williams
=============================
The presence of the WTA, the most successful and far-reaching women's sports organization in the world, in the Middle East
=============================
Flavia Pennetta in the spotlight
=============================
Jelena Dokic embracing Australia after all these years, and having the feelings reciprocated
=============================
Jelena Jankovic's idea for "air-conditioned shoes"... though I suspect they might hinder her movement, and we surely don't need to go through that sort of trial yet again
=============================
A roof on Centre Court, and Laver Arena
=============================
U.S. Open Series TV ads featuring personal moments and player backstories
=============================
Day 7 on Laver Arena
=============================
Victoria Azarenka's desire
=============================
Liezel Huber's joy
=============================
Britain's surprising "Lass Brigade" (official motto: "The Cheekier the Better"
=============================
Venus Williams' overall leadership performance on the Players Council
=============================
Serena Williams' "Are you staring at my titles?" t-shirt. The Spirit of Sania lives!
=============================

"Eating too much chocolate out of depression from not being allowed to play for India." - Shikha Uberoi, an American citizen playing under the Indian flag, saying what she'd been doing after the India tennis federation ruled that she could not represent the nation in Fed Cup play


*ALL-UGLY*
The Dubai Debacle
=============================
Tennis on NBC
=============================
The decision to train in Mexico during the offseason
=============================
Maria Sharapova's serve before Tokyo
=============================
AnaIvo's "year after-plus"
=============================
Serena Williams' unfortunate thoughtlessness when she's angry
=============================
Venus Williams toeing the party line in Dubai
=============================
Victoria Azarenka's temper
=============================
The growing number of Not-Ready-for-Prime-Time players populating prime time in the women's game
=============================
No roof on Ashe Stadium
=============================
Sad to say, Monica Seles' dancing abilities on "Dancing with the Stars"
=============================
Anne Keothavong's relationship with the Lawn Tennis Association
=============================
Vera Zvonareva essentially ruining an on-the-verge-of-great season with one wrong step in South Carolina
=============================

"(She's) had a 'great' year. (pause) She won Rome and Madrid. (loud cackle)" - Serena Williams, sarcastically pointing out then-#1 Dinara Safina's "qualifications" for sitting atop the rankings




=ALL BACKSPIN WANTS BETWEEN NOW AND CHRISTMAS 2010=
For Comcast to buy NBC, the powers-that-be to re-think the network's spending, and then decide to drop its grand slam tennis coverage.
=============================
FINALLY... that long-awaited Sharapova vs. Vaidisova match.

Sorry, it's become something of a tradition to include that one here. But times change, so I'll now settle for more Sharapova vs. Azarenka clashes. The two we saw in 2009 were enough to make anyone wish for more.
=============================
For things to happen during the 2010 season that'll allow me to finally use up some of those Sarah Palin jokes I've been banking the last few months. Some things just shouldn't be forced upon an unsuspecting public without warning and/or reason, you know. Ah, that felt good. Well, at least I can cross that minor crack off the list.

And, no, "Mrs.-I'm-a-Governor-Wait-No-I'm-Not, but you-betcha-I'll-think-I-should-be-President in 2012," I wasn't saying that any of the minors in your household are on crack. Just because your husband's name is Todd, doesn't mean I'm ready to go "snowmachine" riding with the Palin clan. Thank the Tennis Gods. (Yes, Sarah, I KNOW you think that was blasphemous.)

Okay, that's two... or is it three?
=============================
More Kichenok twins!
=============================
An NCAA singles championship for Georgia Bulldog Chelsey Gullickson
=============================
A comeback from Justine Henin.



Thanks, Santa. Would it be greedy to ask for at least one grand slam title for La Petit Taureau, too?
=============================
To see Yanina Wickmayer on the court. Playing. Even if unsuspecting linespeople and Pam Shriver might have to watch their backs in moments of Belgian disgust.
=============================
For Melanie Oudin to keep the smile (and look of determination) on her face.
=============================
For Sabine Lisicki to stay healthy.
=============================
For the WTA to not be given a belated "mulligan" in Dubai due to the current debt crisis in the U.A.E. Too easy.
=============================
For injuries to any of the former-or-current world singles #1's to derail what very well could be the most competitive and fascinating WTA season... well, ever.
=============================
A season without incessant handwringing about the decibal level of certain players' grunts/squawks/squeals/squeaks/screams or whatever new noise some young lady will invariably come up with by this time next year.
=============================
A little more Amelie, just for old time's sake.
=============================
For Queen Chaos to fully get her groove back.
=============================

"The more you know, the worse you sleep." - Dinara Safina


Amen, sister.

Whew! If you made it this far, congratulations. Hopefully, there was something here for everyone. If not, well, it wasn't for a lack of trying.

To be continued in 2010... hmmm, how are we saying that, by the way? "Twenty Ten," "Two-Thousand Ten," or, in shorthand, "Oh-Ten?" I guess we'll find out next year. Anyway, as I was saying, to be continued in 2010...

Res Ipsa Loquitur. All for now.



PAST YEARBOOKS: 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008

2009 SEASON REVIEW EDITIONS OF WTA BACKSPIN:
...Revolving Doors - 2010 WTA Guide Preview
...Regional Honors & '10 All-Intriguing Team and Market Tips
...Backspin Awards
...Ms.Backspin: A T-E-A-M Effort
...WTA Yearbook

Read more...

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

ITF Backspin (Wk.46)- A Hordette, a Maiden and No Kindness From a Stranger

ITF Backspin. A day late. Not a dollar short (not very long, either). But the first production since I finally got that "Decade's Best" taste out of my mouth.


ITF PLAYER OF THE WEEK: Evgeniya Rodina/RUS
...
the 20-year old Russian won the $50K Bratislava challenger in the Slovak Republic, getting wins over Michaella Krajicek, Sofia Arvidsson and Renata Voracova 6-4/6-2 in the final.
=============================
RISER: Sandra Zahlavova/CZE
...
Czech Maiden Zahlavova opened the 2009 season with a 1-9 slide that lasted into April. She's since rebounded, though, advancing to six ITF singles finals over the course of the season. Her victory in the $25K in Opole, Poland was her second title of the year. After knocking off Simona Halep, Zahlavova defeated Serbia's Ana Jovanovic 6-0/6-2 in the final.
=============================
SURPRISES: Camila Giorgi/ITA & Mashona Washington/USA
...
Italy's Giorgi, 17, claimed her second ITF title of the season with a win in the $50K in Toronto. Before taking out Aniko Kapros 4-6/6-4/6-0 in the final, she got wins over the likes of Ashley Weinhold, Valerie Tetreault, Alexandra Stevenson and #1-seed Stephanie Dubois. Meanwhile, in the same event, veteran Washington got wins over Lauren Albanese and Sophie Ferguson before taking Dubois to three sets in the QF. She and Sharon Fichman also reached the doubles final, which they couldn't play because of an injury to Fichman.
=============================
VETERANS: Rika Fujiwara/JPN & Anne Kremer/LUX
...
Fujiwara, 28, won the Pune, India $50K with a 5-7/6-4/6-3 victory over Bojana Jovanovski in the final. In Bratislava, Kremer, 34, qualified and notched wins over Ekaterina Bychkova (who retired from the match at 5-0 in the 2nd set, but not while leading Luxembourg's Own, ala Caroline Wozniacki -- Kremer was up 7-5/5-0) and Vesna Manasieva before falling in three sets in the SF to Renata Voracova.
=============================
FRESH FACE: Olivia Rogowska/AUS
...
the 18-year old Rogowska is already preparing for the Oz circuit, winning a $25K in Esperance, Australia. Her victim in the final? Well, none other than Alicia Molik, who sure has been fitting in a great deal of tennis into her Down Under comeback the last couple months. Rogowska won 6-1/3-6/6-2, and also won the doubles title with fellow Shiela Shannon Golds.
=============================
DOWN: Tamarine Tanasugarn/THA
...
the #1 seed in the $50K Pune event, vet Tanasugarn, who actually defended a grass court WTA tour title in the Netherlands over the summer despite seeing her year-end ranking take a tumble over the past year, was taken out in the challenger's QF round by Nina Bratchikova by a 6-3/6-2 score.
=============================
JUNIOR STAR: Marianne Jodoin/CAN
...
in Toronto, the 16-year old Canadian grabbed the $50K doubles title along with 38-year old countrywoman Maureen Drake. Unseeded, the pair reached the final, then were awarded the win over Fichman/Washington when fellow Canadian Fichman was too injured to play.
=============================


1. $50K Bratislava SF - Renata Voracova def. Anne Kremer
...5-7/6-2/6-3.
The kindness of a stranger act wasn't passed down from Wozniacki to Voracova, apparently.
=============================
2. $50K Toronto 1st Rd. - Alexandra Stevenson def. Heather Watson
...6-2/6-4.
Hmmm, I wonder if Brit Watson knew before this match that Stevenson was a former Wimbledon Ladies singles semifinalist? I wonder how many people who actually witnessed that result back in '99 remember it all these years later, or maybe think it's some sort of reverse "FlashForward" vision thing?
=============================
3. $50K Toronto 1st Rd. - Christina McHale def. Julia Glushko
...6-7/6-3/6-3.
I guess McHale didn't topple over due to the heat here. Of course, this WAS Toronto... in November... indoors... without a broken air conditioning system. The Oz Open is but two months away, though. (Fingers crossed)
=============================

*OF NOTE*
  • Lyudmyla Kichenok gets her moment in the ITF website spotlight

  • ...is Nadiya next?


  • Zoo Tennis' Colette Lewis reviews Andre Agassi's autobiography

  • ...I'm still not sure whether or not I really want to read his book or not.


  • Year in Review by Women Who Serve's Diane Dees

  • ...yeah, this is from a week and a half ago, but since the "WTA Yearbook" is coming up this weekend...




    **MOST ITF TITLES - RUSSIANS**
    3...Galina Fokina
    2...Yulia Kalabina
    2...Daria Kuchmina
    2...Regina Kulikova
    2...Ksenia Pervak
    2...EVGENIYA RODINA
    2...Arina Rodionova


    All for now.



    NEXT: 2009 WTA Yearbook

    Read more...

    Sunday, November 22, 2009

    The Decade's Best: Players #1 & #2- "Two for the Ages"



    Well, it took ten years worth of tennis action, condensed and spread out over nearly a year's worth of "Decade's Best" special editions of Backspin, to get to this. The best two players of the decade.

    Funny thing is, I probably could have just started by talking about these two women back in December and skipped all the other late night posts between then and now and no one would have been any the wiser.

    Oh, well. Hindsight, right?

    There are a great deal of easy arguments to begin and end when it comes to the other women on this list and where they might rank, but not these two. 100% of 100% of the lists seeking to determine the best players on the WTA tour from 2000-09 would -- or at least should -- begin with them. The only possible question might be which one should be ranked #1.

    But is it really?

    In the end, while one gets credit for fashioning a remakable career filled with moments of clenched fists and heart-stopping drama, the other, well, is quite possibly the most awesome player the sport has produced. Ever.

    So, let's get to it:

    #2 - Justine Henin, BEL


    "I dedicated this to my mother because when I came here with her eleven years ago I said, 'One day I'll be on that court and maybe I'll win.' And today, I did. - Henin, while addressing the crowd after winning her first Roland Garros crown in 2003, talking about her '92 presence in the stands along with her mother when Monica Seles won her third straight title in Paris. Henin's mother died in 1995. In 2007, Henin won her third straight RG championship.


    No one would have ever dared to cast Justine Henin in the role of a dominant figure in the sport during a decade when "Big Babe" tennis came to the forefront. She initially arrived on tour as a slight teenager from the small nation of Belgium, with a varied game highlighted by a thing-of-beauty backhand. A baseliner by trade, she punctuated her style with a natural aggression (and surprising pop off the ground) that served to make up for her physical disadvantages against her sometimes-towering, harder-hitting opponents.

    Even though it was plain from the start that she was going to be a player to be reckoned with down the line, no one could have guessed that there lurked inside her a little bull of a competitor that would make her one of the sport's all-time greats and an inspiration to many (Melanie Oudin will likely be only one of many who'll eventually list themselves as an admirer). Of course, when a player has such a larger-than-life heart, and a desire to succeed fueled by a childhood goal and the lingering pain of tragedy, physical stature hardly matters, does it?

    No player held the #1 ranking for more weeks than Henin did during the 2000's (117, sixth-most all-time), nor ended as many seasons in the top spot (three times, 2003 and 2006-07, tied with Lindsay Davenport). She won more singles titles (40 of her 41 career championships) than any other woman this decade, as well. Her seven career slam singles wins were surpassed only by Serena Williams' ten over the past ten-year span, and in Henin's final full season on tour she defeated Williams in three straight slams during the '07 season. In early 2004, she was the reigning champion at three of the four slams after winning the Australian Open in January '04. A year-end Top 10er every year from 2001-07, she became the first woman to ever retire from the sport while ranked #1 when she walked away (temporarily, as it's turned out) from the game in the spring of '08.

    Over the course of the decade, Henin's evolution came full circle. We saw Henin rise as a player with great promise, but suffer through early (and now largely forgotten) battles with her nerves while trying to create her own breakthrough moment. Her love 3rd set loss to Venus Williams in her first slam final at Wimbledon in 2001 proved to be a learning experience for the then-19 year old. The confidence that she was worthy just wasn't quite there. But grow confident she did.

    When we were last blessed with her presence on tour, it'd become fashionable in these parts to say that the only thing that had ever been able to stop Henin was the cytomegalovirus (and she put up a grand fight against that, perhaps pulling off her career-best performance just before the viral illness forced her off the court in late '04) and her own heart, which had not coincidentally lost some of its single-minded desire to pursue her tennis dreams after she reconnected with her previously estranged family during the year before her retirement. With her off-court life having lost some of it's need to prove herself, her champion's "edge" was dulled. The confidence seemed to ebb, just enough to matter. Somewhere along the line during her final months on tour, she began to lose the tight matches she'd once dominated. Not long afterward, she was gone.

    Where things changed for the good for Henin on the court, though, is a little easier to pinpoint.

    In the '03 Australian Open 4th Round against Lindsay Davenport, Henin experienced one of those epiphanies that often accompany the transition of a young player from a player-to-watch to an actual champion. Suffering through horrendous cramps in the Melbourne heat, Henin found herself flat on her back and in pain on the court. When she managed to rise up and win the match, she could no longer question her ability to compete at the very top levels of the sport. In that instant, she realized that her heart was indeed big enough to keep that promise to her mother, and that confidence boost is the moment that Henin has often pointed to as the moment when everything changed. She lost in the semifinals in that tournament, but she left Australia armed with everything she'd need for the remainder of her career.

    By the end of the 2003 season, she'd won her first Roland Garros title and pulled off the most remakable weekend performance in many a year at the U.S. Open, winning a cramp-and-exhaustion inducing marathon with Jennifer Capriati in the semifinals, supposedly being questionable to even play in the final the following day, then coming out the next night and seeming to be the fresher player while taking out countrywoman Kim Clijsters in straight sets. La Petit Taureau was born.

    A month later, Henin moved into the #1 ranking for the very first time.



    A junior champ there in 1997, Henin's special relationship with Roland Garros never relented throughout her career. Her three consecutive Roland Garros championships from 2005-07 have only been matched in the Open era by Seles' three-peat from 1990-92. In fact, from 2003-07, Henin's only loss during her four-titles-in-five-years stretch in Paris came against Tathiana Garbin in 2004 when the Belgian was suffering through the weakness associated with her illness. After the loss in May, she didn't play again until late in the summer at the Athens Olympics.

    There, Henin amazingly gathered whatever energy she had left to put on a gutsy performance that, in retrospect, turned out to be the most remarkable in her career. After erasing a 5-1 3rd set deficit in the semifinals against Anastasia Myskina, she defeated Amelie Mauresmo in the Gold Medal match. After a 4th Round loss at the U.S. Open, she pulled out of all her scheduled tournaments for the rest of the season. A subsequent knee injury delayed the start of her '05 season until the following March. When she returned after a seven-month absence, she ripped through the clay season, going on a 24-match tear, winning four titles, overcoming a match point against Svetlana Kuznetsova in the 4th Round at Roland Garros before winning yet another title in Paris.



    Henin's 2006 season was simply historic, and 2007 was even more impressive. In '06, she became the first woman since Steffi Graf in 1993 to reach the finals of all four slams (winning another RG) and the Season-Ending Championships (which she won after having wrapped up the year-end #1 ranking). A year later, she put away another title in Paris, as well as her second U.S. Open (becoming the first player to defeat both Williams sisters in a single slam, then win the title -- a feat matched in NYC by Clijsters in '09), winning ten of the fourteen tournaments she entered, compiling a 63-4 record (the best single-season win percentage since Graf in '89) and ending her second consecutive #1 season on a 25-match winning streak.

    It was her last full season this decade. Her retirement came just two weeks before the start of her beloved Roland Garros tournament in '08, as if she couldn't bear going there without the confidence that she could put forth her best effort.

    With her return to the tour now set for January 2010, Henin will set about trying to collect the one slam crown that has so far eluded her. Wimbledon. A runner-up there in a pair of three-set finals, in '01 and '06, her last visit to the All-England Club was not a good one. After leading Marion Bartoli in the semifinals by a 6-1/5-3 score, windy conditions put her off her game and she never recovered, losing to the Frenchwoman to end what had been a string of five consecutive appearances in the finals of slams in which she'd participated. With the resurgent Williams sisters now presiding over the lawns of SW19 like they haven't since the early seasons of the decade, Henin's quest won't be an easy one to pull off.

    But, of course, when have long odds stopped her in the past?

    While Henin's story began with such heartfelt emotion, she often found herself at the center of controversy over the years. Many times seen as being unrelatable and TOO single-minded, especially in comparison to her always-ready-to-please countrywoman Clijsters, who she'd once teamed with to claim Belgium's only Fed Cup championship in '01, Henin was often cast in the black-hatted villain role during her career (even as she ironically always sported a white cap on court, and was one of the most charitable players off it). While Clijsters courted approval, Henin rarely spent much time worrying about how she was perceived, shrugging off the criticism from many corners (including here) when she refused to admit waving off a serve in a match against Serena Williams, and being the focus of many mini-rants about her "unsportsmanlike gamesmanship" that was sometimes "disrepectful to the game" (that one came from Clijsters herself, as Henin has traditionally been one of the few who've been able to bring the Belgian to the edge of being something other than "Nice Kim"). Again, even in announcing her comeback, Henin's timing might have been considered "questionable" by some, seeing that it came just days after Clijsters' comeback victory at this year's U.S. Open, cluttering the headlines of the new champ's success with whispers and rumors, and then actual facts, about her own return to the game next season.

    Gotcha, Kim.

    Of course, the biggest controversy in Henin's career came at the Australian Open in 2006, when she retired due to illness from a match she was losing to Mauresmo in the final, "robbing," in some critic's words, the Frenchwoman of a proper celebratory moment. Some even went so far overboard as to say the moment would "tarnish her career forever" (hmmm, what is it with Pam Shriver and Belgians, anyway?). The charges were that Henin was a sore loser, and that when she realized she was going to lose she effectively "picked up her racket and went home." As I said then, one moment in a career filled with handfuls of others when Henin gave every living ounce of energy she had to win a match, was hardly enough to besmirch anything (just as with Serena's tirade at this year's U.S. Open). And, as predicted, once Henin retired two years later, the moment was but a footnote in her biography. In fact, as soon as the Belgian was no longer around, all that criticism turned to longing for what the game lost when she retired. From all corners of the globe, the "power vacuum" on a Henin-less tour was the pet phrase rolling off everyone's tongue.

    I guess people didn't know what they had until it was gone.

    One day, they'll write stories about Justine Henin. I guess we should have known from the start, considering she won the very first WTA event she entered as a 16-year old in Antwerp in 1999. But, really, who am I kidding? They've already been writing stories about Henin for centuries.

    Tales of an underdog making good, with anything from a slingshot to a tennis racket as a weapon of choice. Inspired by tragedy. Accomplishing goals against all odds and, while maybe not winning the hearts of ALL in the end, winning the respect that was sought from the start.

    Where Henin is different is that she not only walked away on top and triumphant, but that she's now set to return to the circle of competition in an attempt to construct a just-as-successful second act to her story.

    Ah, but that's a story for "The Decade's Best: 2010-19," isn't it?

    *BACKSPIN LINKS OF NOTE*
    Time Capsule: U.S. Open '03/'05 (Henin/Clijsters)
    The Best of Henin (2008)
    Bring It On (Comeback Announcement)



    #1 - Serena Williams, USA


    If there is such a thing as a tennis superhero, Serena Williams is it. She wasn't born with a cape, but someone should probably check with Oracene, just to be sure.

    Quite simply, Serena is, in full, the most talented, feared, sometimes-controversial, always exciting, enigmatic, fierce, pulse pounding, jump-out-your-seat, shake-your-head-in-astonishment, kick-butt-and-take-names, and leave-'em-wanting-more champion of her time. Oh, and she's the most accomplished player of her generation, too. But, still, even after all we've seen, that some might proclaim that she STILL hasn't fully taken advantage of her gifts over the years, well, that just speaks to how great she truly is. Ever since she first seared her brand into the hide of this sport more than a decade ago, she's been tennis' "Soul Survivor" and the last woman any other tennis player wants to go up against head-to-head when she's wearing that look of determination on her face on the other side of the net.

    Yeah, you know the look. It's that unmistakable, "you go ahead and celebrate your win today, but just know, one day, in the not too distant future, I'll be standing over you with my foot placed squarely on your chest while you beg for mercy" expression Serena sometimes gets when she's denied something she wants very much. It's such a powerful predictor that you can occasionally forecast its aftereffects months in advance. And when it's hidden from sight? Haha. Well, THAT'S when she's most dangerous. I mean, just ask all those poor souls she's dumped out of the Australian Open in stomach-turning (for the vanquished) circumstances over the years. Hint: when Serena lets loose with one of those primal howls she's become so fond of in big moments, the end is near.



    Oddly enough, when you remember back to the beginning, Serena wasn't supposed to be in the starring role of the story of the Williams sisters. She seemed to be something akin to a nominal DVD extra -- a nice little throw-in for those inclined to delve deeper into the production, but hardly the reason for making a special purchase. Only father Richard knew she was actually the feature attraction, and even while he told us all what he saw in his crystal ball, we didn't really believe him. But then Serena proved him right.

    Before this decade began, Serena ended the slam history of the 1990's by providing a preview of what was to come. Truthfully, though, everything was ALREADY there. The amazing court coverage, penetrating and big moment-loving serve (more reliable, and sometimes even as hard, as her sister's... with a second serve that's probably the best the women's game has EVER entertained) and the don't-think-it's-over-because-it-never-is ability to make a sudden u-turn right before a match goes over the cliff to oblivion. At the 1999 U.S. Open, the #7-seeded 18-year old proceeded to steal big sister Venus' thunder, claiming the family's first slam title by defeating a group of players who eventually collected twenty slam singles crowns -- the then-#1 (Martina Hingis), #2 (Lindsay Davenport) and #4 (Monica Seles) players in the world, plus Kim Clijsters (coming back from a 5-3 3rd set deficit in the 3rd Round) and Conchita Martinez. As the first African-American slam singles titlist since Althea Gibson in 1958, from that moment, Williams began her pursuit of the mythical "Greatest of All-Time" (G.O.A.T.) moniker... a "title" she's more than capable of winning even if her final career numbers don't match up to some of the other past champions in the conversation.

    After slowly biding her time for a couple of seasons after her early breakthrough, Serena grew into the perfect embodiment of the eventual G.O.A.T. in 2002. Early in the season in Miami, she telegraphed her course, becoming just the second woman to ever defeat the top three-ranked players (Jennifer Capriati, Venus & Hingis) in a single event. At Roland Garros, she met Venus in the final and became the first younger sister to ever defeat her older sibling in a grand slam match. In the Wimbledon final, she did it again. She first rose to the #1 ranking that July, and there she would stay for the next fifty-seven weeks. At the U.S. Open, while defeating Venus in yet another slam final, she grabbed her second title at Flushing Meadows, doing so without dropping a set, just as she had at SW19 (joining Martina Navratilova in '83 as the only other woman to sweep both slams so seamlessly). With three straight slams in her pocket, she headed to Melbourne and, waiting for her in the final yet again, was her sister. One more time, she sent Venus home with second place to win her fourth straight slam title.

    The "Serena Slam," dubbed so after coming not long after Tiger Woods' four straight, non-calendar year "Tiger Slam" wins at golf majors, thus entered the sports lexicon.

    Williams' streak of grand slam match wins would end at thirty-three at the '03 Roland Garros, but she won a fifth slam in six attempts at Wimbledon later that summer. After that, injuries (specifically a series of knee ailments that led to surgery) and a so-called "lack of focus" (as her off-the-court interests allowed her mind to "wander") allowed her body to slip from its "Serena Slam" peak. After her '03 Wimbledon win, she won only one slam between then and the end of the 2006 season, and missed three slams due to injury. Her knee put her out eight months from the end of the '03 season though the early months of '04, then another six months in '06. In that '06 season, Williams played only four events, saw her ranking dip as low as #140, outside the Top 100 for the first time since 1997, and she ended the year at #95.

    But as she has so often done throughout her career, Serena made a slam her immediate salvation. In Melbourne in '07, she entered the Australian Open ranked #81 and unseeded, but exited it with her eighth career slam singles win. After losing three straight times in slams to Henin the remainder of the season, Williams slowly began to rebuild her legacy as the best player in the game. Sure, it helped that the now-dominating presence of Henin disappeared with the Belgian's retirement in mid-'08, but it was Williams' best stretch of good health since her "Serena Slam" days that really restored her previous aura over the last two seasons of the 2000's.

    The scramble for #1 on the Henin-less tour led to Serena reclaiming the #1 ranking for the first time since 2003 in September '08. The five-year gap between her top-ranked stints is the longest in WTA history. She stayed atop the rankings for just a month, finishing the year at #2 after winning the U.S. Open (defeating eventual year-end #1 Jelena Jankovic in the final), her first title in NYC since '02. Not surprisingly, it came just a few months after I'd noticed "the look" on Serena's face after she failed to take down Venus in the Wimbledon final in July. But with her honor restored, she was just getting (re)started. Her '09 season turned out to be her best, at least at the year's biggest tournaments, since her "Serena Slam" run.

    After winning her fourth straight "odd-year" Australian Open crown ('03/'05/'07/'09), she went on to win her first Wimbledon title since '03 (defeating Venus in the final, just like old times), her eleventh slam overall. At that point, she was the reigning champion at three of the four slams, her best standing since her four-straight run in 2002-03. She went on to claim her second Season-Ending Championships title (her first since '01) and finish with her first year-end #1 ranking in seven seasons. By the end of this year, she'll have occupied the spot for eighty-three weeks in her career, good for eighth-best all-time. The only real demerits in her season were her unfortunate mocking of then-#1 Dinara Safina's top ranking in spite of her grand slam collapses (even if Serena's points were accurate, she probably wasn't the one who should have been making them), and her now-infamous blow-up at a U.S. Open linesperson after a foot-fault call during a semifinal match with Kim Clijsters (a second "game misconduct" from Williams in the match, for verbal abuse, was penalized with a lost point, and since it came on match point due to the foot-fault on a second serve, the Belgian advanced to the final without playing another point).

    Of course, lost in all the uproar about her behavior on that inglorious night, little was said about how Serena actually managed to cheat herself, for she more than any other player might have been able to serve her way out of her seemingly unwinnable position against Clijsters (she was down 6-4/6-5) by reeling off a string of aces. She might not have, but if she had no one would have been shocked. Such is the awe of Serena on a roll... especially the sort that no one sees coming until it's too late. And Williams surely has a slew of them in her history.

    Here are just a few of her "escapes" before eventually claiming one of her eleven slam titles:

    2003 Australian Open: Clijsters led 5-1 in the 3rd set in the SF, and held two match points
    2005 Australian Open: Maria Sharapova had three match points in the SF
    2007 Australian Open: Nadia Petrova (3rd Rd.) and Shahar Peer (QF) served for the match
    2009 Australian Open: Svetlana Kuznetsova served for the match in the QF
    2009 Wimbledon: Elena Dementieva had a match point in the SF

    In all, Serena won thirty singles titles in the 2000's (of her 35 career crowns), ten of them slams. Her eleven career major titles are eighth on the all-time list. One of nine women who've won all four slams, she has multiple titles at three (four Australian Open, one Roland Garros, three Wimbledon, three U.S. Open). The only players who have ever defeated Serena in a slam final are her sister Venus and Sharapova, and only Venus ('08 Wimbledon) has done so since Serena was shocked in the '04 SW19 final by the Russian. Williams finished in the Top 10 eight times this decade, and has held a Top 20 rank every season but '06 since she was a 17-year old in 1998.

    All that, and Serena is part of maybe the most lethal doubles team ever, as well. Thus far, she and Venus have combined to win ten slam titles (eight this decade), half-way to a tour record, and two Olympic Golds. Serena also won two Mixed Doubles slams with Max Mirnyi in 1998, bringing her career slam titles total to twenty-three, tied with Steffi Graf for the highest number behind Martina Navratilova's tour-best run-up to fifty-nine since Billie Jean King's final slam Doubles title in 1980. Serena is currently one of six women with career slams in both singles and doubles (Navratilova, King, Margaret Smith-Court, Doris Hart & Shirley Fry), and is just Mixed titles at the Australian Open and Roland Garros from becoming the fifth to achieve career slams in all three tennis disciplines.



    A lightning rod over the years, Serena has likely been the subject of more conversations than any other tennis player since her arrival on the scene. Whether it be about her tennis, her on-court attire (from the early flying hair beads to the catsuit to the superhero boots... hmmm, maybe the notion of the cape WASN'T so far-fetched), her being "called out" by no less than Chris Evert a few years ago for not upholding her "responsibility" to the sport to be the (maybe all-time) best that she could be, or her recent naked cover shot for ESPN the Magazine. Even her passion has often been used against Serena at times, making one wonder if her's is sometimes TOO strong a force of personality -- female personality, especially -- in some corners of Madison Avenue and the like. This year's U.S. Open incident falls into this category, too, as it's easy to question whether the same hullabaloo would have occurred had a male player "threatened" a linesperson, with the moment possibly quickly forgotten and passed off as simply a case of a champion "blowing off steam" on a bad night.



    As usual, though, Serena will prevail in the end. She'll rise above it all, both on the court and off. And she seems to be no where near finished winning major titles, either.

    She recently announced her goal of winning an Olympic singles Gold, the only major championship she's never claimed. Thus far, only Graf has won all four slams, the SEC and Olympic singles Gold. Additionally, Serena is just one more RG singles title from joining Smith-Court, Evert, Navratilova and Graf as the only women with multiple championships at all four slams. Who knows what Williams' numbers will be by the end of her career, but no matter how close to the all-time records they are they'll be close enough for her to legitimately be declared the "best of the best" by many.

    The only sticking point might be that Serena's talent level is SO high that no number will be looked upon as "enough" for some. Those middle years of the past decade in which her slam totals slipped just a tad might be forever used against her in the G.O.A.T. debate. They shouldn't be, though, for anyone who attempts to look down on Williams' career in any way is asking for too much. Serena has played out her career and lived her life up to this point as she's seen fit, even if it's sometimes meant nearly relegating her tennis to a part-time avocation. Truthfully, when an athlete is as superior as Serena, with so many important titles and starring roles on big stages, our's is not to wonder why she hasn't won even more major titles, it's to marvel at how many she's actually won. I mean, do people harp on Michael Jordan leaving basketball for a time to pursue the dream of a baseball career? No, because he earned the right to make that decision by winning everything there was to win. Serena's in the same category.

    Much like Jordan, Serena's occasional flights of fancy in acting and reality television, though maybe best left alone in a perfect world, can be seen as Williams doing whatever she can to keep her mind fresh. If she hadn't allowed herself to go off on such tangents, she might not still have the seeming reservoir of desire for many more years in tennis that she now does. Graf played on and on with a single-minded purpose, eventually wearing herself out and leaving the game two months after turning 30. Such an exit, barring a severe recurrence of her knee injury, isn't likely in the cards for Serena.

    Thank goodness.

    Years ago, it was easy to wish for a little something different in the game besides the Williams vs. Williams dominance that developed at the start of this decade. But after those glory years for the family temporarily dried up in the mid-2000's, it was just as easy to welcome back the sisters' resurgence in the last two years with open arms. We didn't know what we'd been missing until we got it back. Now, hopefully, we'll be able to witness the remarkable ride of both at least until the mid-way point of the 2010's. After all, there'll never be another story like their's, and it'll have been a true privilege to see the entire tale play out.



    With apologies to Navratilova's now-unfortunately-anachronistic serve-and-volley game, Graf's overwhelming force, Seles' all-too-brief angles-loving attack and Henin's underdog-turned-pit bull rise to power, Serena is the one who has it ALL. While others might have won more titles, dominated unfailingly for longer periods of time, run over opponents with merciless abandon or managed to steal away moments of the dominance from under the noses of fellow all-time greats, Williams is the most awesome tennis force that I'VE ever seen. And not just in the 2000's, either.

    From here, Serena isn't in the running for that "Greatest of All-Time" crown. She's ALREADY CLAIMED IT.

    And, with that, I'd say that that's as good a spot to wraps things up as any.

    *BACKSPIN LINKS OF NOTE*
    Serena Slam: Coming Soon to a Court Near You (U.S. Open '02)
    Serena Slam-Slam-Slamming Away (Australian Open '03)
    Grasscourt Awards 2003
    Melbourne's Soul Survivor (Australian Open '05)
    The Demolition Heard 'round the World (Australian Open '07)
    Destiny's Child (U.S. Open '08)
    The Theory of Serenativity (Australian Open '09)
    The Power of One (Wimbledon '09)



    Aha, hold on a moment! There's one final list of honors left to toss out there. Let's hope it finds a nice place to land.

    *TOP PERFORMANCE*
    Serena Williams' "Serena Slam" (2002-03)

    [Tournament]
    Justine Henin-Hardenne, 2004 Athens Olympics
    [Weekend]
    Justine Henin, 2003 U.S. Open (SF-def. Capriati, Final-def. Clijsters)
    [Team]
    Russia wins four Fed Cup titles (2004-05, 2007-08)
    [Misc.]
    Russians sweep Beijing '08 Olympics Medal stand (Dementieva-Safina-Zvonareva)

    *TOP DOUBLES TEAMS*
    1. Serena Williams/Venus Williams, USA
    2. Virginia Ruano Pascual/Paola Suarez, ESP/ARG
    3. Cara Black/Liezel Huber, ZIM/RSA-USA
    HM- Lisa Raymond/Rennae Stubbs, USA/AUS


    *TOP*
    [Junior]
    Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS
    [Breakout]
    Maria Sharapova wins Wimbledon (2004)
    [Comeback]
    Jennifer Capriati (2001)
    [Adopted Technology]
    Instant Replay review

    *MATCHES OF THE DECADE*
    2001 Roland Garros Final - Capriati def. Clijsters
    ...1-6/6-4/12-10.
    So what if it was the only three-set RG final this decade. It was the most dramatic, historic match. Period.
    =============================
    2003 U.S. Open SF - Henin def. Capriati
    ...4-6/7-5/7-6.
    The legend of La Petit Taureau is born.
    =============================

    *BEST*
    [Story]
    The Williams Sisters
    [Unlikely Tennis Power]
    Belgium
    [Revolution]
    Russian

    *Ms. Backspin of the 2000's*
    THE Serena Williams

    And, now... time to take a breath.


    1. Serena Williams, USA
    2. Justine Henin, BEL
    3. Maria Sharapova, RUS
    4. Venus Williams, USA
    5. Kim Clijsters, BEL
    6. Jennifer Capriati, USA
    7. Lindsay Davenport, USA
    8. Amelie Mauresmo, FRA
    9. Svetlana Kuznetsova, RUS
    10. Cara Black, ZIM
    11. Lisa Raymond, USA
    12t. Virginia Ruano Pascual, ESP
    12t. Paola Suarez, ARG
    14. Rennae Stubbs, AUS
    15. Elena Dementieva, RUS
    16. Martina Hingis, SUI
    17. Liezel Huber, RSA/USA
    18. Mary Pierce, FRA
    19. Dinara Safina, RUS
    20. Daniela Hantuchova, SVK
    21. Ana Ivanovic, SRB
    22. Jelena Jankovic, SRB
    23. Ai Sugiyama, JPN
    24. Anastasia Myskina, RUS
    25. Patty Schnyder, SUI
    HONORABLE MENTION- Martina Navratilova, USA



    *BACKSPIN'S 2000-09 HONOR ROLL, #27-116*
    Nicole Arendt
    Shinobu Asagoe
    Victoria Azarenka
    Sybille Bammer
    Marion Bartoli
    Daja Bedanova
    Alona Bondarenko
    Kateryna Bondarenko
    Kristie Boogert
    Elena Bovina
    Severine Bremond-Beltrame
    Els Callens
    Anna Chakvetadze
    Chan Yung-Jan
    Chuang Chia-Jung
    Dominika Cibulkova
    Sorana Cirstea
    Amanda Coetzer
    Eleni Daniilidou
    Nathalie Dechy
    Casey Dellacqua
    Mariaan de Swardt
    Jelena Dokic
    Silvia Farina Elia
    Clarisa Fernandez
    Tatiana Golovin
    Anna-Lena Groenefeld
    Carly Gullickson
    Julie Halard-Decugis
    Hsieh Su-Wei
    Anke Huber
    Janette Husarova
    Kaia Kanepi
    Sesil Karatantcheva
    Vania King
    Anna Kournikova
    Michaella Krajicek
    Lina Krasnoroutskaya
    Li Na
    Li Ting
    Elena Likhovtseva
    Sabine Lisicki
    Nuria Llagostera-Vives
    Petra Mandula
    Marta Marrero
    Conchita Martinez
    Maria Jose Martinez-Sanchez
    Anabel Medina-Garrigues
    Sania Mirza
    Alicia Molik
    Corina Morariu
    Miriam Oremans
    Melanie Oudin
    Shahar Peer
    Flavia Pennetta
    Tatiana Perebiynis
    Kveta Peschke
    Nadia Petrova
    Kimberly Po-Messerli
    Agnieszka Radwanska
    Anastasia Rodionova
    Chanda Rubin
    Lucie Safarova
    Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario
    Mara Santangelo
    Barbara Schett
    Francesca Schiavone
    Monica Seles
    Magui Serna
    Antonella Serra-Zanetti
    Meghann Shaughnessy
    Anna Smashnova
    Karolina Sprem
    Katarina Srebnotnik
    Samantha Stosur
    Carla Suarez-Navarro
    Sun Tiantian
    Agnes Szavay
    Tamarine Tanasugarn
    Patricia Tarabini
    Nathalie Tauziat
    Nicole Vaidisova
    Dominique van Roost
    Elena Vesnina
    Yanina Wickmayer
    Caroline Wozniacki
    Yan Zi
    Zheng Jie
    Fabiola Zuluaga
    Vera Zvonareva

    All for now.



    "DECADE'S BEST" SERIES:
    ...Players of the 2000's: Nomination List, Australian Open 2000-09, Roland Garros 2000-09, Wimbledon 2000-09, U.S. Open 2000-09, Players #21-25, Players #16-20, Players #11-15, Players #6-10, Decade's Best: Player #5- "Splitting Hairs", Decade's Best: Player #4- "LeaVes of Grass", Decade's Best: Player #3- "Supernovic Aspirations"

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