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Tuesday, Jan 29, 2013 |
Djokovic savours making Open history |
By Guy Hand |
Tuesday, Jan 29, 2013 07:27 |
It wasn't the memorable marathon of the previous year. But Novak Djokovic admits his sixth career Grand Slam title - a four-set Australian Open victory over Andy Murray on Sunday night - will live long in his memory. Djokovic's 6-7 (7-2) 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 6-2 victory in three hours and 40 minutes was a tense, tough encounter, but was a much different beast compared to his epic 2012 win over Rafael Nadal in perhaps the greatest Grand Slam final ever. Yet the 25-year-old says his feat of winning three successive Australian Opens, and his fourth title at Melbourne Park, is something he will celebrate and remember. "To be mentioned with the history, winning three in a row, it's a huge achievement," Djokovic said. "In life, you don't get many opportunities to win a Grand Slam and as a tennis player, that's the pinnacle of the ambitions and of success. "Winning three in a row is incredible. I'm full of joy right now." Djokovic's fourth Australian Open title matched the records of Roger Federer and Andre Agassi, who fittingly was on hand to present the trophy to him. But the Serb started slowly, with Murray winning the first set and being the better player in the second. Both sets went to tiebreaks - Murray winning the first and faltering in the second when he double-faulted after a feather landed on court prior to his serve. Djokovic grabbed the mini-break as a result, and claimed the tiebreak in what appeared a critical shift of momentum. There were no breaks of serve for the first two hours and 51 minutes of the match, before Djokovic snapped the Scot and closed out the third set. Hampered by blisters on his feet and fatigue, Murray struggled in the fourth. Djokovic managed two more breaks of serve in the set to close out the match - Murray suffering his fifth defeat in sixth Grand Slam final appearances
http://wwos.ninemsn.com/article.aspx?id=8600160
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Saturday, Jan 26, 2013 |
Azarenka wins dramatic Aussie Open final |
By Darren Walton |
Saturday, Jan 26, 2013 08:00 |
Victoria Azarenka broke down in tears after retaining her Australian Open crown and world No.1 ranking with a drama-charged final triumph over Chinese challenger Li Na. In an extraordinary encounter, Li needed two separate medical timeouts and was treated for possible concussion before finally succumbing 4-6 6-4 6-3 to the top seed after two hours and 40 suspense-filled minutes on Saturday night. Li had hundreds of millions of Chinese hearts in mouths for the first time when she collapsed in a heap during the second set and hobbled off court. She returned, though, six minutes later with her left ankle strapped and recovered from a service break down to draw level at 4-4 and close to within two games of taking the title. Li looked for a second time like she may have to retire after falling heavily and hitting her head on the Melbourne Park centre court on the very first point after the resumption from a nine-minute break for the Australia Day fireworks. Li was cleared after medical testing from tournament doctors and conjured a break point while leading 2-1 in the deciding set, only for Azarenka to rally and deny the 2011 French Open champion a place in the history books as the oldest woman to win the Open singles crown. Had Azarenka lost, the Belarusian would also have relinquished her top ranking to Serena Williams, the reigning Wimbledon, US Open and Olympic champion. Instead, she joins Williams (17), Venus Williams (7), Maria Sharapova (4) and Svetlana Kuznetsova (2) as the only active players with multiple grand slam titles. It was not the most popular Open victory after the 23-year-old was roundly condemned for taking a controversial double medical timeout immediately after blowing five match points in her semi-final victory over American teenager Sloane Stephens. While Li was afforded a rousing reception upon her entry to Rod Laver Arena, applause for Azarenka was subdued and at times the top seed was heckled by fans. The Belarusian had the last laugh, though, collecting the winner's cheque for a record $2.43 million after seeing off Li in a tense rollercoaster ride lasting almost two-and-three-quarter hours. Azarenka said the tears were "a bunch of everything". "It was emotion, relief, joy, everything," she said. "You never know how you're going to react and it just comes from the bottom of your heart. "It's definitely been really tough for me these whole two weeks, and very emotional. "Everyone knows now that I'm an emotional player and it just proved that." Azarenka again apologised for her untimely medical timeout against Stephens. "But there's things you can't take back," she said. "There were new experiences for me over the past two days. I'm glad I have been able to turn things around." Li, turning 31 next month, had been bidding to remove Australian great Margaret Smith Court from a page in the Open record books as the oldest woman to reign in the 45-year open era. Alas, lightning struck twice for the Chinese tennis pioneer who two years ago became her country's first and only major singles champion with a breakthrough success at Roland Garros. Entering Saturday night's final, Li was the only player in the past 25 grand slam women's deciders to squander a one-set lead. That defeat came against Kim Clijsters at Melbourne Park in 2011. Now it has happened again in a final full of twists and turns. But she vowed to return to try again. "I know I'm not young, but I have to say I'm very (much) looking forward to next year," Li said. Drama and tension aside, it was not the highest-quality final with the match featuring 16 service breaks and 77 unforced errors in 29 games.
Article Source:http://wwos.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=8599544
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Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013 |
Fed's perfect 10 |
By Matt Trollope |
Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013 06:36 |
Of the many things Jo-Wilfried Tsonga will be remembered for when stops playing, one will be that he was the man who first defeated Roger Federer from two-sets-to-love down at a Grand Slam. He did so at Wimbledon in the 2011 quarterfinals, an inconceivable result at the time. It has clearly since served as a source of motivation for the Swiss, who in their five subsequent matches has won four. In their next meeting at a major, Federer trounced Tsonga in straight sets at the US Open in 2011. It may not have been as clear-cut on Wednesday night, but Federer continued his winning ways against his French foe, advancing to the Australian Open semifinals for the 10th consecutive year and a meeting with No.3 seed Andy Murray after a 7-6(4) 4-6 7-6(4) 3-6 6-3 victory. “It was a tough match from the start really. A lot of ups and downs on both sides obviously. I mean, more good ones than bad ones, because ups and downs you can see the negative way, too. But I thought we always played well to get back into the match,” he reflected. “So I'm very happy. It was a good match. I enjoyed it. Could have been four (sets), could have been three. I could have lost it. So at the end, I'm just happy I won in five.” Let’s be frank – it wasn’t always pretty tennis. There were shanks and flurries of errors as both men felt the pressure heaped on them by the other. But it was nonetheless an absorbing scrap, a dogfight between two top players jostling for supremacy at a venue that has brought each some of their greatest career highlights. Having comprehensively dismantled all previous opponents at Australian Open 2013, Federer began in much the same manner against Tsonga, unleashing his vast repertoire of shots to immediately break serve. Yet Tsonga began to find some chinks in the armour. Federer’s serve had not been broken all tournament, but the Frenchman brought up a break point in the fourth game and again in the sixth, converting the second time to level at 3-3 and intensify the contest. With both men generally assured on serve, the set progressed to a tiebreak. It was here that Tsonga unravelled. With a mini-break safely in hand, Federer didn’t let up, stroking an off-forehand swinging volley winner to bring up set point, and taking the opener thanks to another Tsonga error. The second set progressed fairly uneventfully until the seventh game – a Federer ball hit the tape and bounced just wide, bringing up a rare break point. Tsonga capitalised, coming out on top of a searching rally when a Federer forehand drifted out. The match had changed. The Swiss’ level had dipped slightly, while Tsonga was more consistently hitting his spots and doing so more powerfully and cleanly. Suddenly the wild shanks – particularly the cross-court forehand which he had sent metres wide on several occasions – were gone. The No.7 seed would go on to comfortably serve out the set, but promptly went down a break after an entertaining game that saw Tsonga’s flamboyant shotmaking countered by some exceptional retrieving from Federer. Yet instead of Federer building on this momentum, he handed the break straight back, coughing up four straight forehand errors from 30-0 up. The set continued in this vein, ebbing and flowing, scintillating winners interspersed with maddening errors. Appropriately, it required another tiebreak to separate the pair, which began dreadfully for the world No.2 when he dumped a swinging volley halfway down the net, drawing groans from the Rod Laver Arena crowd. Yet he recovered, earning a mini-break with a fabulous hooked forehand passing shot up the line off the back foot, and set points thanks to a backhand winner. Tsonga powered a shot into the ad court on the next point that Federer, incredibly, retrieved at full stretch and dropped low over the net to force a volley error. Two-sets-to-one. “It's very much become a game of movement today with the slower courts and as quick as we are and all that. It's very important to be able to rely on your defensive skills,” the second seed explained. “I'm happy with how I felt and how I'm moving, so it's important.” A Federer victory looked near-certain when he raced to a 0-40 lead in the third game of the fourth, yet Tsonga hit his way out of trouble, crunching a outrageously powerful forehand and an ace shortly after on his way to holding for 2-1. In Tsonga’s mind, teeing off was key to victory. And he did exactly that, generating some incredible winners to break in the sixth game and move ahead 4-2. The pair then traded breaks before the Frenchman clinched the fourth set with an ace out wide. Tsonga blinked first in the decider, erring twice on the backhand side in the fourth game to drop serve. When Federer in the next game played two overhead winners followed by an unanswerable drive volley, he’d built a 4-1 lead. It looked dire when Federer played a winning drop shot for 15-40, which clipped the tape and died. Tsonga chased and ended on Federer’s side of the net, feigning a punch in the Swiss’ direction and drawing giggles from both men and the crowd. The lighter moment appeared to relax Tsonga, who found his game once more and escaped to hold for 2-4. And when Federer had three match points in the eighth game, Tsonga erased them all with some audacious shotmaking. He was proving tough to subdue. Yet Federer, as is customary, found a way. He brought up a fourth match point with a forcing backhand down the line, and sealed victory in fine style with a winning overhead. Murray, who hasn’t lost a set in Melbourne in five matches, awaits in Friday night’s semifinal. “I know what to expect; whereas it would be different if I hadn't played him (recently),” said Federer of his looming battle with Murray. “He has changed his game around a bit. He's playing more offensive. I'm looking forward to it. Obviously (he’s) a great player … So I'm expecting a tough match, of course.”
Article Source:http://www.australianopen.com/en_AU/news/articles/2013-01-23/201301231358940150358.html
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Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013 |
Sloane stuns Serena |
By Matt Cronin |
Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013 06:26 |
In one of the most stunning upsets in the past decade, American teenager Sloane Stephens shocked tournament favorite Serena Williams 3-6 7-5 6-4 to charge into the semifinals of Australian Open. Even though five-time Australian Open champion Williams aggravated a back injury in the second set that clearly affected her at the end of that set and at the beginning of the third set, she did regain much of her power at the end of the third set, but it didn't matter, as Stephens played more ambitiously and executed when she had too. Stephens out-hit Williams from her forehand side, kept moving forward and won key points at the net, and even after she was broken to 3-4 when Williams retrieved one of her cannon shots, she didn't fold. She continued to press Williams and moved her around from the backcourt and broke back to 4-4, when the 15-time Grand Slam champion committed two unforced errors. Stephens, who had pressed her Fed Cup teammate in a straight-sets loss in Brisbane three weeks ago, had said before the match that she wasn't intimidated and she would bring everything she had to the court. And that she did the next game. Serena – who had destroyed a racquet earlier in the set because she couldn’t find the rhythm that had won her 20 straight matches coming into the contest – held a break point, but netted a backhand return. “You're playing Serena, one of the best competitors in the world,” Stephens said. “She might smash a racquet, but she's still going to play hard. It was definitely like, ‘Wow, that just happened’. But it was more like, ‘OK, now you even have to play harder because she's going to be firing’.” Stephens eventually held when she whipped a forehand pass and Williams committed a forehand error. The daughter of a now deceased American football star, the speedy Stephens knew she would have a great chance to close in the next game and did, playing like a grizzled veteran rather than a rookie in her first Grand Slam quarterfinal appearance. She played steady, while Serena – clearly affected by seeing a youngster matching her stroke for stroke – fell apart, and committed three unforced errors to lose the match. Stephens, who has a poster of Serena at her Los Angeles home and just last year at the Australian Open described Williams as her “tennis god,” said with a smile on her face: “I think I need a poster of myself. Here mental, technical and physical improvements have been substantial since then which she chalks up to more than two months of hard work during the offseason. “I definitely improved a lot,” said Stephens who converted 18 of her 20 net approaches. “Definitely last year it was all new to me and it was just kind of a new experience. It was the first time [playing her in Brisbane], so it was tough. But the first time you do anything it's tricky. I think I was kind of just ready to play.” Within a two hour and 13 minute time span, she became an instant celebrity. Her mobile phone had over 200 incoming messages. Her twitter followers more than doubled from 17,000 followers to more than 35,000. “[Singer] John Legend tweeted me. [Basketball star] Dirk Nowitski tweeted me. I'm just excited. I want John Legend to sing at my wedding. I was like, ‘Oh, my God. He tweeted me’.” Stephens will play top seed and defending champion Victoria Azarenka in the semifinal.
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