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Dementieva will play Kuznetsova for women's U.S. Open title

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  • Dementieva will play Kuznetsova for women's U.S. Open title

    Sun-Sentinel Com

    Dementieva will play Kuznetsova for women's U.S. Open title

    By Charles Bricker
    Staff Writer
    Posted September 11 2004

    NEW YORK -- This would be the final run, the final stretch and the
    final futile wave of the racket by Jennifer Capriati, the last Yank
    in the tank at the U.S. Open.

    Elena Dementieva's backhand, smoothly struck to the left corner on the
    second match point, sped through a brisk wind past America's hard-luck
    queen of tennis, then probably sent half of Russia into euphoria
    while simultaneously shipping CBS Sports deeper into depression.

    With Lindsay Davenport gimping out against Svetlana Kuznetsova earlier
    on this bright and breezy Friday, and with Capriati sent home once
    again one day early, the Open is without an American in the final
    for the first time since 1988.

    The words of former USTA President Harry Marmion, uttered in 1997
    when he inaugurated a multimillion-dollar program to revitalize the
    junior tennis program, came echoing out of the past:

    "I'm not looking forward to the day, four or five years from now,
    when we have an Armenian and a Lithuanian in the U.S. Open final,"
    Marmion said.

    Well, it's two Russians in the women's championship match and just
    about anyone but an American on the men's side, and, of all the
    surviving suspects, no one deserves this more than Dementieva, who
    has fought through an injury to her left leg and the horrors of one of
    the worst serves in tennis to reach her second major final of the year.

    Dementieva defeated Capriati 6-0, 2-6, 7-6 (5) after the powerfully
    built smaller Kuznetsova took advantage of Davenport's groin injury
    to win 1-6, 6-2, 6-4. Capriati had lost the first nine points and
    seven games before she seemed to get back in control, but faded late
    in the final set.

    The men play their semifinals today with one Swiss (Roger Federer),
    one Brit (Tim Henman), one Aussie (Lleyton Hewitt) and one surprising
    Swede (Joachim Johansson). That's great for international relations,
    but it's not going to pump up the television ratings today and Sunday.

    Dementieva, whose strong lower body is a big key to her destructive
    ground strokes, can be edgy on court. But this time, she vowed, she
    won't go into the Open final with the nerves that doomed her against
    countrywoman Anastasia Myskina at the French Open.

    "At the end of the game today, I was so tired it was no place for
    nerves," she said. "I was always thinking about every point. I wasn't
    nervous at all. Why should I? It's been a great tournament for me
    so far.

    "It was not easy to play against this crowd. They were laughing at
    my serve, so I was kind of relaxed a little. I was into the game all
    the time."

    She hit 67 doubles faults at the French, at one point in the final
    screaming, "I hate my serve." This time, Capriati hated her serve,
    even when Dementieva puffed it in at 59 or 63 mph because the slower
    the ball, the more it wiggled and dived in the wind.

    "You're off-balance basically all the time," said Capriati, who never
    considered coming in, chipping the serve back down the middle and
    racing to the net behind her returns.

    "I mean, it's not my game to chip and charge," she explained. "It's
    kind of difficult on the forehand, kind of the way she was hitting it,
    to do that."

    In fact, Capriati's second serve was much more vulnerable. In the
    decisive set, Dementieva won 10 of the 11 second serve points on
    return while Capriati was able to score on 13 of 19.

    But it was Dementieva's persistence in coming to net that made the
    difference. She was at net 11 times in the first two sets, 33 in the
    final set, and she converted 23 of those points.

    "It was very difficult to play with the wind today, so I as trying
    to stay close to the ball and go to the net was the only way I could
    win this match," she said. "Especially from one side, when you play
    against the wind. There is no other choice to win the point. You have
    to go to the net."

    If Capriati had done the same, this match might have turned out
    differently. After she broke Dementieva to go up 2-1 in the third,
    she made a few sweeping gestures with her hands, as if to say, "Yes,
    like that. Get to the net!" But she never tried to force the play
    off Dementieva's weak second serves.

    Davenport was equally despondent after her defeat. She had won 22
    matches in a row coming into this semifinal and somehow tweaked her
    left groin or hip flexor in an easy morning warmup. It was fine while
    she slashed through the first set.

    But after being broken at 2-1 in the second set after holding 33 games
    in a row dating back to the second round, Davenport's body language
    changed. "Somewhere along the line, I believe around 4-2, my leg got
    worse. I knew I was at a disadvantage and it was an uphill battle."

    She was retaped after the second set and was up 4-3 in the third,
    but she could no longer run and was depending on hitting winning
    serves. Playing smartly, Kuznetsova broke her with a backhand winner,
    then ran out the match at love with a 103 mph ace.

    A few hours later, the last American could have pulled down the
    flag. Maybe the famed Russian Tea Room will reopen this weekend.

    Copyright © 2004, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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