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Stabroek News

Henin spoils Serb party plans in Paris
published: Friday | June 8, 2007


Left: Serbia's Ana Ivanovic reacts after defeating Russia's Maria Sharapova in their semi-final match at the French Open yesterday. Right: Belgium's Justine Henin celebrates after defeating Serbia's Jelena Jankovic in their semi-final at Roland Garros yesterday. - Reuters Photos

PARIS (Reuters):

BRISTLING WITH determination, Justine Henin gatecrashed the Serbian party at the French Open yesterday to set up a final date with Ana Ivanovic.

Jelena Jankovic and Ivanovic had dazzled their opponents overthe past fortnight and had been hoping to set up a historic all-Serbian grand slam final at Roland Garros.

After Ivanovic kept up her part of the deal with a ruthless 6-2, 6-1 destruction of Maria Sharapova, champion Henin played dream wrecker when she ended Jankovic's run with an almost equally rampant 6-2, 6-2 performance.

"It was perfect," was the top seed's verdict. "I just hope I can keep going to the end this way."

Breaking the iron will

For the second time in three years, only seven games in total were dropped in the two semis, leaving the losers shell-shocked and despondent.

The Belgian charged into her third successive showpiece match in the French capital and is now only two sets away from emulating Monica Seles's hat-trick of titles achieved in 1992.

Ominously for Ivanovic, she will have to find a way to break the iron will of a woman who has now pocketed 33 consecutive sets at the claycourt grand slam.

Ready to reap benefits

Sharapova has never felt comfortable on the slowest of all tennis surfaces and likened her movement on red dirt to "a cow on ice". Yesterday, it took Ivanovic 65 brutal minutes to send the Russian skidding out of the tournament.

The world number two had contested the last two grand slam finals, emerging victorious at the U.S. Open. Yet she had never reached a claycourt final and her luck was not about to change.

Sharapova had hoped that her big-match experience would give her an edge in her ninth major semi. Ivanovic was in her first.

But after fitting in countless training sessions at 7:00 a.m. in a converted swimming pool during the 1999 NATO bombings in Belgrade, Ivanovic was ready to reap the benefits.

"It's my first grand slam final, so it's hard not to get overexcited," said Ivanovic.

"It was tough times ... I grew up playing in an emptied swimming pool ... and now I have chance to play against one of the top players."

The Serbian wasted little time in soaking up the atmosphere on the Philippe Chatrier arena and itwas not long before the match started to slip away from an error-prone Sharapova.

Ivanovic made her intentions clear by firing a thunderbolt ace to start off the match. Before Sharapova knew what had hit her, the double faults were flying off her racket and she was staring into an abyss as Ivanovic steamed ahead 5-1.

The Russian pulled one of the breaks back in the seventh game after Ivanovic wildly flayed the ball long to draw gasps from the crowd. It proved to be one of the few bad judgements the seventh seed made all day.

Yet another Sharapova double fault gifted her opponent the set and with the Russian shanking one forehand mistake after another, Ivanovic grabbed six games in a row.

Such was her command over the match, Ivanovic also chose to over-rule a linesperson herself to allow Sharapova to narrow the second set to 5-1.

But that was as far as her generosity stretched and her fifth ace sealed her a place in tomorrow's final and dragged a cheering crowd to their feet.

She became the first athlete representing Serbia to reach a grand slam final.

After the one-sided nature of the first match, fans had hoped for a tighter tussle between Henin and Jankovic as each of their previous five encounters had gone the distance.

But the fourth seed was a forlorn spectator for most of the contest as Henin produced a series of breathtaking backhands to take her perfect record against Jankovic to 6-0.

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