Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Federer wins ATP awards for player of the year, sportsmanship and fan favorite

Roger Federer was a winner in more ways than one last year.

The world's No. 1 player was honored Tuesday as the ATP Tour's player of the year for 2007. He also won the Stefan Edberg Sportsmanship Award for the fourth consecutive year and the Fans' Favorite Award for the fifth consecutive time.

"The sportmanship award is voted by my fellow players and it is a great recognition for me," Federer said in a statement. "It is equally important to be voted by the fans as their favorite player. 2007 was a fantastic year for me."

Bob and Mike Bryan of the United States won the Doubles Team of the Year and Fans' Favorite awards, each for the third straight year. The brothers won 11 titles in 2007.

"It was a very special year," Mike Bryan said. "Being voted fan favorite is also very important to us. Wherever we go the fans support us and make us feel really great."

Novak Djokovic, who'll defend his title at the Sony Ericsson Open which starts Wednesday in South Florida, won the most improved player award for the second straight year.

Other top award winners included: Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, newcomer of the year; Igor Andreev, comeback player of the year; and Ivan Ljubicic, Arthur Ashe Humanitarian of the Year.

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

Federer hopes to shake slow start to year

The best player in tennis has been awfully average this year.

Roger Federer is off to his worst start since 2000, when he was 18 and still three years from his first Grand Slam title. In three tournaments he has yet to reach a final, and he has lost three of his past six matches.

Not that anyone will be eager to face Federer at the Sony Ericsson Open, which begins Wednesday. He's a two-time champion and top-seeded, and he's sure to be highly motivated to jump-start his season.

But for the moment, the debate about whether Federer is the best player ever has given way to another question: Is his game in decline?

Health has been a factor. A stomach virus curtailed his preparation for the Australian Open, and he lost in the semifinals to eventual champion Novak Djokovic. Last month Federer was diagnosed with mononucleosis, and when he returned three weeks ago, he lost to Andy Murray in the opening round at Dubai.

But even after Federer pronounced himself fit at Indian Wells, his backhand lacked its usual snap, and his lethal forehand was too often wayward. He lost in the semifinals to No. 98-ranked Mardy Fish.

Is this a slump? A slip? A bump? A blip?

Fish says top players don't see Federer as more vulnerable than before.

"In the locker room, we just kind of laugh at it," Fish says. "We just kind of think it's kind of a joke - you know: 'Oh, my gosh, Roger hasn't won a tournament yet this year.' ... I think he's going to continue to be No. 1 for a long time."

Federer's domination has been such that he'll remain atop the rankings even if he loses his opening match at Key Biscayne. He has a first-round bye, then will play Saturday against the winner of the match between Gael Monfils and American John Isner.

Before losing to Fish, Federer had won 41 consecutive matches against Americans since 2003. Fish was the lowest-ranked player to beat Federer in nearly three years.

But Federer said the upset was merely a case of confronting a hot player who hardly missed a shot.

"I'm surprised myself it hasn't happened more in the last five years," Federer said. "That's why I'm maybe not that disappointed."

Still, this is the deepest Federer has gone into a year without winning a title since 2000. Since seizing the No. 1 ranking four years ago, this is the first time he has failed to reach a final in three consecutive tournaments.

Federer, who parted with coach Tony Roche nearly a year ago, said his game doesn't need major changes. After all, he's only two Grand Slam titles shy of tying Pete Sampras' record of 14. Last year Federer won three of the four major events, including the U.S. Open in September.

At 26, still in his prime, Federer figures all his game needs are a few tweaks.

"I think I have really a lot of potential toward playing more aggressive," he said. "The rest is sort of trying to maintain good fitness and good defensive skill. My offensive skills will always be very good. I just having to continue improving little things.

"I think it's about details at this stage of my career. I'm not going to become a different player. I don't want to."

Among the top men and women, only Maria Sharapova will be absent at Key Biscayne. Justine Henin is seeded No. 1 on the women's side and is in the same half of the draw as Serena and Venus Williams. Serena beat Henin in last year's final.

Three-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal is seeded No. 2 in the men's draw, and defending champion Djokovic is third.

Djokovic, who won his first major title this year, is one reason the gap between Federer and other top players seems to be shrinking.

"There is more variety of players at the top, which is an encouraging thing for this sport," Djokovic said. "Obviously a lot of people got a little bit bored, Federer and Nadal winning and being so dominant. It's always good to see some new faces winning major events. I think the people like it."

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

Monday, March 24, 2008

Djokovic, Ivanovic win Indian Wells titles

Novak Djokovic and Ana Ivanovic have given their home country reason to be proud.

The 20-year-old Serbs who practiced together as children won his and her titles in the Pacific Life Open on Sunday. Djokovic ended American Mardy Fish's string of upsets with a 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 victory, and Ivanovic downed Svetlana Kuznetsova 6-4, 6-3.

There has been civil strife in Kosovo since it declared its independence from Serbia last month, but both Djokovic and Ivanovic said they do not want to discuss politics.

Serbian swimmer Milorad Cavic was suspended from the European swimming championships Friday for wearing a T-shirt proclaiming "Kosovo is Serbia" at a medal ceremony.

"I'm really sad to hear about this," Ivanovic said. "But on the other hand, I don't know much about politics and I don't get involved in that area. When I'm out here playing, I just want to represent my country in the best possible way.

"They (Serbs) really love tennis right now. It's a cool thing to wake up (in the middle of the night) and watch us play," she said, alluding to the time difference. "They're proud to be Serbians, like I think everyone is in their own country."

Djokovic, whose father and other relatives are natives of Kosovo, recently taped a video saying he believes Kosovo will always be a part of Serbia.

"It kind of touched me in that moment that this was my quest to give support to my country," he said.

Otherwise, he said, he simply considers himself an athlete representing his country.

"I think professional athletes all over the world ... are one of the biggest ambassadors of their country; considering the fact that our country is in a very difficult position, they're struggling in economics and politics, as well," he said.

"But this is something I don't want to get involved in."

Djokovic and Ivanovic figure to represent their country well in tennis, since they both already have accomplished a great deal and seem to be getting even better. He's No. 3 behind Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, who both lost at Indian Wells. Only Justine Henin, who skipped the tournament, is ranked above No. 2 Ivanovic.

The Serbian stars just missed a sweep in the Australian Open. Djokovic beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga for the men's title, and Ivanovic lost to Maria Sharapova in their final.

Both Djokovic and Ivanovic won their championship matches at Indian Wells mostly by powering shots down the lines, although Djokovic obviously had a tougher time with No. 98 Fish.

Djokovic, who lost to Nadal in the final last year, knocked off Nadal in the semifinals this time.

Despite the loss, Fish had a remarkable run at Indian Wells. He had never beaten two top-10 players in a tournament before, but he upset No. 4 Nikolay Davydenko and No. 7 David Nalbandian before stunning Federer in the semifinals.

The 26-year-old Fish, who rose to No. 17 four years ago but has been hampered by injuries, will move up to the top 50 in the next rankings.

He built an enthusiastic following along the way at Indian Wells, with fans chanting "Mardy! Mardy!" during the final, and one waving a sign reading, "Go Fish."

He said his success in the tournament took a while to sink in.

"I just didn't realize what had happened," he said. "To get a few wins against players like that and to play a match like today, to be in there. A lot of great players to go through, and I was one set away."

Asked if he thought Djokovic could become No. 1, Fish said yes. But as for the top player now, he said, "I think it's Roger Federer, hands down. He's had a few results these past few weeks that are uncharacteristic for him. I think he's going to continue to be No. 1 for a long time."

Djokovic seemed on his way to an easy victory after winning the first set and going up 4-2 in the second. But Fish came back to win five of the next six games and force a third set. Djokovic seemed to slip out of his rhythm during Fish's comeback, twice slamming his racket to the court after missing shots.

But he broke Fish's serve in the second game of the final set, then each held serve the rest of the way. After wrapping it up with a service winner, Djokovic raised his eyes and arms skyward, then shook hands with Fish and hugged him.

In the women's match, Ivanovic used well-placed groundstrokes to keep Kuznetsova scrambling from side to side. She capped her victory with a shot that seemed to typify her play in the final: she whipped a forehand down the line on a service return.

Adidas Barricade V Mens Tennis Shoes
Adidas Barricade V Mens Tennis Shoes

Price: FROM $109.95

Wilson K Blade Tour K Factor Tennis Racquet (Coming Soon)
Wilson K Blade Tour K Factor Tennis Racquet(Coming Soon)

Price: $199.00

Adidas Mens Essex Shorts - 646482
Adidas Mens Essex Shorts - 646482

Price: $19.95

I Love Ana Ivanovic T-Shirt
I Love Ana Ivanovic T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Ana Ivanovic Framed Autographed 8x10 Photograph
Ana Ivanovic Framed Autographed 8x10 Photograph

Price: $299.00

Ana Ivanovic Loves me T-Shirt
Ana Ivanovic Loves me T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Sharapova pulls out of Sony Ericsson Open

Maria Sharapova pulled out of the Sony Ericsson Open on Saturday, citing a shoulder injury.

The No. 5-ranked Sharapova is a two-time finalist at the hard-court tournament.

Her withdrawal came a day after her 18-match winning streak ended with a 6-3, 5-7, 6-2 loss to Svetlana Kuznetsova at Indian Wells, Calif.

"We certainly wish Maria a speedy recovery and hope she is able to return to the court quickly," Sony Ericsson Open tournament director Adam Barrett said.

I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt
I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag
Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag

Price: $29.95

Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69
Maria Sharapova - Fathead , 36x69

Price: $99.99

Fish routs Federer; Djokovic stomps Nadal in semis

Roger Federer lost again, this time in one of the biggest tennis upsets in memory.

Mardy Fish, an American ranked 98th, shocked No. 1 Federer in straight sets Saturday, with the lopsided score - 6-3, 6-2 - making it even more of a stunner.

Fish, who pulled off by far the biggest of his upsets he's strung together this week in the Pacific Life Open, moved into Sunday's final against No. 3 Novak Djokovic, who ousted defending champion Rafael Nadal by the same score.

Federer, the Swiss star who has seemed almost invincible most of the past five years, has looked vulnerable so far this season.

He hasn't reached a final and has lost three times, including defeats by eventual champion Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals, and by Andy Murray this month in the first round at Dubai.

The 26-year-old Federer, who was slowed by mononucleosis early in the season, doesn't seem overly concerned.

He breezed through his first three matches at Indian Wells without losing a set, then had a walkover in the quarterfinals when Tommy Haas withdrew because of a sinus infection.

"Today it's hard to judge, because Mardy took everything on the rise; not many rallies out there," said Federer, a three-time champion in the desert tournament. "But all in all, I'm happy with the way the week (went) for me. Obviously, the walkover is sort of an awkward situation, but you have to take them when they come around.

"So semifinals to start off with at the first Masters Series is a good thing, and I hope I can go from here and win in Miami, and on to clay."

Federer said the unexpected day off when Haas pulled out Friday may have thrown him a bit off his rhythm, but said Fish simply played "incredibly."

"When he wanted to attack, everything worked," Federer said. "He would never miss, really, when I needed a miss once in a while."

He said it's impossible to not lose such matches occasionally, adding: "I'm surprised myself that it hasn't happened more in the last five years. You always think one guy can outright dominate you on any given day.

"People weren't able to do it against me, so that speaks for itself. But today, Mardy was really impossible to beat, it almost looked like."

Fish, also 26, ended Federer's 41-match win streak against Americans dating to a 2003 loss to Andy Roddick, and beat him for the first time in their six meetings.

"This obviously wasn't Roger's best day, but hopefully I had a little something to do with that. I put the pressure, extremely, on him from the word go," said Fish, who jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first set and remained in control the rest of the way.

Asked if he could recall another upset in tennis to equal it, Fish smiled and said, "I don't think I'm that bad."

In a career interrupted by various injuries, he reached his highest ranking, No. 17, four years ago.

Federer looked like just another player Saturday, with his backhand especially mediocre. He managed just one winner and had 13 unforced errors with his backhand. Fish kept constant pressure on him, serving seven aces to Federer's two, and peppering the lines with hard groundstrokes.

He hit 26 winners to Federer's 14 in defeating him for the first time in six career meetings.

Fish, who had never beaten as many as two top 10 players in one tournament, defeated three at Indian Wells. He downed No. 4 Nikolay Davydenko and No. 7 David Nalbandian, as well as No. 24 Lleyton Hewitt, before beating Federer.

Australian Open champion Djokovic, ranked No. 3 to Nadal's No. 2, avenged last year's loss to the Spaniard in the Indian Wells final.

The 20-year-old Serb served eight aces to two by Nadal, and hit 20 winners to the Spaniard's 11.

The match included several long, spectacular rallies when each dashed around the court making difficult returns. More often than not, Djokovic would end those rallies by driving a winner down the lines, or Nadal would finally miss a shot.

"I had more mistakes than usual," Nadal said. "I feel a little bit tired from the last two matches. If you play against a player like Novak, you have to play 100 percent if you want to win.

"He's a very complete player - very good serve, very good backhand, very good forehand. He moves fast and well. He has very good position on the court."

Djokovic said he's trying to take his fast start to the season in stride.

"I need to stay calm and just go step by step and try to get to my lifetime goal, which is to be No. 1," he said. "It's getting closer, but still, I don't want to go too fast and skip some things. I really need to be consistent with my results in the most important events, major events.

"I started the year in the best possible way, but it's not over yet."

In Sunday's women's final, Ana Ivanovic will face Svetlana Kuznetsova.

I Love Mardy Fish T-Shirt
I Love Mardy Fish T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson K Factor KSix-One 95 Tennis Racquet
Wilson K Factor KSix-One 95 Tennis Racquet

Price: $189.95

Mardy Fish Poster
Mardy Fish Poster

Price: $7.99

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

Friday, March 21, 2008

Nadal finally breaks free against Blake

Somewhere around 9:23 p.m. Thursday, in a tennis stadium nearly filled with perhaps 14,000, Rafael Nadal shook a giant weight off his shoulders.

He got rid of an ongoing toothache, blew away a cloud that had been hanging around for some time now.

Nadal, the man who makes Roger Federer's heart beat slightly faster - probably the only one - finally won a match against James Blake, a noted Nadal-killer.

His 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 victory, in a quarterfinal of the Pacific Life Open, ended with a 120 mph ace. That was followed immediately by a collapse to his knees and a ball smash into the second deck. If this was just another win, Nadal had a funny way of showing it.

Blake is No. 9 in the world, Nadal No. 2, but in this head-to-head series, the record was 3-0 in favor of the guy you wouldn't expect.

Blake has beaten Nadal at the U.S. Open in 2005, at Indian Wells in a semifinal in '06 and at the Tennis Masters Cup at the end of '06. Three big stages, three big defeats for the Spaniard who has won the last three French Opens.

By the time they reached the third set, this match was clearly a matter of who would blink first. There was never any question what kind of match it would be. It was one of those that has become a staple on the men's tour: hit it hard versus hit it harder. Which was which changed with every point.

"Other than the result," Blake said afterward, "this was a lot of fun."

Then he added, "There were lots of back and forth. I was not playing a guy who is one dimensional. Just so much back and forth. I said before that it would come down to just a few points, and that's what it did at the end."

There was no choking going on in this one. The key moment seemed to take place with Blake serving at 3-4 in the third and 30-all. On a 92-mph second serve, Nadal stepped around and went for the home run, which he got with a rocket into Blake's deep forehand corner.

Blake saved that break point, but faced a second one moments later, and Nadal finally finished it with a huge forehand return of serve that Blake hit out. From 30-all in that game, Nadal's only strategy was to hit it as hard as he could, to the deepest corner he could find, and let the chips fall.

After that, serving out the match looked easy.

"It is very nice [to beat Blake]," Nadal said. "He is a very aggressive player. Very happy to beat a big player like that. There are some moments in a match when you have to do what you have to do. I said if I win this match, I win with my forehand. And I did."

The victory kept alive Nadal's hopes of repeating as champion here. He beat Serbia's Novak Djokovic in last year's final and gets him again this year, in the semifinals.

Djokovic, this year's Australian Open champion and one spot below Nadal in the rankings, struggled through a first set against Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland, then got control and won, 7-6 (5), 6-2.

Asked about facing Nadal, against whom he was 2-5 last year and is 2-6 overall, Djokovic said, "He's a big fighter. He will never give you a free point."

The other semifinal will be determined today, with Federer facing German Tommy Haas and Argentine David Nalbandian facing Mardy Fish, an unseeded quarterfinalist.

The women's semifinals were also set Thursday. Top-seeded Ana Ivanovic handled Russian Vera Zvonareva, 6-1, 6-4, and will play fellow Serbian Jelena Jankovic.

Jankovic had a somewhat easy day, taking the first set from Lindsay Davenport, 6-2, and then getting the match when Davenport retired because of a back injury.

Davenport said she had injured her back about a week ago, but had trainers working on it all the time and felt fine - until she tried to get out of bed Thursday morning.

"After two games, it was pretty sore out there," she said.

In the other semifinal, determined Wednesday, Russian Maria Sharapova, Australian Open champion and winner here in 2006, will take on another Russian, Svetlana Kuznetsova, a finalist here last year.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

I Love Blake James T-shirt
I Love Blake James T-shirt

Price: $16.99

James Blake Poster
James Blake Poster

Price: $15.50

Breaking Back: How I Lost Everything and Won Back My Life
Breaking Back: How I Lost Everything and Won Back My Life

Price: $11.99

Richard Williams comments on women's tour

WTA head Larry Scott said Thursday that he strongly disagrees with comments made by Richard Williams, father of Serena and Venus, regarding racism on the women's tour.

Saying he was disappointed by Williams' recent remarks during an interview in India, Scott said in a statement: "The Tour has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to racism, and I have previously let Mr. Williams know that he should let me know if he ever had evidence of racist comments or acts in women's professional tennis."

While his daughters were playing earlier this month in Bangladore, India, where Venus reached the quarterfinals and Serena won the title, Williams told the Deccan Herald, "Well, I'm black and I'm prejudiced, very prejudiced. People are prejudiced in tennis. I don't think Venus or Serena was ever accepted by tennis. They never will be."

He said the media treated his daughters unfairly, that it was "the worst media job that they have done on any human being in the world," and that if he were Serena and Venus, he would have quit playing.

"But if you get some little white no-good trasher in America like Tracy Austin or Chris Evert, who cannot hit the ball, they (the media) will claim this is great," he said.

Scott said, "Champions like Chris Evert and Tracy Austin have done so much to help build women's tennis to where it is today, and it is regrettable that anyone would criticize them in this manner."

The Williams sisters haven't played at Indian Wells since 2001. They were booed after Venus pulled out of a semifinal match against her sister, citing knee tendinitis. Serena went on to win the title, but was booed during and after the championship match.

I Love Serena Williams T-shirt
I Love Serena Williams T-shirt

Price: $16.99

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt
I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Nadal rallies vs. Tsonga at Pacific Life tourney

Rafael Nadal came back to win the final five games and beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on Wednesday in an intense, crowd-pleasing rematch of their Australian Open semifinal.

Nadal, the defending Indian Wells champion, avenged his lopsided loss in Melbourne with a scrappy 6-7 (4), 7-6 (3) 7-5 victory Tuesday in the fourth round of the Pacific Life Open.

After Tsonga, a hard-hitting Frenchman, went up 5-2 in the third set, Nadal held serve the rest of the way and broke Tsonga's serve in the ninth and 11th games to take a 6-5 lead.

With the crowd beginning to cheer even as he set up for the shot, the Spaniard capped the match by slamming an overhead past Tsonga.

The 22-year-old Tsonga, who has vaulted from 212 in the rankings in 2006 to No. 17, upset No. 2 Nadal 6-2, 6-3, 6-2 in the Australian Open semis before losing to Novak Djokovic in the final.

Tsonga played brilliantly at times in the rematch against the 21-year-old Nadal, but mistakes cost him at other times.

After ending a long rally when both hit several outstanding shots, Tsonga ended it with a drop shot that Nadal somehow managed to hit back, then a bang-bang volley that left Nadal lying on the ground at the end of the point. That brought Tsonga back from a 15-40 deficit to deuce in the 11th game, but he quickly followed that with a double-fault, then hit a forehand long to lose the game.

Driving powerful forehands down the lines, Tsonga had 47 winners overall - but made 56 unforced errors. The far more consistent Nadal finished with 27 winners and 27 unforced errors. Tsonga, who had 18 aces when he stunned Nadal in Australia, had 11 against him at Indian Wells, but also double-faulted seven times.

The match lasted 3 hours, 3 minutes, and the crowd seemed rapt, reacting loudly to practically every point. Some fans yelled "Go, Ali!" a Tsonga nickname alluding to his resemblance to boxing great Muhammad Ali, and others screaming, "You can do it, Rafa!"

In other matches, Djokovic advanced with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over Guillermo Canas; Tommy Haas edged Andy Murray 2-6, 7-5, 6-3; and David Nalbandian beat Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-2, 6-2.

In a women's quarterfinal, Svetlana Kuznetsova beat Agnieszka Radwanska 6-2, 6-4.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

Adidas Barricade V Mens Tennis Shoes
Adidas Barricade V Mens Tennis Shoes

Price: FROM $109.95

Wilson K Blade Tour K Factor Tennis Racquet (Coming Soon)
Wilson K Blade Tour K Factor Tennis Racquet(Coming Soon)

Price: $199.00

Adidas Mens Essex Shorts - 646482
Adidas Mens Essex Shorts - 646482

Price: $19.95

Tennis governing bodies unify replay rules, allowing 3 unsuccessful challenges per set

All professional tennis tournaments using an electronic replay system will offer players the same amount of challenges per match starting next week.

Each player will get a maximum of three unsuccessful challenges per set, plus one wrong challenge in a tiebreaker, the International Tennis Federation said Wednesday in a joint statement with the ATP, WTA Tour and Grand Slam committee.

Players can still make an unlimited number of correct challenges.

Previously, the men's and women's pro tours offered only two unsuccessful challenges per set plus one in the tiebreaker. The ITF's team competitions, including the Davis Cup and the Fed Cup, offered unlimited challenges.

The unified system will start next week at the Sony Ericsson Open in Key Biscayne, Fla.

For matches that don't use tiebreakers, players will get an addition three challenges for every 12 games played.

"The players will know where they stand," ITF spokesman Nick Imison said. "There hadn't been an agreement up until this point."

The U.S. Open previously allowed only two unsuccessful challenges per set, while Wimbledon and the Australian Open allowed three. The French Open, played on clay, doesn't need replay technology because balls leave a mark on the surface.

"With an additional challenge per set, we look forward to the Chase Review being used more frequently at this year's U.S. Open," tournament director Jim Curley said in a statement.

Each individual tournament will still be able to decide whether it wants to use the technology, and most will only have one or two courts wired for the replays. But it will ensure that all major matches are using the same rules.

"This is another example of the effort of all governing constituencies in the sport to find a balanced, unified approach to issues of common interest," the ITF said.

Davenport beats Bartoli to advance at Indian Wells

Southern California's own Lindsay Davenport continues to get more and more ready for tennis' prime time.

She took one more step on her road back to major tournament semifinals and finals with a late night 6-2, 7-5 victory Tuesday in the women's Pacific Life Open.

Davenport, 31, of Laguna Beach, who took time off to have a baby last year and said at the time that she didn't plan to come back, has won four tournaments since that comeback late last fall and is now setting her sights on enhancing that comeback with a successful showing at this women's tier I event.

In her fourth round match, one that began just before 11 p.m. on center court, she took out sixth-seeded Marion Bartoli of France. But it wasn't really an upset, even though Davenport is seeded 24th here.

Bartoli's success story is her appearance in last year's Wimbledon final. Davenport's includes titles in three of the four majors, the Australian, Wimbledon and U.S. Open, not to mention 89 careeer titles, including singles and doubles. She missed most of 2007 but continues to gather ratings points now.

Against Bartoli, who hits two-handed from both sides, Davenport ran through the first set and then stumbled as bit as Bartoli went to a 5-3 lead. The French woman, serving at that point, lost a challenge when the electronic Hawkeye machine rule Davenport's shot good on the baseline. That got her to break point, she converted and then held serve easily for 5-5.

Now, like somebody in a rush to catch a bus, she broke Bartoli at love, then served three aces at 6-5 and got the match point with a 109 mile-an-hour first serve and a forehand winner off Bartoli's return.

Davenport's next match will be a real test. She will face No. 3 Jelena Jankovic of Serbia.

In the other evening match on the women's side, No. 1 Ana Ivanovic out lasted France's Francesca Schiavone, 2-6, 7-5, 6-2.

"In the first set," Ivanovic said, "I had a lot of mis-hits, but I think I fought pretty well. In the third set, I basically played point by point and didn't think about the score too much."

Ivanovic next plays Russia's Vera Zvonareva.

I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt
I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wimbledon 2005 Final: Williams vs. Davenport (DVD)
Wimbledon 2005 Final: Williams vs. Davenport (DVD)

Price: $24.99

Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving
Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving

Price: $399.99

Federer advances; Sharapova improves to 17-0

Roger Federer needed only 53 minutes to get through the third round, and Maria Sharapova extended her perfect start to the year by winning her 17th consecutive match on Tuesday in the Pacific Life Open.

Three-time Indian Wells champion Federer, continuing to show strong signs that he's completely recovered from the mononucleosis that hindered him earlier in the season, breezed to a 6-1, 6-1 victory over Nicolas Mahut in their third-round match.

Sharapova, whose streak includes triumphs in the Australian Open and at Doha, outlasted Alona Bondarenko 6-2, 7-5, 6-4 to move into the women's quarterfinals. The 2006 tournament champion, Sharapova seemed to put added zip on her serves and groundstrokes after Bondarenko went up 4-3 in the third set.

Sharapova won the final three games, losing just one point in each of the last two.

Mardy Fish upset Nikolay Davydenko 6-3, 6-2 to join James Blake as the lone U.S. players to make the fourth round. Fish, ranked 98th, dictated the pace of the match with accurate groundstrokes on his way to beating his Russian opponent, who is No. 4.

Federer, No. 1 for the fifth consecutive year, seemed to be losing his aura of invincibility earlier this season, losing to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals, then to Andy Murray in the opening round at Dubai.

It's the first time in eight years that the 26-year-old Swiss star has gone as long as two months into the season without winning an ATP title.

He opened at Indian Wells with an efficient 6-3, 6-2 victory over Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, then seemed to shift his game into high gear as he overwhelmed Mahut. Federer had nine aces and won 96% of his first serves, Mahut had no aces and won 47% of his first serves; Federer hit 26 winners to the Frenchman's seven.

"It was a perfect match, really, for me," Federer said. "Just overall excited being back, happy to be playing well.

"I'm more sure I'm over the sickness."

Sharapova said inconsistency made her match against Bondarenko difficult.

"I was like a little kid doing a beaded bracelet. I would put four beads together and they would all fall down and then I'd start all over again," Sharapova said.

"I was just tough in the end, and it gets me through a lot of matches."

She said she can't always play "great, fantastic tennis," adding, "But I've got to keep my concentration out there and keep my focus for longer periods of time."

Other winners in the men's third round included two-time Indian Wells champion Lleyton Hewitt, 7-5, 6-1 over Mikhail Youzhny; Ivan Ljubicic, 6-3, 6-4 over Tommy Robredo; and David Nalbandian, 7-6 (1), 0-6, 7-6 (6) over Radek Stepanek.

Defending women's champion Daniela Hantuchova, who also won the event in 2002, defeated Sania Mirza 6-1, 7-6 (4), and Svetlana Kuznetsova beat Caroline Wozniacki 6-2, 6-3.

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt
I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag
Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag

Price: $29.95

Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69
Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69

Price: $99.99

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Davenport advances at Indian Wells

The number on Lindsay Davenport's mind was 101 degrees.

And it had nothing to do with temperature readings in the desert. Her 9-month-old son Jagger fell sick for the first time in his young life and Davenport took him to the tournament doctor at the Pacific Life Open on Sunday.

"I was stressed out of my mind, yelling at my husband because my son has a fever and he's not sleeping," Davenport said. "... I think it was mostly because he's teething they think. But he has a rash all over his body and he's really cranky. It's the first time it happened. It was a nightmare yesterday."

Davenport did have reporters in the interview room laughing when she told a story about Jagger's size.

"He's huge. He's great," she said. "We take it as a compliment. Someone the other day was like, 'Oh, your son's so big, and I'm like, 'Yeah, thank you.' She goes to me, 'I had a friend who had a really obese baby.' "

Perhaps failing to realize that the words obese and baby should never meet in the same sentence, the woman kept on talking.

" 'Don't worry, when he grew tall, he grew out of it,' " Davenport said. "I'm like, 'Oh my God.' . . . That was pretty funny."

In any event, stress is all relative. In the old days, it probably meant a lousy practice or going three sets against an untested teenager, not trying to calm a crying infant.

This doesn't mean the old stresses aren't capable of creating moments of anxiety. A day after Jagger's woes, his mother was locked in a third set against an 18-year-old from China, summing it up: "Just kind of drawing everything out. It was like a slow death."

But Davenport won the last four games, beating Yung-Jan Chan, 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, in the third round Monday, and will next play Marion Bartoli.

Of the eight women's matches, Davenport's was the only three-setter.

In men's third-round play, second-seeded and defending champion Rafael Nadal took the first four games and breezed against teenager Donald Young, 6-1, 6-3; No. 9 James Blake beat Carlos Moya, 6-3, 6-4; and in an all-French showdown, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga beat Paul-Henri Mathieu, 7-6 (5), 6-4.

Tsonga's victory set the stage for an appealing fourth-round match against Nadal, a rematch of their Australian Open semifinal, which Tsonga won in straight sets.

"Well, going to be important to serve well, because he's strong in his serve, and from baseline, try to play a little bit more aggressive than in Australia, no?" Nadal said. "I think he have -- he has the control of the point all the time there, so try to not repeat the same."

I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt
I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wimbledon 2005 Final: Williams vs. Davenport (DVD)
Wimbledon 2005 Final: Williams vs. Davenport (DVD)

Price: $24.99

Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving
Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving

Price: $399.99

Nadal, Blake, Jankovic advance at Indian Wells

Defending champion Rafael Nadal defeated Donald Young in their first meeting, and James Blake evened his record against familiar foe Carlos Moya in third-round matches Monday at the Pacific Life Open.

Nadal beat his 18-year-old American opponent 6-1, 6-3. Blake took a methodical 6-3, 6-4 victory over Moya.

Two-time women's title winner Lindsay Davenport bounced back from a second-set loss to defeat Chan Yung-Jan 6-4, 5-7, 6-2. Ana Ivanovic, ranked No. 2 and the top seed since Justine Henin is skipping the tournament, advanced with a 6-3, 6-0 win over Tathiana Garbin.

The 21-year-old Nadal, second in the rankings to Roger Federer, benefited from Young's inconsistency.

Although he was able to match Nadal stroke-for-stroke in some rallies and also hit several hard winners that brought roars from the crowd, Young's inexperience was evident at other times.

After hitting a routine forehand out to end a long rally in the second set, Young slammed his racket to the ground in frustration. Soon after, he banged an overhead volley into the net, shaking his head at missing the easy shot.

Young won just seven of 17 points when he went to the net and Nadal was 6-of-7. Young made 38 unforced errors, 13 more than his Spanish opponent.

Although just some three years older than Young, three-time French Open champion Nadal obviously has a huge edge in experience.

"Well, I think he's young," Nadal said, describing how the match went. "I think he started very nervous. So I tried to score in the beginning, and he had some mistakes."

Young agreed.

"Obviously I was really nervous," he said. "It's not the first time I played in front of a lot of people, but it's the first time I played No. 2 in the world."

Asked if his nerves had calmed down by the second set, Young said, "Yeah, losing 6-1, I think they go away. But overall, it was pretty decent."

Young had scored the biggest victory of his career two days earlier at Indian Wells, beating No. 32 Feliciano Lopez in three sets.

The 28-year-old Blake, at No. 9 the highest-ranking U.S. player remaining in the tournament since No. 6 Andy Roddick was eliminated a day earlier, won for the sixth time in 12 career meetings against Moya, the former No. 1 now ranked 19th.

"We know each other's games really well," Blake said. "I've had a lot of tough matches with him. So I was really happy with getting through it in two sets, and either way, just getting the win was something I was proud of."

Moya, a 31-year-old from Spain, had been the oldest player left in the men's side of the tournament.

Davenport often seemed her own worst enemy in the match against Chan. The 31-year-old Davenport, a former No. 1, had to overcome 48 unforced errors, 20 more than her 18-year-old opponent from Taipei.

Jelena Jankovic, the women's No. 3 seed, romped to a 6-1, 6-1 victory over Ai Sugiyama.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

I Love Blake James T-shirt
I Love Blake James T-shirt

Price: $16.99

James Blake Poster
James Blake Poster

Price: $16.00

James Blake Autographed Game Model Dunlop Tennis Racquet
James Blake Autographed Game Model Dunlop Tennis Racquet

Price: $319.00

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Haas upsets Roddick in Indian Wells

Sixth-seeded Andy Roddick was ousted from the Pacific Life Open on Sunday, losing 6-4, 6-4 to unseeded Tommy Haas.

Roddick's famously fast serve failed him in the match, as he hit just 54% on his first serves and was broken twice.

Seventh seed David Nalbandian needed three sets but reached the third round by beating Ernestes Gulbis 6-4, 4-7, 7-6 (4).

No. 12 Fernando Gonzalez was not so fortunate, losing in three sets to Mario Ancic. No. 25 Nicolas Almagro was also upset by Nicolas Mahut.

Also on the men's side, 11th seed Andy Murray lost a set before rallying to beat Jurgen Melzer 3-6, 6-3, 6-3. No. 15 Tommy Robredo, No. 20 Ivo Karlovic, and No. 29 Radek Stepanek also advanced.

On the women's side, fourth-seeded Maria Sharapova continued her tear in 2008, reaching the fourth round with a straight sets win over Eleni Daniilidou. She will face No. 15 Alona Bondarenko, who knocked out 17th seed Amelie Mauresmo.

No. 2 Svetlana Kuznetsova also reached the fourth round, as did No. 10 Agnieszka Radwanska and unseeded Caroline Wozniacki.

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

I Love Tommy Haas T-Shirt
I Love Tommy Haas T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

TOMMY HAAS - Tennis Star AUTOGRAPH - Signed 3.5x6 Photo
TOMMY HAAS - Tennis Star AUTOGRAPH - Signed 3.5x6 Photo

Price: $17.99

Tommy Haas & Nicolas Kiefer dual autographed Tennis magazine
Tommy Haas & Nicolas Kiefer dual autographed Tennis magazine

Price: $60.00

Young rallies against Lopez at Indian Wells

Teen who lost first 11 matches on tour wins, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-2, at windy Indian Wells.

Proof that tennis life, indeed, does exist after going 0-11 was out on Stadium Court 3 during a wind-swept Saturday afternoon, taking the form of 18-year-old Donald Young.

This was a rare lefty vs. lefty contest: Young vs. Feliciano Lopez of Spain, and the accompanying soundtrack was an almost constant beat of flags from various nations on top of the stands flapping loudly in the wind.

If conditions inside the main Stadium Court at the Pacific Life Open in Indian Wells were difficult - one winner, Novak Djokovic, called it the "ugliest match" he had played - life for the proletariat on the outside courts was considerably more complicated.

Young led by a set and 3-0 before losing the second in a tiebreaker. He used a bathroom break to compose himself and steadied enough to beat Lopez, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-2, avenging his loss to the Spaniard at the U.S. Open last year in four sets.

"Yeah, it was tough," Young said. "I'm just happy to be the one with the 'W' at the end of the day. I don't really know how balls were going in. You couldn't really hit your shot with the serve."

Still, the top-seeded players, while needing to be resourceful with the tricky conditions, mostly emerged unscathed with the exception of No. 10 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, who lost to Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4.

On the women's side, top-seeded Ana Ivanovic of Serbia faltered in the second set before beating Ioana Raluca Olaru of Romania, 6-1, 5-7, 6-0, and Lindsay Davenport had a short afternoon of work, playing just one set against Gisela Dulko of Argentina. Dulko retired because of a strained right quadriceps after Davenport won the first set, 6-2,

In other second-round matches, No. 2 Rafael Nadal of Spain, the defending champion, beat Santiago Giraldo of Colombia, 6-3, 6-3, and No. 3 Djokovic was pushed in the second set before beating Andreas Seppi of Italy, 6-3, 7-6 (3).

Nadal will next play Young, and he admitted he did not know much about the American. In fact, the majority of questions were about his friendship with Lopez.

"If I play Feliciano, I'm going to start to win the match tomorrow on the golf course," Nadal joked.

It wasn't as though anyone was doubting Young's ability to win against Lopez, but Young admitted to succumbing to nerves when he had the chance to serve it out in the second set.

There was a time, not long ago, when Young's early struggles had him wondering when - or if - his breakthrough would come on the main ATP tour. He lost his first 11 matches, including a 6-0, 6-0 defeat against Carlos Berlocq at Miami in 2006.

Young, now ranked 86th, was candid about his thoughts during the losing streak.

"Just when am I going to win one? That was pretty much it," he said. "When was I going to win one? Come on. Please. Guys I was beating, they were winning ones and I wasn't. It was really disappointing, but I figured out how to win one."

The Berlocq loss was especially humiliating for the kid who was on the cover of many sports sections at age 14.

"Yeah, Miami hurt a lot. I've never lost 0-0 in my life, and then I lost 0-0 at one of the biggest tournaments I played," Young said. "That wasn't too confidence boosting at all. Actually shut it down pretty bad.

"And then on TV I got talked about bad, you know. And then he loses 0-0 to [James] Blake. It just looked really bad, so it hurt my feelings a lot."

Unwittingly, he became the poster boy for what is said to ail the wild-card system. But he made a concerted effort to curtail his social life to devote himself more fully to tennis. Finally, he had his first ATP victory just before the U.S. Open last year, beating Amer Delic at New Haven, and followed up by pushing Nikolay Davydenko to three sets in the next round.

Not that he recommended anyone go 0-11.

"It was definitely a learning experience," Young said. "I wouldn't say 11 was good for me, but, you know, I did it."

Nadal, Ivanovic cruise at Pacific Life Open

Nadal, the No. 2 seed, beat qualifier Santiago Giraldo of Colombia, 6-3, 6-3.

The third-seeded Djokovic bested Italy's Andreas Seppi 6-3, 7-6 (3) on another day plagued by cold, gusty winds.

"You always want to pick up the best things in the match and keep the high level of performance," said Djokovic, who made his debut in the ATP Tour's top 10 after losing to Nadal in last year's Pacific Life final.

"But it was a very ugly match to watch, a lot of unforced errors," he said. "It was so windy, you couldn't get any rhythm."

On the women's side, No. 3 seed Jelena Jankovic, No. 6 Marion Bartoli and two-time event winner Lindsay Davenport joined Ivanovic in the third round. Jankovic, of Serbia, beat Ahsha Rolle 6-0, 6-2; France's Bartoli beat Elena Vesnina of Russia, 6-0, 6-4; and Davenport had taken the first set from Gisela Dulko, 6-2, when the Argentine retired due to a strained right quadriceps.

Davenport was happy to end the match because of the conditions on the court.

"I feel fine with one set," she said.

Jankovic, however, said the weather helped her.

"In the windy conditions, you have to be really focused and really try to move your feet," Jankovic said. "That's what I did today, so I'm really glad with my performance despite the conditions. I'm happy to get through."

There was one minor upset on the men's side, with Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland beating No. 10 seed Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4.

Rafael Nadal Ace Poster (1x), Posters, Gifts, Racquets Sports Accessories
Rafael Nadal Ace Poster (1x), Posters, Gifts, Racquets Sports Accessories

Price: $8.32

Babolat Aeropro Drive + with Cortex. Free String. Free shipping
Babolat Aeropro Drive + with Cortex. Free String. Free shipping

Price: $179.99

Rafael Nadal 8x10 Photo - Pumped Up Front View
Rafael Nadal 8x10 Photo - Pumped Up Front View

Price: $9.99

I Love Ana Ivanovic T-Shirt
I Love Ana Ivanovic T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Ana Ivanovic Tennis Player Photo
Ana Ivanovic Tennis Player Photo

Price: $29.99

I Love Ana Ivanovic Cap
I Love Ana Ivanovic Cap

Price: $16.99

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Federer ready for 'tricky' time at Pacific Life Open

Federer is still No. 1, but he'd like to blot out questions at Indian Wells after failing to reach the Australian Open final and just finding out he had a bout with mononucleosis.

Being on a pedestal means others will be looking for ways to knock you off.

Some pedestal-sitters are oblivious to that. The smart ones, the Roger Federers, recognize their high ground and protect it warily.

Federer has been No. 1 in men's tennis since Jimmy Carter was president. OK, it just seems that long.

He actually took over the top spot Feb. 2, 2004. That was after he had won his second major, the Australian Open, and before he won 10 of the next 15 Grand Slam events.

He didn't just take over men's tennis. He was men's tennis.

If it weren't for tournaments played mostly in Europe, where two players stand yards behind the baseline, slap looping ground strokes at each other for hours - and that's just the first set - and finish looking like jockeys who have just raced in the mud, Federer might have shut the entire game down.

In its time of need, tennis was rescued by Rafael Nadal, who dominated at least the clay-court portion of the game, winning the last three titles in the French Open dirt at Roland Garros.

Without that, the sport might have become a series of notes from opponents, having just viewed the draw sheet and seen their name next to Federer's, to tournament directors: "Dear Sir. So Sorry. He's too good. Am going home early. Just mail the default check."

Almost since Federer won his first Wimbledon title, and his first major title, in 2003, the story line has been a stream of flowery adjectives and justifiable hyperbole. Another theme has been invincibility, also justifiable.

Most of that remains valid. But there have been hints that cracks may exist near the base of the statue.

Federer didn't win the Australian this year, didn't make it to the final for the first time in 11 Grand Slam events. In his only other tournament outing this year, he lost in the first round to Andy Murray in Dubai. His 2008 record is 5-2, his year's prize money $314,760. Chump change.

Which brings us to real time, as Internet folks call it.

Federer is back at Indian Wells and will start playing Sunday in the Pacific Life Open, which has, on the tennis tour, the status of a mini-major. Federer won the event in 2004, 2005 and 2006, but, inexplicably, bowed out early last year to an unseeded qualifier, Guillermo Canas, who had been off the tour on a 15-month drug suspension.

Then Canas beat him again in the next tournament, another mini-major in Miami.

That didn't exactly wipe out the season for Federer. He went on to win the U.S. Open - his 12th major that brought him to within two of Pete Sampras' record. Then he tacked on the season-ending win at the Tennis Masters Cup and finished the year, at No. 1, of course, giving him another $10,130,620 in prize money to help him with his Christmas shopping.

But the combination of this year's start, mostly attributable to a recently diagnosed bout with mononucleosis, and the memory of last year and Canas' double whammy, have given Federer a renewed resolved these days. Never a "what me, worry?" kind of guy, Federer said Friday that he considers the month of March, with two weeks of tournament play at Indian Wells followed directly by two weeks at Miami, as "tricky."

"I need to start well here, to get going, have a good event," he said. "You have just two tournaments in the month, and if you play a bad one, maybe go out early, people talk.

"It's different if it is three tournaments in four weeks and you have another tournament to get back on track.

"This time, right now, is a tricky period."

Last year, after losing to Canas in the second round, Federer stayed around the desert, practiced a lot, even played some golf.

"I think that's the last time I played," he said.

And while he agreed that the break was nice, the weather is always great and time away from pressure is always welcome, he admitted to getting itchy.

"You want to get back out there," he said. "I don't want 10 days of practice like last year."

What he does want is his energy back, something he thinks has now returned after his bout with mono.

"I was just happy to find out exactly what it was," he said. "They did a lot of checking for bacterial infections and food poisoning. I ended up in the emergency room three times. I don't think there was any misdiagnosis. They just had to eliminate other things."

He also seems to want the reinstatement, to the status of rivalry, his matches with Nadal, who won at Indian Wells last year and is seeded second. They can only meet in the final, and Federer seems almost eager for that.

When asked whether up-and-coming Novak Djokovic, Australian Open winner, who beat him in the semifinals there, had taken over as his rival, Federer responded quickly.

"Rafa is my rival. We have played much more, we are 2-2 in Grand Slam finals, we have played some epic five-setters, like at Miami and at Rome.

"I used to not like the rivalry thing. I didn't think that much about it, or care that much about it. But now, with Rafa, it is good.

"With Djokovic, we just haven't played that many times."

Federer's first match at Indian Wells will be against Guillermo Garcia-Lopez.

That other Guillermo, Canas, is seeded 16th this year and on the other side of the bracket. If Nadal isn't there at the end, Canas might be a nice consolation prize for Federer.

They would call that match a final. Federer might call it pedestal-crack repair.

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

Graf edges Navratilova in Tokyo exhibition

Once again, Steffi Graf and Martina Navratilova needed a tiebreaker to settle the score.

Playing "Dream Match 2008" before a sellout crowd at Tokyo's Ariake Stadium on Saturday, Graf defeated Navratilova 8-7 after winning a tiebreaker 10-5.

"It was great that it went to a tiebreaker," Graf said. "It was a lot of fun playing Martina again. It brought back so many memories."

In their first match in 14 years, Graf took a 6-3 lead before Navratilova tied the match at 6-6 and forced a tiebreaker.

"It was almost a surreal experience," Navratilova said. "I felt like we went back in time. People always asked me who the toughest player to play against was and if it wasn't Steffi, I don't know who it was."

Before retiring, Graf and Navratilova met 18 times and each won nine times. The last time the two greats met was at the 1994 Toray Pan Pacific in Tokyo, which Graf won 6-2, 6-4.

After defeating Navratilova on Saturday, Graf lost to Kimiko Date of Japan 6-2, 6-3. In an earlier match, Date beat Navratilova 8-6.

Date and Graf played a memorable Fed Cup match at the same venue in 1996, when Graf led 5-1 in the first set but Date rallied to win the set and match 7-6 (7), 3-6, 12-10.

"It's so much fun to be back in this stadium," Graf said. "I have so many good memories of playing here and I hope the fans enjoyed today's matches."

I Love Steffi Graf T-Shirt
I Love Steffi Graf T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Steffi Graf autographed March 1989 Sports Illustrated
Steffi Graf autographed March 1989 Sports Illustrated

Price: $160.00

Steffi Graf Autographed Tennis Ball Shadowbox
Steffi Graf Autographed Tennis Ball Shadowbox

Price: $439.00

I Love Martina Navratilova T-Shirt
I Love Martina Navratilova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Martina Navratilova Farewell Framed Memorabilia
Martina Navratilova Farewell Framed Memorabilia

Price: $224.99

Martina Navratilova Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box
Martina Navratilova Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box

Price: $399.99

Sharapova mows down Cohen-Aloro at Pacfic Life

Maria Sharapova won her 15th straight match without a loss this year, overpowering French qualifier Stephanie Cohen-Aloro 6-1, 6-0 on Friday night in the wind-blown second round of the Pacific Life Open.

The fourth-seeded Sharapova, the 2006 champion, had little trouble with Cohen-Aloro, breaking her serve five times and losing only 24 points in the 58-minute match.

"You never know what kind of tennis you're going to produce in these conditions, but against an opponent that didn't give me much pace, I think I handled it pretty well," Sharapova said.

The Russian star joined second-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova and defending champion Daniela Hantuchova in the third round. Kuznetsova beat Russian countrywoman Ekaterina Makarova 6-1, 6-1 in 53 minutes, and the fifth-seeded Hantuchova opened her title defense with a 6-1, 6-2 victory over wild-card Angela Haynes.

Kuznetsova saved the three break points she faced and broke Makarova five times en route to her victory.

"It was tough with the wind, but I was able to play well on the key points," Kuznetsova said.

Hantuchova won 22 of 23 points on her first serves in the match and lost just 12 total points in the opening set. The 5-foot-11 right-hander, also the 2002 Indian Wells winner, didn't face a break point.

"This is the court for me. I wish I could play every match of the year on this court," the three- time tour winner said. "I don't know what it is. I guess it's the bounce - not too slow, not too fast. It was just perfect. I feel like I can hit every time in the middle of my racket."

She was able to adapt to the gusting wind.

"There's not too much to do other than just trying to hit the ball inside the court, not going for too many crazy shots," Hantuchova said. "You are never going to have incredible rallies and beautiful shotmaking. It's about putting it inside the court, no matter how."

Eighth-seeded Dinara Safina of Russia and No. 10 Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland also advanced. Safina beat Jill Craybas 7-6 (3), 7-5, and Radwanska edged Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine 6-1, 7-6 (3). China's Shuai Peng beat No. 23 Karin Knapp of Italy, 6-1, 6-3.

In men's first-round play, American Sam Querrey, the winner last week in Las Vegas, was a 7-6 (5), 6-3 winner over Peru's Luis Horna; and 6-foot-9 John Isner outlasted Italy's Simone Bolelli, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (2). Austria's Jurgen Melzer eliminated former U.S. Open champion Marat Safin of Russia 7-6 (5), 2-6, 6-2. It was Safin's fourth loss in five matches this year.

I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt
I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag
Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag

Price: $29.95

Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69
Maria Sharapova - Fathead , 36x69

Price: $99.99

Friday, March 14, 2008

Hantuchova starts Indian Wells title defense

Defending champion Daniela Hantuchova made short work of her opener at the Pacific Life Open, beating American wild card Angela Haynes 6-1, 6-2 in her first match in four weeks on Friday.

Hantuchova, back as the fifth seed, needed three sets to put down Haynes three years ago but this time didn't even offer a break point in the second-round match.

Recovered from a bad flu-like virus which forced her to retire in the Antwerp quarterfinals then withdraw from two other tournaments, Hantuchova won the first four games against Haynes and the last four.

The Slovak won the tournament in 2002 at 18, and didn't win another title until last year's event. Her bid to become the first three-time champion at Indian Wells faces a potential major hurdle in the quarterfinals, where Hantuchova is seeded to meet Australian Open champion Maria Sharapova.

Eighth-seeded Dinara Safina overcame 10 double faults to beat American Jill Craybas 7-6 (3), 7-5, and 10th-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska was broken five times but pulled out a 6-1, 7-6 (3) win over Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine.

Also, Peng Shuai of China beat Karin Knapp of Italy 6-1, 6-3, Alona Bondarenko of Ukraine downed Tsvetana Pironkova of Bulgaria 6-3, 7-6 (2), and Dominika Cibulkova of Slovakia beat Sofia Arvidsson of Sweden 7-5, 6-4.

In the men's draw, Romania's Victor Hanescu and Chile's Nicolas Massu won their first-round matches.

I Love Daniela Hantuchova T-Shirt
I Love Daniela Hantuchova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Daniela Hantuchova autographed 2003 NetPro tennis Rookie Card
Daniela Hantuchova autographed 2003 NetPro tennis Rookie Card

Price: $25.00

Daniela Hantuchova autographed 8x10 tennis photo
Daniela Hantuchova autographed 8x10 tennis photo

Price: $50.00

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Sharapova eyes a return to the top

Maria Sharapova doesn't dream like she once did as a teenager, as she's firmly stuck in her highly successful tennis reality.

But the 20-year-old Sharapova will never deny herself an opportunity to think positively about her chances, and when FOXSports.com asked her whether she could boldly go where the greatest women's player ever, Steffi Graf, did back in 1988, when the German won the Golden Slam (all four majors plus the Olympics), she hesitated, but wouldn't count herself out.

"Lets not get carried away," Sharapova said with a laugh. "Winning 14 matches in a row doesn't mean I'm going to win the Golden Slam. But anything is possible. I don't know if I'm ready and capable of doing it, but it can happen."

While three-time Grand Slam champion and former No. 1 Sharapova cannot be counted out of anything due to her fighting spirit and much-improved game, winning the year's five biggest tournaments with a deep, ambitious field around her seems almost unattainable, especially since she's never been a great clay court player (the French Open is played on dirt) and has gone through fits trying to keep healthy over the past two years.

And even though the Russian has looked dominant this year, not losing a match and winning the Australian Open, two matches in Fed Cup and the title in Doha, there are a handful of terrific players eyeing the same major titles.

One of those is Serbian Ana Ivanovic, another 20-year-old who has grabbed the world No. 2 ranking and no longer feels that she's still too immature to make a serious charge at No. 1 — Sharapova bested the charismatic Ivanovic in the Australian Open final, but Ivanovic is the top seed at this week's Pacific Life Open at Indian Wells, Calif., and says that she's very close to hitting her top form.

Current No. 1 Justine Henin, who is skipping the tournament, must be wary of Ivanovic, as must the fifth-ranked Sharapova, who is the hottest player right now, but still has a lot of ground to make up after a mediocre first seven months of 2007.

"Obviously being second in world, that's as close as you can get," Ivanovic said. "I learned in Australia that I have a few things (to) improve, but it's possible now and I believe in it. Everything I do is to achieve my goal of becoming No. 1. This year will be interesting because so many girls are playing better and it will be tough for Justine to remain in that position. It's going to be a huge competition for that position."

Tennis is to some degree a cyclical sport, but players must work hard not to be thrown out of the elite orbit. Henin utterly dominated the second half of 2007, losing only one match from late May on. But now, after Sharapova stomped her in Australia, there is thought permeating the locker room that the super-creative Belgian is ripe for a fall.

"It can't last forever," world No. 3 Svetlana Kuznetsova said. "People play one year well and then not. It's very hard to stay at the top. Maria was injured and then had some rest and she started strong, is focused and playing well."

But as Sharapova says, one three-month period of excellent health and tremendous form does not guarantee an automatic rise back to the top. She's been through way too much in her five years on tour to think that she'll just cruise through the rest of the season. She flew 48,000 miles from the start of the year through early March and that's not easy on anyone's body.

But she's making sure to have a little fun in between intense training sessions, attending the premier of "10,000 BC" last week with her close friend, actress Camille Belle, who had the lead role in the film.

"Apart form getting sick during Doha, everything has held up well, but this year is very young," Sharapova said. "The flying was insane, and it does feel like it. But I'm just in a happy place in my career and in my life."

Ivanovic feels much the same way, even though, like Sharapova, when she's in great mood, her bright smile and personality can captivate a room like a beaming Angelina Jolie strolling down the red carpet.

Even when she's talking about emotionally trying losses, like her 7-5, 6-3 defeat to Sharapova in the Australian Open final, the Serbian is engaging and energetic. You can literally feel her pain when she discusses what went wrong in Melbourne.

"That game at 5-4, I had chances and I made the wrong shot with a drop shot," she said. "I thought it was great idea at time, but it did not turn out too good. Maria is great champion and against those players, you have to use opportunities a little different.''

If Ivanovic wants to achieve No. 1 this year, she will more than likely have to win a Grand Slam title. But that's not her dream. She'd rather bring home a gold medal to tiny Serbia.

"It would be amazing," she said. "I would rather take a gold meal over the Slam this year because its only once in every four years and there are so few opportunities to do it."

While the tall brunette would certainly look good carrying the Serbian flag on the opening day of ceremonies, she'd rather take a pass and let her good friend and countryman, the zany Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic, lead the procession

"He's the showman," Ivanovic said. "But I really hope he'll just carry it and not make any jokes. But he might take his shirt off. I'd love to do it, but he'll put his hand up first."

Sharapova will almost certainly be part of the large Russian contingent in Beijing, too. But first things first for both she and Ivanovic: wrestling the Pacific Life Open trophy from the soft and capable hands of defending champion Daniela Hantuchova.

Sharapova says she's fresh and rested and ready to retake the crown she won in 2006, while Ivanovic seems eager to tee it up immediately.

"I have to stay with these top girls for a longer period of time and handle their pace better," she said. "I can't be afraid. That's what the champion (does)."

I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt
I Love Maria Sharapova T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag
Prince 2006 Sharapova Team Backpack Tennis Bag

Price: $29.95

Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69
Maria Sharapova -Fathead , 36x69

Price: $99.99

Angela Haynes courts success again

First-round win over Errani at Indian Wells is a small step back for player who has struggled since death of her brother in 2005.

The body was fine, thank you, it just took longer for Angela Haynes' mind to click back to where it had been in 2005 when she pushed Serena Williams to the brink of elimination at Wimbledon.

Haynes, raised in Compton and now living in Irvine, has practically been absent from the main WTA Tour the last couple of years, and her colleagues were wondering what physical reason was behind it when she resurfaced at the Pacific Life Open at Indian Wells.

After all, she is anything but old in tennis years, all of 23.

"People have been asking me where I've been," Haynes said. "Have I been hurt? No, I've just been playing challengers."

Haynes, a wild-card entrant, was talking Wednesday in the media center, not long after a deeply satisfying first-round victory. Not that most wins don't hold that distinction, but this one will give her a shot at defending champion and fifth-seeded Daniela Hantuchova in the second round.

Moreover, at this time last year she was getting ready to play a $25,000 challenger in Orange. Now her 7-5, 6-2 victory over Sara Errani of Italy represented her biggest of the year, in terms of a big-event platform and her ranking.

Errani, who nearly beat Lindsay Davenport in the first round of the Australian Open in January, is ranked No. 72 to Haynes' 221. And Haynes was forced to scramble back from an 0-4 first-set deficit.

"I figured it couldn't get any worse," Haynes said. "I was going to call my dad, my coach, after the set and ask him what I was doing wrong. I needed some help, badly.

"I felt if I can get one game and get my nerves down and get something going, I felt I was going to be OK. She was playing well. I was just giving her too many free points."

Her year started at a $25,000 tournament in St. Leo, Fla., and traveling the minor-league route can often be humbling experience after the gilded rides at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.

"Back when I was playing well, having good results, you can take it for granted so easily," Haynes said. "And I think that's what I did. I got a little cocky and had a couple of humbling experiences.

"Being here now, you just have to work hard and when you get to where you want to be, you have to work even harder to keep it. I definitely know that now."

What happened to Haynes is understandable. Her brother Dontia, who played tennis at San Diego State, was killed in a motorcycle accident in 2005.

Their bond went beyond the closeness of a brother and sister. They were trained by their father, Fred, and Angela joked at Wimbledon how angry Serena Williams used to get at losing to Dontia when they were kids growing up in Compton.

Not long after Dontia's death, father and daughter were back on the road.

"It's brought us a lot closer, especially after what happened to my brother," she said. "I respect my dad a whole lot more. He went back with me on the road a month after my brother passed away, which was the hardest thing for him."

"It was very tough. My mom needed him the most and he came with me."

She spoke about the long struggle to pull herself together.

"My mind has really, really been gone," Haynes said. "I've had a lot of setbacks. I've tried to get it back and my mind was gone again.

"But, this year I feel good. My head is there. I've got to leave it behind me and move forward."

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Wild-card Angela Haynes advances to 2nd round in Pacific Life Open

Angela Haynes, a wild-card entrant from nearby Irvine, overcame a 4-0 first-set deficit to beat Italy’s Sara Errani 7-5, 6-2 on Wednesday in the first round of the Pacifc Life Open.

The 23-year-old Haynes, ranked 221st, was playing just her third WTA match of the year. She will face defending champion Daniela Hantuchova in the second round. Hantuchova is trying to become the first player to win the event three times.

Ashley Harkleroad also advanced, beating the Ukraine’s Tatiana Perebiynis 6-2, 6-0. Jill Craybas edged Czech qualifier Barbora Zahlavova Strycova 7-6 (2), 6-4, while Russia’s Ekaterina Makarova beat Meilen Tu 6-4, 6-2.

All 32 seeded players have first-round byes.

Hantuchova is seeded fifth behind Ana Ivanovic, Svetlana Kuznetsova, Jelena Jankovic and Maria Sharapova.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Roddick rallies past Lopez to win Dubai crown

For once, Andy Roddick faced an opponent who could match him serve for serve. Though Feliciano Lopez managed more aces, he couldn't stop Roddick from winning his second ATP Tour title in three weeks with a 6-7 (8-10), 6-4, 6-2 victory in the Dubai Tennis Championship final on Saturday.

"This is as well as I've played," said Roddick, who didn't drop his serve throughout the tournament.

In his first appearance in Dubai, Roddick ousted second-ranked Rafael Nadal and third-ranked Novak Djokovic during the week to become the first American winner of the tournament.

"I didn't really know what to expect," he said. "A big part of my decision (to attend) was to be able to get a shot at some of the top guys."

Roddick has used his overpowering serve to dominate opponents throughout the tournament but met his match in the final when Lopez served 24 aces to Roddick's 22.

Lopez had some success returning Roddick's serve in the first set, but couldn't keep it up later in the match.

"It doesn't give you a chance, not one time," Lopez said of the serve.

Roddick failed to convert a set point in the first tiebreaker, but kept pressure on Lopez with powerful forehands and sliced backhands.

He finally broke the Spaniard to take a 5-4 lead in the second set, and then again in the opening game of the third.

Roddick also won in San Jose last month, but Saturday's victory will probably provide a welcome confidence boost after he revealed Thursday that he split with coach Jimmy Connors.

Roddick credited Connors with vastly improving his backhand, and the 2003 U.S. Open champion said he is ready to challenge for Grand Slam titles again.

"If I keep the form I kept this week I'll definitely be a threat again," he said.

Lopez played an aggressive volley game and tried to press Roddick into making mistakes with his backhand.

"The whole time, I felt I was playing well," Roddick said. "The biggest thing this week was the way I played my forehand," he said.

It was Lopez's second runner-up finish in Dubai. He lost to Roger Federer in the 2004 final.

"I have a lot of confidence for the rest" of the season, Lopez said.

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Serena Williams wins Bangalore Open

Third-seeded Serena Williams clinched the Bangalore Open title by defeating fourth-seeded Patty Schnyder 7-5, 6-3 Sunday.

Williams dominated the final with powerful serves and groundstrokes. Schnyder committed several unforced errors in trying to hit deep and keep Williams at the baseline.

"It's good to be a champ here, it always feels good to win," Williams said. "I did not want to make too many errors. That was my game plan, but I did not stick to it.

"It wasn't my best match. Patty played well and forced me to do better."

The 10th-ranked Williams was warned for a court violation after she cursed and smashed her racket when she faced two break points in the fifth game of the first set.

"I'm passionate about what I do. I got too passionate, my grip was wet and that's what happened," said Williams, who managed to hold her serve.

She the broke Schnyder in the sixth game, but dropped her own serve in the seventh.

Williams wasted two set points in the 10th game when she failed to break Schnyder, who stayed level at 5-5. In the 12th game, Williams again let go two set points, but won the third when Schnyder sent a return into the net.

They traded service breaks in the first three games of the second set with Schnyder breaking Williams in the first and third games.

Williams surged ahead by breaking Schnyder in the sixth and eighth games.

Serving for the match in the 12th game, Williams saved two break points and then won on the first match point she held.

"When you're playing a champion like Serena, you've got to be at your best," the 12th-ranked Schnyder said.

"The first set could have gone either way," she said. "Serena was really focused, she played tough and it was difficult for me to play my game even when I was 5-5."

I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt
I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story
Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story

Price: $2.85

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

Roger Federer, Pete Sampras set to meet at sold-out Madison Square Garden

Roger Federer loves Pete Sampras' game, even if the old guy last played a real match in 2002.

"He's so fluent, you know? His whole technique is so smooth," Federer said. "And it was funny sometimes, because when I played him, it was intimidating. Because he reminded me so much of myself."

How's that for a compliment?

Similarly, Sampras loves Federer's attitude, even if the youngster is fast approaching Sampras' record for career Grand Slam titles.

"I don't think he gets too overwhelmed, too worked up," Sampras said.

Sound familiar?

Sampras, the best of his generation, and Federer, the best of his, bring two eras of excellence together Monday night, when they play an exhibition match at a sold-out Madison Square Garden. It's the first men's professional tennis match at the New York arena in a dozen years.

Pistol Pete vs. The Artful Roger.

The past vs. the present: Sampras is 36; Federer is 26.

A total of 26 major singles championships, 14 for Sampras vs. 12 for Federer.

A total of 10 year-end No. 1 finishes in the rankings, a record six for Sampras vs. four for Federer.

Sampras' serve-and-volley style, something rarely seen these days.

Federer's all-court brilliance, conjuring up shots rarely if ever seen.

They only played each other once on tour, in the fourth round at Wimbledon in 2001, when Federer beat Sampras in five sets.

That came after Sampras had won the last of his seven titles at the All England Club, and before Federer began his current streak of five consecutive championships there.

"I knew he was extremely talented then—a lot of power, didn't have holes in his game," Sampras said. "He figured it out, kind of how I figured it out in my early 20s. Then, the way he started winning majors pretty much with ease, I just accepted that he was going to break my record."

They have started to get acquainted with each other's personality and tennis, having played three exhibitions in Asia in November.

Federer won the first two, and Sampras won the third.

Now comes their first matchup in the United States, a best-of-three-sets encounter on an indoor hard court.

"Look, Roger Federer obviously is a huge favorite, just based on the fact that he's 10 years younger and is playing full-on. He certainly is not going to go out there in front of 19,000 people in New York City and want to lose to Pete Sampras," U.S. Davis Cup captain Patrick McEnroe said. "And Sampras is going to want to show that he can still play. … Will it have the same intensity as a U.S. Open final? No. But it will be very competitive. Both guys will want to play as well as they can."

For Federer, Monday's match might represent an exhibition with no trophy at stake and a guaranteed payday, but it also represents a chance to get in some work.

He's coming off consecutive losses, in the Australian Open semifinals and the first round of an event in Dubai, so there hasn't been much activity of late for a guy accustomed to playing all the way to the end of tournament after tournament.

It wasn't until Friday that word emerged from his camp that Federer was diagnosed last month with mononucleosis, an energy-sapping infection caused by a virus.

"The good news really is to be certain of what has occurred," Federer said in a posting on his Web site. "The bad news is that I have quite some catching up to do in terms of fitness as I am not in the physical state that I would normally be in at this time of the year."

I Love Pete Sampras T-Shirt
I Love Pete Sampras T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Pete Sampras Poster Print
Pete Sampras Poster Print

Price: $30.00

Sampras
Sampras

Price: FROM $1.99

I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt
I Love Roger Federer T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet
Wilson KSixOne Tour 90 K Factor Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.00

Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras
Wimbledon Classic Match: Federer vs Sampras

Price: $7.89

Serena tops Venus en route to Bangalore final

Third-seeded Serena Williams defeated older sister Venus Williams 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (7-4) Saturday to reach the final of the Bangalore Open.

"It was a close match, although we both weren't at our best," said Serena Williams, who will play fourth-seeded Patty Schnyder in the final Sunday.

In the deciding set, Serena Williams broke her sister in the seventh game and had match point in the 10th but wasted it and went on to drop the service point.

"My serve let me down on match point," she said.

In the 12th game, it was Venus Williams' turn to squander a match point, allowing her sister to draw even and take the contest in the tiebreaker.

Serena Williams forced three service breaks in winning the first set before her second-seeded sister struck back to take the second set.

In the other semifinal, Schnyder dominated from the start, forcing three service breaks while conceding one point on her own serve in the first set.

"I struggled with my first serve, but my second serve was fine," Schnyder said. "I kept hitting the ball deep, which she found difficult to return."

Schnyder failed to serve out the match in the ninth game of the second set when Yan broke back — only to lose the match with a double fault in the next game.

"The ball bounced a lot more than I expected, Patty played well and got the angles on her shots," Yan said.

I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt
I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story
Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story

Price: $2.85

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

Roddick rallies past Lopez to win Dubai crown

For once, Andy Roddick faced an opponent who could match him serve for serve. Though Feliciano Lopez managed more aces, he couldn't stop Roddick from winning his second ATP Tour title in three weeks with a 6-7 (8-10), 6-4, 6-2 victory in the Dubai Tennis Championship final on Saturday.

"This is as well as I've played," said Roddick, who didn't drop his serve throughout the tournament.

In his first appearance in Dubai, Roddick ousted second-ranked Rafael Nadal and third-ranked Novak Djokovic during the week to become the first American winner of the tournament.

"I didn't really know what to expect," he said. "A big part of my decision (to attend) was to be able to get a shot at some of the top guys."

Roddick has used his overpowering serve to dominate opponents throughout the tournament but met his match in the final when Lopez served 24 aces to Roddick's 22.

Lopez had some success returning Roddick's serve in the first set, but couldn't keep it up later in the match.

"It doesn't give you a chance, not one time," Lopez said of the serve.

Roddick failed to convert a set point in the first tiebreaker, but kept pressure on Lopez with powerful forehands and sliced backhands.

He finally broke the Spaniard to take a 5-4 lead in the second set, and then again in the opening game of the third.

Roddick also won in San Jose last month, but Saturday's victory will probably provide a welcome confidence boost after he revealed Thursday that he split with coach Jimmy Connors.

Roddick credited Connors with vastly improving his backhand, and the 2003 U.S. Open champion said he is ready to challenge for Grand Slam titles again.

"If I keep the form I kept this week I'll definitely be a threat again," he said.

Lopez played an aggressive volley game and tried to press Roddick into making mistakes with his backhand.

"The whole time, I felt I was playing well," Roddick said. "The biggest thing this week was the way I played my forehand," he said.

It was Lopez's second runner-up finish in Dubai. He lost to Roger Federer in the 2004 final.

"I have a lot of confidence for the rest" of the season, Lopez said.

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

Friday, March 07, 2008

Venus, Schnyder into Bangalore Open semis

Venus Williams dispatched Vera Zvonareva 6-4, 6-3 Friday to reach the semifinals of the WTA's Bangalore Open.

She was joined in the final four by Patty Schnyder, who beat Akgul Amanmurdova 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (1).

Williams raced to a 5-1 lead in the first set, but Zvonareva responded with two breaks of her own to square the set before breaking her in the 10th and final game.

She will meet the winner of Friday's quarterfinal between sister Serena Williams and Russia's Anastasia Rodionova.

In the second set, Venus forced two breaks while dropping serve once in the thin air 3,000 feet above sea level.

"It was difficult to play Venus today and the altitude, too, did not help me," Zvonareva said. "I have a lot of work to do. I have not been at my best form and need to get better."

Schnyder's error-riddled game put her down two breaks in the deciding set, and even after getting back level she squandered three match points in the 12th game. But she found enough to clinch the tiebreak.

"Her serves were tough to return," Schnyder said. "There were ups and downs in my game today. I broke her in the second set which was helpful. She was two breaks up in the decider, I managed to turn around and I am happy."

Schnyder's semifinal opponent will be the winner of Friday's match between Serbia's Jelena Jankovic and China's Zi Yan.

I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt
I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story
Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story

Price: $2.85

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

Venus, Jankovic into quarters in Bangalore

Venus Williams and Jelena Jankovic reached the quarterfinals of the Bangalore Open on Thursday.

Williams struggled past Peng Shuai 6-2, 6-7 (6), 6-2, and Jankovic defeated Sanda Mamic 6-2, 6-2. Williams wasted two match points in the tiebreaker, and then lost the second set with one of her 15 double-faults.

"It's past. You have to go on. I got to hit a lot of balls and that is good," Williams said. "She played well, but I had the upper hand."

Williams had another match point in the third set before she won when Peng hit a volley out.

The seventh-ranked American will face Vera Zvonareva, who beat Agnes Szatmari 7-6 (5), 6-1.

"Venus is going to have a tough match," Zvonareva said. "I will be prepared and hope to raise the level of my game."

Zvonareva was broken in the opening game, but she broke back in the eighth and won the tiebreaker.

"I could have played better," said the seventh-seeded Zvonareva. "I didn't serve too well and I was trying to hit the ball too hard. I am not happy with the way I constructed my points."

In the second set, Zvonareva took a 5-0 lead, breaking Szatmari in the second and fourth games.

Zi Yan also advanced to the quarterfinals, defeating Olga Savchuk 6-2, 6-1.

I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt
I Love Venus Williams T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story
Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story

Price: $2.85

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

Jelena Jankovic autographed 2006 Ace Authentic tennis card
Jelena Jankovic autographed 2006 Ace Authentic tennis card

Price: $25.00

Prince O3 Speedport PRO White Mid Plus Tennis Racquet
Prince O3 Speedport PRO White Mid Plus Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.95

Jelena Jankovic Tennis Player Photo
Jelena Jankovic Tennis Player Photo

Price: $29.99

Roddick upsets Nadal to reach Dubai semis

Andy Roddick used his strong serve to upset Rafael Nadal 7-6 (5), 6-2 Thursday and reach the semifinals of the Dubai Tennis Championships, and then announced he has split with coach Jimmy Connors.

Roddick said that Connors resigned about a week ago because he wanted to spend more time with his family.

Andy Roddick's powerful serve and forehand were too much for Rafael Nadal.

"I still have the utmost respect for Jimmy and thank him for his time," Roddick said.

He credited the eight-time Grand Slam champion for having greatly improved his backhand and boosted his "fighting spirit."

The sixth-ranked Roddick closed the match with one of his 17 aces, and had numerous service winners against the second-ranked Spaniard. One ace was 149.75 mph, breaking the Dubai serve record he set a day earlier.

"I knew I was going to hit it well, from the first point. I kind of let it fly, and that's what it took tonight," Roddick said. "Anything less than that and I wasn't going to win."

Roddick had several love games in the match, using his powerful forehand to keep Nadal at bay.

"The way he was serving tonight, it's tough," Nadal said. "You feel a lot of pressure when you're serving."

Nadal said he made too many errors on his forehands on crucial points.

"Against a big server you have to put these balls in if you want to win," Nadal said. "It's disappointing for me today."

Roddick will next face third-ranked Novak Djokovic, who beat Igor Andreev 6-2, 6-1.

"It's going to be a big challenge for both of us," Djokovic said. "Roddick has the strongest and probably the best serve in today's tennis."

Also on Thursday, Nikolay Davydenko edged Andy Murray 7-5, 6-4 to reach the semifinals.

Murray, who had upset top-ranked Roger Federer in the first round, was forced out of his defensive game by the fifth-ranked Russian's hard serves and quick moves on the baseline.

"I played well," said Davydenko, who trailed 3-0 in the second set. "If you are crazy, you can lose your match. ... If you are concentrated you can win every game."

Murray opened the tournament by extending Federer's losing streak to two matches.

"I'm not terribly disappointed with the week as a whole," Murray said.

Feliciano Lopez also advanced to the semifinals, defeating fourth-ranked David Ferrer 6-4, 6-3.

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

Roddick, Connors no longer working together

Andy Roddick and Jimmy Connors are done working together.

Connors resigned as coach of the sixth-ranked player "about a week ago," Roddick said Thursday after upsetting Rafael Nadal 7-6 (5), 6-2 at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Roddick and Connors paired up in July 2006, and within months Roddick reached the U.S. Open final. But they weren't able to replicate that success at a Grand Slam tournament.

"He's helped my backhand a ton. I mean, it's a different shot than when we got together," Roddick said. "It's a lot more solid. And just that fighting spirit.

"When we got together, I was as close to down and out as I've been. I spent the week after Wimbledon almost as close to depressed as I've been as far as my career goes. And I really credit him for that spark and getting me back into the top five and in a Slam final pretty close there afterwards."

Roddick said he's "not too worried" about playing without a coach, given his recent success against the No. 2 Nadal.

"Tonight's an example. I know how to play," Roddick said. "I just have to set my mind to it."

Roddick won the U.S. Open and reached No. 1 in the rankings 2003 and was runner-up to Roger Federer at Wimbledon in 2004 and '05, when he finished the season ranked No. 3.

Roddick was coached by Brad Gilbert in 2003, but they parted ways in 2004. Roddick worked with Dean Goldfine, and then with his brother, John Roddick, before hiring Connors.

Connors won eight Grand Slam singles titles as a player in the 1970s and 1980s.

"I guess I'm just happy," Roddick said, "to have been able to spend a little bit of time with such a legend."

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

I Love Jimmy Conner T-Shirt
I Love Jimmy Conner T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

JIMMY CONNORS PRESENTS TENNIS FUNDAMENTALS: Comprehensive
JIMMY CONNORS PRESENTS TENNIS FUNDAMENTALS: Comprehensive

Price: $39.99

JIMMY CONNORS PRESENTS TENNIS FUNDAMENTALS: Serve & Volley
JIMMY CONNORS PRESENTS TENNIS FUNDAMENTALS: Serve & Volley

Price: $29.99

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Martina Hingis returning to tennis court for exhibition matches in England

Retired tennis star Martina Hingis will play exhibition matches in Liverpool in June, her first appearance on court since her two-year ban for a positive test for cocaine at last year's Wimbledon.

Banned from official competition, Hingis announced on Tuesday she will play in three exhibition matches from June 13-15 during the unofficial Liverpool International, which features ATP, WTA players and a Legends division two weeks before Wimbledon.

Two other former Wimbledon champions Goran Ivanisevic and Pat Cash are also entered.

The International Tennis Federation found Hingis guilty of the doping violation in January, two months after she announced her retirement when the positive doping test was revealed. She's suspended to Sept. 30, 2009.

The five-time Grand Slam champion has protested her innocence, but hasn't sought to overturn the ruling or punishment.

At a media conference in Liverpool to announce her participation, a live and crackly telephone call with Hingis was relayed, but questions were restricted to a selected radio personality.

"She wants to give something back to the game," tournament director Anders Borg told The Associated Press. "Her life goes on and she wants to be part of the exhibition circuit."

Borg believes Hingis didn't cheat and won't be a bad role model for children at the grasscourt event.

"She knows within herself that she hasn't taken anything and I just find it amazing she has tested more than 200 tests in her career and nothing has ever come up," he said. "Then they find a drug that is not performance-enhancing at all, allegedly taken in the midst of Wimbledon, which I find unbelievable and she denies."

Borg said Hingis still has a lot to offer the game, and could still return to competitive action.

"She's incredibly still only 27 years old," Borg said. "She's still very young and capable of doing it. She reached No. 4 on her second comeback. I think she's easily a top-10 player again if she wants to. Let's hope she considers it."

Hingis won her five Grand Slams before she was 19, and spent 209 weeks at No. 1.

I Love Martina Hingis T-Shirt
I Love Martina Hingis T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Martina Hingis Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box
Martina Hingis Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box

Price: $399.99

Martina Hingis Matted Photo
Martina Hingis Matted Photo

Price: $29.99

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Roddick to face Nadal in Dubai quarters

Andy Roddick will face Rafael Nadal in the quarterfinals of the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Roddick had 13 aces in his 6-3, 6-4 win over Paul-Henri Mathieu, and the second-ranked Nadal easily beat Mikhail Ledovskikh 6-4, 6-0 on Wednesday.

"It's going to be a tough one," Roddick said.

Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray also reached the quarterfinals.

Djokovic advanced with a 6-3, 7-6 (3) victory over Fabrice Santoro, who won their last match at the Paris Masters.

"I started losing my hair in the second set," Djokovic said. "But it was OK, you know, to play such a magician with a racket. He's a very special player and for me it was an honor to play again against him."

Djokovic will face Igor Andreev, who defeated Richard Gasquet 6-3, 6-4.

Murray, who beat top-ranked Roger Federer on Monday in the first round, defeated Fernando Verdasco 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (5). Murray led 6-2 in the third-set tiebreaker but needed four match points to win. Verdasco hit the ball long after a lengthy rally.

"It was a pretty ugly point, actually," Murray said. "I was just making sure I kept the ball in play, because I think he's the sort of guy if you can make a lot of balls against him, keep him in the back of the court, he can get a bit impatient, and luckily he missed one at the end."

Murray said he had a sore knee in the second set.

"I'm just really happy with the way I've fought, after beating Federer," Murray said. "It was really windy and I didn't hit the ball clear at all."

Fourth-seeded David Ferrer also advanced, beating Olivier Rochus 3-6, 7-5, 6-1. Fifth-seeded Nikolay Davydenko defeated Jan Hernych 6-1, 6-4, and Feliciano Lopez upset eighth-seeded Tomas Berdych 6-2, 7-5.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

Serena reaches Bangalore quarters

Serena Williams overcame a shaky start to defeat Tzipora Obziler 7-5, 6-0 Wednesday and reach the quarterfinals of the Bangalore Open.

Playing in her first match since the Australian Open, Williams defeated Obziler despite being broken twice in the first set.

"I did not feel 100 percent," said the 11th-ranked Williams, who noted the long layoff. "I made too many errors today. There were a lot of bad calls out there."

Fourth-seeded Patty Schnyder rallied to defeat Aiko Nakamura 6-7 (1), 6-4, 6-2.

"A win is a win. I was not comfortable for the first hour or so, but I kept firing myself up," Schnyder said.

In other second-round matches, Akgul Amanmuradova defeated Agnes Szavay of Hungary 4-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4, and Anastasia Rodionova stopped Sybille Bammer 7-6 (5), 6-2.

I Love Serena Williams T-shirt
I Love Serena Williams T-shirt

Price: $16.99

Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story
Raising Tennis Aces - The Williams Story

Price: $2.85

Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography
Venus and Serena Williams: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)

Price: $29.85

Nadal, Murray advance to Dubai quarterfinals

Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray reached the quarterfinals of the Dubai Tennis Championships on Wednesday.

The second-ranked Nadal cruised past Mikhail Ledovskikh of Russia 6-4, 6-0, while Murray defeated Fernando Verdasco of Spain 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (5).

"Today, I didn't know this player, but he has a very good potential," Nadal said of his 171st-ranked opponent.

Murray, who stopped top-ranked Roger Federer on Monday in the first round, led 6-2 in the third-set tiebreaker but needed four match points to win. Verdasco finally hit the ball long after a lengthy rally.

"It was a pretty ugly point, actually," Murray said. "I was just making sure I kept the ball in play, because I think he's the sort of guy if you can make a lot of balls against him, keep him in the back of the court, he can get a bit impatient, and luckily he missed one at the end."

Murray said he had to overcome a sore knee in the second set and gusty wind.

"I'm just really happy with the way I've fought, after beating Federer," Murray said. "It was really windy, and I didn't hit the ball clear at all."

Fourth-seeded David Ferrer also advanced, beating Olivier Rochus of Belgium 3-6, 7-5, 6-1, while fifth-seeded Nikolay Davydenko defeated Jan Hernych of the Czech Republic 6-1, 6-4. Feliciano Lopez of Spain upset eighth-seeded Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic 6-2, 7-5.

Later Wednesday, Andy Roddick and Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic were scheduled to play.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

ANDY MURRAY - Tennis Star AUTOGRAPH - Signed 4x6 Photo
ANDY MURRAY - Tennis Star AUTOGRAPH - Signed 4x6 Photo

Price: $24.95

Andy Murray: The Story So Far . . . (Paperback)
Andy Murray: The Story So Far . . . (Paperback)

Price: $17.90

Head MicroGel Prestige Pro Tennis Racquet
Head MicroGel Prestige Pro Tennis Racquet

Price: $199.95

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Nadal, Roddick, Djokovic advance in Dubai

Andy Roddick, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic succeeded where Roger Federer failed at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

They each advanced to the second round Tuesday, a day after the top-ranked Federer extended his losing streak to two in a row.

Roddick defeated Juan Carlos Ferrero of Spain 6-2, 6-4. He had 18 aces, including one that reached 147 mph. In the second set, he won a game with four straight aces.

"That's as well as I've served," Roddick said. "It was a really good first match."

Nadal struggled to beat Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.

"You play the first round like you'd play a quarterfinals," Nadal said. "It was a tough match."

Djokovic, who defeated Federer at the Australian Open semifinals, defeated Marin Cilic of Croatia 6-4, 6-3.

Federer, who is still looking for his 13th Grand Slam title, lost to Andy Murray on Monday in the first round.

"Roger is starting to lose more and more," Djokovic said. "Now, players have started to believe they can win."

Djokovic, who beat Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the Australian Open final, was glad to advance in Dubai, where many players had tough draws.

"It's always good to go through the first round in straight sets," said the Serb, who won after Cilic had saved two match points.

Roddick arrived in Dubai on Monday after playing last week in Memphis, Tenn.

"It's like a paid vacation," Roddick said of Dubai. "It's weird. It's like Star Wars. ... We're not as inventive back home."

Eighth-seeded Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic also advanced, beating Gael Monfils of France 6-3, 6-2.

Mikhail Ledovskikh of Russia, Paul-Henri Mathieu of France, Olivier Rochus of Belgium and Feliciano Lopez of Spain also reached the second round.

I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt
I Love Rafael Nadal T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393
Babolat AeroPro Drive Plus (Cortex) Tennis Racquet - 1393

Price: $185.00

Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster
Rafael Nadal Poster French Open Champ Poster

Price: $16.00

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Soderling upsets Roddick, Davenport in finals

Robin Soderling upset top-seeded Andy Roddick 7-6 (6), 6-3 in the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships quarterfinals on Friday, ending the American's bid to win in consecutive weeks.

Roddick won at San Jose last week and went into the quarterfinal 10-1 this season, ranked sixth in the world. Soderling had been only 7-19 against top 10 players, a record that included a victory over No. 7 Richard Gasquet this week.

But the eighth-seeded Swede served up 16 aces and won all but nine points on his serve and 14 of 18 on his second serve. Soderling, the runner-up in Rotterdam last week, did not face one break point and hasn't been broken in three matches.

Roddick said Soderling outplayed him in what he thought would be his toughest match this week.

"You look at his career record indoors. I think he's over 3-1 in wins to losses. Outdoors, I think he's flirting with .500," Roddick said. "I definitely don't think that's coincidence. You see his toss, it almost brings rain. There's no doubt he's one of the best indoor players."

Soderling will play fourth-seeded Radek Stepanek, who beat Chris Guccione of Australia 7-6 (4), 6-1. Stepanek was runner-up in San Jose last week.

Swedish veteran Jonas Bjorkman saved a match point in beating American teenager Donald Young 1-6, 6-2, 7-6 (6) and will play Steve Darcis of Belgium, a 6-1, 6-0 winner over Benjamin Becker of Germany.

On the women's side, fourth-seeded Lindsay Davenport beat qualifier Marina Erakovic of New Zealand 6-0, 6-3 in 57 minutes. Davenport, who already had beaten Erakovic in a doubles here 6-0, 6-0, will meet fifth-seeded Olga Govortsova of Belarus on Saturday in the final of the Cellular South Cup. Govortsova downed last year's runner-up Shahar Peer of Israel 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

Soderling won the tiebreak by serving up an ace, then watched Roddick hit a poor return.

The Swede had 10 chances to break Roddick, and he finally broke the American again in the seventh game of the second set. With Soderling holding the advantage, Roddick double-faulted to fall behind 4-3 and threw his racket to the court. Soderling broke Roddick again to win the match, converting on his second match point when Roddick hit into the net.

"I'm serving great," Sodering said. "Not only am I serving great, I'm playing great. I played one of my best matches."

Bjorkman, 36 next month, saved a match point at 6-5 in the tiebreaker with a strong service winner. Bjorkman won the next point with a good backhand after a volley, and then 18-year-old Young finished it himself by hitting a backhand into the net before throwing his racket.

It will be Bjorkman's first semifinals since June at Nottingham. The owner of six ATP singles titles and 10 Grand Slam doubles titles, he is making his season debut here after staying home for the birth of his second child.

Darcis has reached his second career semis. The first were last July at Amersfoort, Netherlands, where he won his maiden ATP title. Since then, Darcis hadn't won consecutive matches on the tour until this week.

Davenport will be going for her fourth title since giving birth to her son last June. She won at Auckland this year, but has not won in the United States since New Haven in 2005.

"It's great," Davenport said of reaching the final. "I've expected to win every match and so to come through and perform is great. I didn't play well in Australia and the week after, so I'm excited I got back on the right foot here and hopefully can continue this momentum through the next few tournaments in the United States."

Saturday's final will be the first for Govortsova.

Davenport will be playing for her 55th title.

I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt
I Love Andy Roddick T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323
Babolat Pure Drive Roddick Tennis Racquet - 1323

Price: $189.00

Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series
Pro Performance Hit-A-Way Tennis System Andy Roddick Series

Price: $119.99

I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt
I Love Lindsay Davenport T-Shirt

Price: $16.99

Lindsay Davenport Poster
Lindsay Davenport Poster

Price: $9.99

Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving
Lindsay Davenport Signed Ball in Framed Shadow Box - Serving

Price: $399.99