Tag Archives: roland garros 2011

the king is in his castle

Either way somebody was going to make history today.  Roger stood to win his 17th Grand Slam and his second French Open (completing a second career Grand Slam),  the first in four meetings against Rafa in the finals of the French.  Rafa stood to win his sixth French Open and tie Bjorn Borg’s record.

The two familiar rivals and friends took the court on a gratefully sunny Sunday afternoon.  It had rained during the night and looked threatening through the day, so this was lucky.  The stadium was filled to its capacity of 15,000 and one of the best things about Chatrier is the lack of a ring of corporate boxes.  It gives the place a whole different feel.  Roger came out on court first, to a huge ovation, followed by Rafa who also was received loudly and warmly.

The match got underway and Roger came out firing.  He took a quick 3-0 lead and then went out to 5-2.  On set point, his drop shot just bounced out, and I do mean just.  It was cruel, especially because Rafa took that small opening and widened it to win the next five games.  He stole the first set 7-5.  The first set is crucial always, more so for Roger in this match than Rafa, but not by that much.  Had Roger won the set, you never know; the momentum would have shifted, he would have come out with advantage in the second set rather than a haunting feeling that he almost won it, but was now a set down.

In the second set, Roger fought back from 4-2 down and took it to a tiebreak, which he lost 7-3, always coming from behind there.

It was either win the third set or go home and Roger again fought back from 4-2 down, but this time he did win the set.  A great moment.  There was hope.  The match would at least go a fourth set, maybe a fifth if everyone watching got lucky.

This was no easy match for either player.  At the end of the second set, Rafa was serving for it and the rains come very suddenly.  The players had to leave the court, but they stayed just to the side of the entryway in trainer rooms there.  The rain stopped quite quickly, the whole thing was around ten minutes, not long enough to require a warm-up, but geez, at such a critical juncture, wouldn’t that have been a good idea?

Instead, Rafa came up to the line and played two points, a serve winner to earn a set point that Federer denied him, and then two more points that Roger won bringing things level to 5-5.

In addition to the bizarrely timed rain delay, the wind kicked up as the match progressed.  Not to mention the long match Roger had played against Novak on Friday and how physically and mentally challenging that had been.  Or how less than spectacular Rafa had played the first week and here he was now in fabulous form, but would he maintain it?

Inarguably, this was the best French Open final the two have played.  The key for Roger was his first serve and his forehand and when both were firing, Rafa was on the losing end.  But when his first serve let him down, or the forehand, then Rafa was all over a second serve or a less compelling shot.  Over and over, as is his usual tactic, Rafa worked Roger’s one handed backhand with balls that come up to his shoulder and are very difficult to return once, much less several times in a row.  For all this, for three and three quarters hours the two delivered fantastic tennis, very high quality and you had much less of the feeling that the outcome was inevitable.

It did come to that.  Rafa, who has only been defeated once at the French Open, kept that statistic right where it was.  He broke Roger twice in the fourth set, guaranteeing his victory.  6-1 in the final set.  Rafa still the King of Clay. He fell to his knees and his body shook with tears, exhaustion, relief, happiness.

Worldwide, Roger’s fans were disappointed as was he.  You’re supposed to be, as he said in his press conference afterwards.  He did not stick around for any interviews on court; it was enough to sit there, as is the custom in tennis, waiting for the award ceremony to begin and end,  and all the set-up needed before it can start.

You see almost none of that when you view the tournament on television, but the French are perfectionists in this regard and, of course, always stylish no matter what they do.  Everyone is lined up just so and they get there in a just so manner also.  During every match the changing of the ball kids or the linespeople is like a military exercise.  When the crew come on court in between sets to freshen up the clay, this also is done in a precise manner.  It’s great to watch.

So finally they were ready for the ceremony and Roger spoke graciously in his fluent French.  Rafa even turned in a three language speech, a little French, some English and some Spanish.  And thankfully, Jim Courier, who won the French twice and was there to hand the players their trophies, was not given a microphone.  I understand he even speaks French but I’m sure he would manage to be smarmy and self-congratulatory in another tongue and after such a wonderful final and a great two weeks, I for one was glad to be spared.

Rafa was twenty five years old two days ago.  Bjorn Borg was exactly the same age (minus two days) when he won his sixth.  He only played tennis a little while longer.  He retired from the sport after losing a few months later to John McEnroe at the US Open.  I remember that and what a loss it was, and a shock, for the tennis world.  Borg left when he was no longer number one; if he couldn’t be that, he didn’t want to be in it any more.

Luckily, Rafa is nowhere near retirement.  In fact, he’s headed to the warm-up for Wimbledon, the Queens tournament, and he’ll be there practicing tomorrow and playing on Wednesday.  We’ll see lots more of him and lots more of Roger, too.  Good news.

For now it’s a wrap in Paris.  Thank you for reading Cupcakes and Tennis, the tennis blog with a sweet spot, and stay tuned for reports from Queens and then Wimbledon.

And PS, this is my 100th blog post since I started writing the blog exactly two years ago.  It seems fitting that I reach a little milestone of my own just now. Tennis is a thing of beauty and that’s some of the reason why I enjoy writing about it.

finally the women’s final

Two weeks ago as the tournament got underway, the women’s field was as wide open as it ever has been.  No Serena or Venus, no Justine, Kim bounced out early.  Any one of a dozen or more players could have won and we all just had to watch the action unfold and see which way the wind eventually blew.

Few thought Francesca Schiavone, the defending champion, would get to the final today or hoist the trophy for a second year.  Few thought she’d ever win it once, or any other Grand Slam.  She nearly didn’t make it as she looked down the long lonely barrel of the rifle in her quarterfinal match against Pavlyuchenkova, down a set and 4-1.  So for her to take the court today was at least a little surprising and a testament to her clay court skills and fighting spirit.

Across the net, a woman no one thought could play on clay, including her.  Growing up in China, her parents didn’t even know what tennis was and there weren’t any clay courts, that’s for sure.  Today at least 30 million Chinese watched at 9 PM Beijing time as Li Na took the court for the final of the French Open.

Li has a new coach and he has encouraged her in this direction.  He must have known something because Li has done well in Madrid and Rome before coming to Paris.  Her former coach left her to work with Maria Sharapova, so it had to feel just a little extra good when she beat her the other day.  Li Na’s husband was her coach until recently but after the Australian Open she fired him and that seems to have been a good decision.  Now he can just be a husband.  Much better.

Li reached the finals of the Australian Open end of January and she played a three setter against Kim Cliijsters.  It was her first Grand Slam final, she lost, but she learned.  Today she knew how to be, how to play, and as it turned out, how to win.

You could learn a lot about tennis from the match they played.  Li’s game is a power game, she’s strong off both wings and she hits flat and hard deep into the court, often the corners.  Francesca’s game is to get to net as much as possible, where she is very adept at put away shots, and to throw out a variety of shots and spins to keep her opponent guessing, and, importantly, running.  Li was so dialed into her game for the first set, she utterly deprived Francesca of the chance to play hers.  Most of the set, and most of the match, Li dictated while Francesca reacted.

Li never seemed nervous.  She was ready for the stage and for the win.  In the second set she had chances to go up a double break practically insuring the victory, but Francesca fought back and started to be able to play her game as Li started to miss and began to feel nerves.

It was great to see Francesca come to life.  She very nearly got back into the match and if she had won the second set, who knows what a one set winner takes all scenario would have looked like.  But in the tiebreak that decided the second set, Li just played brilliantly, shots with depth but also cat and mouse encounters and odd shots that required improvisation.  She played like a clay courter a bit, and she won the tiebreak without giving away a single point, 7-0.

As Francesca’s shot went long on the last point, Li slid and fell to the clay.  It was over.  She was and is the new champion, the first Chinese person, man or woman, to win a Grand Slam title.

You think they’re going to build clay courts in China now?  People have talked for awhile about an imminent explosion of interest in tennis in China and surely that’s here now.  Ten years from now all the kids who are going to start playing in China these days because they are inspired by Li Na, we’ll be seeing their names at the top of the game.  If you sell tennis racquets and have an entree into the Chinese market, chances are good you’re going to take some very nice vacations very soon.

Both of these players are likeable, so whichever of them had won it, it was going to be a happy thing.  After the ceremony, after the photo shoot and on-court interviews, finally Li Na got her gear and waved to the remaining people in the stands, walking out the door from which she had entered three hours earlier.  Ball kids carried the all white huge bouquet of flowers that each of the players received before they came on court and all of the ball kids were lined up on both sides of the hallway and stairs, clapping, as the new champion smiled and descended a flight of stairs into the locker room.

One more match tomorrow and how bad can that be?  Federer vs. Nadal.  Have at it, boys.

And on a final note today.  What a bungled deal that whole thing was this week with Fabio Fognini, the Italian player who beat Albert Montanes in the round of sixteen.  He had leg cramps during play and in the middle of a game received treatment.  It was the chair umpire who went out of her chair and on to the court to say whatever she said and after that play stopped.  You are not supposed to receive treatment for leg cramps, in the middle of a game or on a changeover.  So I don’t know why the umpire did what she did.  And funnily enough, she was the one who officiated the final today.

Then, it turned out that more was wrong and the doctor for the tournament weighed in by saying Fognini probably shouldn’t play for a couple of weeks.  But before that, he withdrew from the tournament, his decision, rather than wait a day or so to see if it got better and then decide if he was well enough to play, and his camp apparently said he decided not to play because it was Djokovic he would face.  Maybe if it had been someone else he would have tried, but Djokovic?  He was saying why bother, I’m going to lose.  I had thought he felt bad to miss the opportunity but apparently not.  He’s no Francesca Schiavone.  That’s a little too lazy and spineless for my taste.

Enjoy the final match wherever you are.  More from Cupcakes and Tennis tomorrow and thanks for reading.

clay ball!

It’s been a full first day at Roland Garros.  Play began on a gorgeous sunny Sunday at 11 AM and didn’t end until 9 PM, still perfectly light.  The days are very long this time of year.   There are no night sessions at the French Open, unlike the US Open and the Aussie where tickets are sold for day and evening sessions.  Uniquely also, the French begins on Sunday, the others, including Wimbledon on Monday.  The extra day is another day of ticket sales and of course, being a weekend day, family friendly.  I can attest to the fact that it’s a mob scene.  The extra day of play also provides a buffer in terms of scheduling, in case of rain.

But it doesn’t look like it’s going to rain this week anyway.  Just tennis, tennis and more tennis and I love seeing my big flat screen TV filled corner to corner with the rich beautiful clay.  It’s been like that for a few weeks now, but no one does the clay like they do in Paris.  Those courts are art.

The weather factor today was wind, you could see the players having to stop at times while the red clay swirled and got into their eyes.  It seemed to calm as the day progressed.

The upsets?  Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo, a Spanish player, defeated 19th seed Marin Cilic in straight sets, tight ones, but still.  I had Cilic getting to the fourth round, and I also had Flavia Pennetta going that far and instead she’s going back to Italy.  Her first round match was the last of the day on Lenglen and she lost in three tight sets to a leftie American, at 85th in the world the clear underdog, (Pennetta is the 18th seed), Vavara Lepchenko (not an American sounding name, for sure – she’s from Uzbekistan originally).  Flavia is an experienced player but she was outplayed today.  The American had the biggest win of her life and advances to meet another American who won today, Bethanie Mattek-Sands. Bethanie defeated a Spanish player, Arantxa Parra Santonja in three and appeared on court in her trademark black knee socks.  In Paris!  This woman is truly shlubby.  I guess you could call it a trademark look, but why bother dignifying it?

The match that didn’t happen at all was the one between Albert Montanes and Lleyton Hewitt.  Hewitt had to withdraw due to injury, too bad, I woke up eager for that one.  Montanes played lucky loser Marc Giquel, of France, and won, not surprisingly.

Sam Stosur looked great, back on Chatrier a year later, and she advances.  It took her a long time to work through last year’s loss.  It’s tough, you beat all these amazing players like Henin and Serena, you’re the favorite to win the championship and you don’t.  Apparently, she consulted a sports psychologist to help her, something many players do at various points.  How to change your perception, yes, you lost the final but how to see it as a positive experience, how to move forward.  How to not feel like a failure because you failed to win an important match you were supposed to win, you should have won?  Well, maybe come back and win it this year.

I’m not the only one who sees this French Open as a wide open playing field for the women.  Everyone seems to agree on this, that there are at least ten women who could come through, maybe more.  Francesca Schiavone, the defending champion, takes the court tomorrow against American Melanie Oudin.

Ferrer won his match against Nieminen, Tsonga beat Jan Hajek, Julien Benneteau is through, Wawrinka won, but in four sets, against an unknown French player Augustin Gensse.  Other women who advanced:  Julia Georges, the 17th seed, Alize Cornet, Jelena Jankovic, Svetlana Kuznetsova, Gisela Dulko, Tsvetana Pironkova, Lucie Safarova, Simona Halep.  Another surprise, and an upset, was Shahar Peer’s loss to the Spaniard Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez.  One thing is for sure, those Spaniards know how to play on clay.

Tomorrow we’ll see Federer and Djokovic, also Gasquet and del Potro.  And a host of others including Mardy Fish, Marcos Baghdatis, and Tommy Haas, we haven’t seen him in awhile.  Tons of action on the women’s side including number one seed Caroline Wozniacki.

Nothing like these first days, the first round matches.  Everyone is there, no one has left.  By Tuesday, half the players are gone.  Boom, just like that, that’s what it feels like.  By the weekend, the field on each side is down to sixteen.  Hope only springs eternal today and tomorrow.  Join in the fun, turn on the TV!

Write me with your comments.  Who are you picking to win?  Rafa had a press conference and five of the nine questions in English were about Novak Djokovic!  In years past, Novak has had the luxury of staying under the radar.  No longer.  That may be Federer’s pleasure this time.  For the first time in all his years competing at the top, the pressure is off of him.  Huh??  Life is change, tennis is change.

Thanks for reading Cupcakes and Tennis.  A demain.