Serena Shaky, Sharapova Sound at WTA BeijingPosted on September 23, 2004 Serena Williams has lost the "Fear Factor" on the WTA Tour.Russian Dinara "Little Sis" Safina led 3-1 over the former No. 1 American Wednesday before Williams found her rhythm to string together five consecutive games to survive her debut at the WTA stop in Beijing. "Out of a 10, I would give myself a 1," said Serena of her performance. Winning the first set, Serena tossed in some key service miscues to lose the second set, then found herself down in the third, on the wrong end of the baseline bashing she usually dishes out. "She was really just hitting balls very hard, right on the line," Serena said. "But once I got used to it in the third set I was able to get back." Since winning in he first tournament back from knee surgery at Miami this year, Serena has come up short of the title in her last eight events, losing in finals at Wimbledon (l. to Maria Sharapova) and Los Angeles (l. to Lindsay Davenport). Other seeded winners on the day were (3) Sharapova (d. Panova in an all-Russian 1-and-1 pounding), (5) Nadia Petrova (d. Zheng), (6)Gisela "Sgt." Dulko (d. Vento-Kabchi), and (7) Jelena Jankovic (d. Asagoe 7-6 in the third). In the lone all-unseeded match-up, Spain's Anabel "Funky Cold" Medina Garrigues beat Thai Tamarine Tanasugarn in straights. Thursday is Russian Day at the China Open, with Russians in all four matches in Zvonareva vs. Gagliardi, Jankovic vs. Douchevina, Li vs. Kuznetsova, and Mamic vs. Petrova. Davis Cup Qualifying Previews: Germany at Slovak Republic, Great Britain at Austria Tennis-X will take a look at two Davis Cup qualifying matches per day leading to the beginning of play on Friday, Sept. 24. Four countries will advance to the World Group, while the four losers will wallow for at least another year in the minor leagues of Davis Cup zonal play. The eight qualifying matches this weekend are Morocco at Australia, Japan at Chile, Belgium at Croatia, Czech Republic at Paraguay, Germany at Slovak Republic, Great Britain at Austria, Canada at Romania, and Thailand at Russia. Today's previews: Germany at Slovak Republic, Great Britain at Austria Germany at Slovak Republic Site: National Tennis Centre, Bratislava, SVK Surface: Hardcourt (indoors) Ball: Dunlop Fort Duck With Rainer Schuettler and the hot-handed Nicolas Kiefer pulling up lame, Tommy Haas and neophyte Florian "Oscar" Mayer have the daunting task of facing the solid Slovaks on their home courts. "I am really disappointed that I cannot be there at Brataslava because I love playing for Germany," Schuettler said. "I will cross my finger for the team." On the Slovak side, veteran Karol Kucera could get the call at No. 2 singles behind Dominik "The Dominator" Hrbaty since he has beaten Haas in two of the their three encounters, while The Dominator has been dominated by Haas, losing six of seven meetings. Karol Beck, also a consideration for the No. 2 Slovak spot, has never faced Haas. The young Mayer is also a bit of a wildcard, having faced no one on the Slovak team. The edge in firepower goes to the Germans, which makes you wonder if the Slovaks have made a major blunder not putting this match-up on clay. Hrbaty's lone win over Haas came on clay, and the red dirt has been the du jour pick for the Slovaks in the past. Great Britain at Austria Site: Werzer Arena Portschach, Portschach, AUT Stadium Capacity: 3500 Surface: Red Clay (outdoors) Ball: Wilson Double Core The tie everyone is talking about features first-time captain Thomas Muster hosting the Brits on the red clay, trying to turn back a hot-handed Tim Henman, a slumping and always clay-addled "Grinning" Greg Rusedski, and possibly thrown into the mix, US Open junior winner Andy Murray. The Austrians will front Jurgen "Tuna" Melzer and Stefan Koubek in singles, with Julian Knowle and Alexander Peya likely in doubles. The Austrians made a splash just weeks ago when Tuna Melt, Koubek and Peya all reached the fourth round at the US Open. "We are definitely not afraid," said Muster who will debut as captain. "We know we have a good team and I think it's going to be a very interesting tie." Austria is forced to compete in the World Group qualifying round after losing in the first round of the World Group in 2004 to the U.S. Henman says he recognizes the challenge of coming into the Slovak Republic and walking out with a "W" after four singles and one doubles best-of-five-set matches. "None of us are claycourt specialist by any stretch of the imagination, and it's definitely my least favorite surface," Henman said. "I'm sure they're going to try and make it as slow and as heavy as possible." Spot-on, as the Brits say, echoes Koubek of the Austrian squad. Expect a mud bog. "Tim Henman may have reached the semifinals at Roland Garros but we are not going to put that kind of clay on the court," Koubek said. "It's going to be a little slower, a little deeper and a lot tougher to play on for British players." Henman is 0-1 career versus Tuna Melt, but 3-1 versus Koubek. Key for the Brits will be captain Jeremy "Master" Bates' decision to either debut Murray and save Grinning Greg for the doubles, or go with Rusedski in singles. Rusedski is 0-1 versus Tuna Melt on clay, and 2-0 versus Koubek, both wins coming on hardcourt. Between the boggy red claycourt and home advantage, give the nod to an emotional four or five-match long win for the Austrians. TENNIS DISCUSSIONS See what all the chatter is about, the talk, the walk, don't balk on the latest issues in pro tennis at http://www.tennis-x.com/discussions.php FREE DAILY TENNIS-X NEWSLETTER Our free gift to you. Make it a gift to yourself. Go to www.Tennis-X.com. Sign up today and we'll attach the Anna Kournikova virus, free of charge. TENNIS-X NEWS, NOTES, QUOTES AND BARBS Former No. 1 Thomas Muster on taking over the Austrian Davis Cup captaincy: "I wasn't really sure if I wanted to do it because Gunther Bresnik had been the captain before me and had done a really good job for the team. But, his contract finished and I was asked. I had a few months to think about it and I said 'yes,' but only if it was connected with the junior program in Austria. I didn't want to just be captain, I wanted to be involved with junior programs in the country because tennis has not been so popular in Austria for a while. I think we have done a good job so far, the numbers (of young players taking up the game) are increasing, kids are playing tennis again, and that is our goal -- that is our 10-year project. It's a really honorable job and I am looking forward to the Davis Cup tie against Great Britain."...The 2004 Delta Tour of Champions has already made stops in Rome (winner Thomas Muster), the Algarve (Jim Courier), and Graz (Boris Becker), and is scheduled to go to Paris (France), Eindhoven (Holland) and Brussels (Belgium), with the season-ending Masters Tennis at the Royal Albert Hall in London on Nov. 30...Wimbledon movie star Paul Bettany on his athletic role: "I'm not driven like that. I played football at school, but to be honest I didn't care whether our team won or lost. These days I've no interest in playing sport. I haven't got much interest in sweating really. So yes -- this was a stretch."...As the Brits square off against Austria this weekend with qualifying for the World Group in the balance, Greg Rusedski will be reminded of the same situation a year ago against Morocco, where on the first day of the competition he received the confidential information that he had failed a drug test. Three days later he collapsed with heat exhaustion against Hicham Arazi and lost the fifth a deciding rubber. Ahh memories...Britain has never won a match in the Davis Cup World Group, despite fronting Tim Henman and Greg Rusedski over the last number of year...The ATP announced Wednesday that defending champions Mike and Bob Bryan, world No. 1s Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor, and three-time reigning Wimbledon champions Jonas Bjorkman and Todd Woodbridge have clinched the first three spots for the Masters Cup doubles...According the ESPN's Davis Cup TV schedule, they are blowing off showing the Saturday doubles, even on tape...Australia is going with Wayne Arthurs over Todd Reid, who apparently has an ankle injury, in singles for their Davis Cup romp against Morocco...The Russians are going with Igor Andreev in the No. 2 singles spot behind Marat Safin against Thailand. |
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