Haas Says Federer Not Great Yet; Baghdatis Beats Ljubicic at Oz Open



Posted on January 24, 2006


Baghdatis Bags Ljubicic at Australian Open

Unseeded Marcos Baghdatis followed up on his win over Andy Roddick in stunning fashion late Wednesday morning at the Australian Open, defeating No. 7 seed Ivan Ljubicic 6-4, 6-2, 4-6, 3-6, 6-3 in a match that ended after 1 a.m. Melbourne time (after 9 a.m. EST Tuesday).

Baghdatis broke Ljubicic for 3-1 in the fifth set after the Croat was rattled by a line call that went against him. The Cypriot beat Ljubicic in their lone previous meeting in the first round last year in Melbourne.

In the first quarterfinal on Tuesday, Argentine David Nalbandian rolled over a tired Fabrice Santoro 7-5, 6-0, 6-0 in under two hours to advance to the semis.

"I feel that I can keep going," Nalbandian said. "I have to keep working, keep playing, keep focus but my goal is to try and win some Grand Slams and I'm ready to do it. I didn't spend a lot of time on court today so I am happy with that."

Nalbandian is only the second Argentine to reach the Australian Open semifinals after Guillermo Vilas, who reached the semis four times and won the title twice.

For the 33-year-old Santoro, a five-set win over Gaston Gaudio earlier in the week took its toll.

"Two days ago I was already pretty tired physically, and against [David] Ferrer, I had a tough period after an hour and 15 minutes of game," Santoro said. "Today I had the same problem after an hour, at the same point. But Nalbandian is a great player, he makes me move a lot. He played better and better, relaxed, because he won the first set. That first set makes a big difference. After that first set, I mean, he just gave me a lesson."

Winners in doubles quarterfinal action were (7) Martin Damm/Leander Paes (d. (2) Bjorkman/Mirnyi in three) and unseeded Poles Mariusz Fyrstenberg/Marcin Matkowski (d. Fisher/Gimelstob in three).

Scheduled for Wednesday in quarterfinal singles play are (21) Kiefer vs. (25) Grosjean (Frenchman leads head-to-head 3-2) and (1) Federer vs. (5) Davydenko (Fed leads 6-0), and in doubles quarterfinal play (1) the Bryan brothers vs. Hernych/"Dr." Ivo Karlovic, and (4) Hanley/Ullyett vs. (8) Aspelin/Perry.

Henin, Sharapova Advance to SF Meeting at Australian Open

Diminutive Belgian Justine Henin-Hardenne took a large, albeit shaky, step Tuesday toward reclaiming the No. 1 ranking in 2006, defeating current world No. 1 Lindsay Davenport 2-6, 6-2, 6-3 to advance to the semifinals at the Australian Open.

The oft-injured Henin-Hardenne looked on course last year to make a run at No. 1 before being sidelined by leg and health issues, not playing her first match of the year until April at Miami. In only nine events played in 2005, Henin-Hardenne won four in a row including the French Open, and finished runner-up to Kim Clijsters in Toronto for five finals in nine total tournaments.

On Tuesday the Belgian found herself a set down after twice double faulting on break points in the opener. In the second set Henin-Hardenne's consistency improved while Davenport's taped ankle, the result of an injury in her previous match, began to limit her mobility.

"I think I played pretty solid in the second and the third sets," Henin-Hardenne said. "She put me under a lot of pressure in the first, but I kept fighting...From where I'm coming from, I've been injured for such a long time, it's great to be back in the semifinals."

In the semis the No. 8-seeded Henin-Hardenne will face the No. 4-seeded Maria Sharapova, who won an all-Russian encounter with No. 6 seed Nadia Petrova 7-6(6), 6-4.

Petrova put herself in a winning position in the first set before performing the super-throat-clutcher: failing to serve it out at 5-4, then double faulting on game point when serving at 6-5, then in the tiebreak leading 6-4 before committing three straight unforced errors, then double faulting to end the match.

After the encounter Sharapova admitted she tanked in their last meeting, a round robin match at the 2005 year-ending WTA Championships which Petrova won.

"That wasn't really a match for me," Sharapova said. "I was already in the semis so I just wanted to save my energy."

Sharapova made 36 unforced errors to 15 winners Tuesday, but the at-times-tearful and racquet-slamming Petrova won the ugly contest with 49 unforced errors and 12 double faults.

"I just feel like I simply gave it away," Petrova said. "I had all the chances in the first set...I mean, there's nothing I can do about it now. I can just go through my mistakes and get my head cleared from all this and just move forward."

Sharapova, who struggled with the wind, knows she will have to adapt better to the conditions in the semis.

"I will have to step it up for sure but I am confident I can do that," Sharapova said. "My biggest weapon is my toughness and I know that until the end of the match I will keep being a tough opponent, even if I am making a lot of mistakes."

Winners in doubles quarterfinal play Tuesday were (1) Lisa Raymond/Sam Stosur (d. (10) Dulko/Kirilenko), (9) Shinobu Asagoe/Katarina Srebotnik (d. (2) Black/Stubbs 6-0 in the third), (5) Anna-Lena Groenefeld/Meghann Shaughnessy (d. Russians (3) Likhovtseva/Zvonareva), and China's (12) Zi Yan/Jie Zheng (d. (4) Ruano Pascual/Suarez in three).

Scheduled for Wednesday are (3) Mauresmo vs. (7) Schnyder (Mauresmo leads head-to-head encounters 10-5, including the last three) and (2) Clijsters vs. Hingis (Swiss leads 4-1, including their most recent three-set encounter in 2002) in singles quarterfinal play, and the doubles semis in (1) Raymond/Stosur vs. (5) Groenefeld/Shaughnessy, and (12) Yan/Zheng vs. (9) Asagoe/Srebotnik.
 
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From the AP: "Tommy Haas isn't convinced of Roger Federer's greatness. Or of former player Jim Courier's astuteness as a television commentator. Haas took a swipe at both following his 6-4, 6-0, 3-6, 4-6, 6-2 loss Monday night to Federer in a fourth-round match at the Australian Open. Federer, a winner of six Grand Slams in the past three years, hasn't won enough majors in Haas's opinion. Pete Sampras owns the record with 14. "Everybody is talking about him being maybe the greatest ever," Haas said. "He still has to do a couple of things in my mind...maybe this guy wins 15 Grand Slams." Courier's flowery comments about Federer "makes me sick, almost." Haas made a crass remark about Courier's commentating, but later said "I love Jim Courier." While Haas isn't sure of Federer's longevity, he admits the Swiss player is playing "fantastic tennis."...Chelsey Gullickson, daughter of former major league pitcher Bill Gullickson, won her first-round match Monday in the junior competition at the Australian Open. The 15-year-old defeated Sandhya Nagaraj of India 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Gullickson is ranked 18th as a junior. She's the sister of Carly Gullickson, ranked 275th on the WTA Tour. Bill Gullickson led the American League with 20 wins in 1991 when he played for the Detroit Tigers."...Roger Federer is gunning for his Open Era-record 50th consecutive hardcourt win...Nicolas Kiefer has never reached a slam semi in 35 events. How is Kiefer in the Aussie Open quarters after pulling from both the Hopman Cup and Kooyong exos with injury?...John Newcombe telling Fox Sports that Maria Sharapova needs to shut the hell up with the shriek-grunting: "I think it's illegal. If I was playing against someone who was doing it all the time, I would ask for the referee and say the player has to stop. They're deliberately obstructing me from hearing the ball come off the strings. It's actually what I consider legalized cheating because one of your great senses that you have on the tennis court is your ability to hear the ball come off your opponent's strings."...Apparently L'Equipe is reporting that Morocco's Younes El Aynaoui has tested positive for the ganja at a tournament in Italy?...American journalist Matt Cronin after the last American man in Andy Roddick was jettisoned from the Aussie Open: "Is men's tennis too international and too deep for it's own good? That's a question the sport is facing at the Australian Open, where a United Nations contingent with a veteran Euro tint is flooding the quarters."...Last year Sebastien Grosjean failed to finish in the Top 20 for the first time since 1999...Sam Stosur will surpass the injured Alicia Molik as the new Aussie No. 1 on Monday...In mixed doubles Tuesday the unseeded team of Mahesh Bhupathi/Martina Hingis ousted No. 2 seeds Jonas Bjorkman and Lisa Raymond 7-6 in the third...Maria Sharapova on watching tennis on TV: "I'm not the biggest fan, I must say, no. I don't know why. I mean, if there's other things on, I'd rather watch something else than tennis, unless it's like a very exciting match where you know the quality of the tennis is going to be great."...Nadia Petrova on Maria Sharapova's grunting: "I can't say it's a distractions because, first of all, when she start grunting, it means she's getting tight, she holds the ball. Second of all, the balls are not coming as fast. So that's her way, you know, get out of tension."


Rankings
ATP - Feb 06 WTA - Feb 06
1 Novak Djokovic1 Victoria Azarenka
2 Rafael Nadal2 Petra Kvitova
3 Roger Federer3 Maria Sharapova
4 Andy Murray4 Caroline Wozniacki
5 David Ferrer5 Samantha Stosur
6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga6 Agnieszka Radwanska
7 Tomas Berdych7 Marion Bartoli
8 Mardy Fish8 Vera Zvonareva
9 Janko Tipsarevic9 Na Li
10 Juan Martin Del Potro10 Andrea Petkovic
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