[新聞] Championship Preview

看板Henin作者 (J'adore Henin.)時間18年前 (2006/07/08 00:37), 編輯推噓0(000)
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http://www.sonyericssonwtatour.com/newsroom/?contentid=583 July 7, 2006 Championship Preview LONDON, UK - One of the tightest rivalries among the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour elite resumes on Saturday afternoon, as the Wimbledon ladies' singles final takes place on Centre Court at the All-England Club. Current World No.1 Mauresmo eyes second major Things really began turning around for Amelie Mauresmo late last season. After a title run at Philadelphia, in the final week of the regular season, she captured what was then her biggest title yet, at the season-ending Sony Ericsson WTA Tour Championships. After dropping the first match of her 2006 season to Ana Ivanovic at Sydney, Mauresmo became the hottest player on the Tour, going on a 16-match win streak that brought her Australian Open, Paris [Indoors] and Antwerp titles. Now, despite reaching just one final in the six events since, she has positioned herself within striking distance of arguably the most coveted title in tennis, at a venue she says herself brings out the deepest of respect and appreciation. "That was definitely a big breakthrough for me, winning in Los Angeles at the end of last year. It helped me a lot, in Australia, then and also all this season. I think it will help until the end of my career. That was a big moment, big change for me. But, again, I really want to give it a try on Saturday. One more to go." Mauresmo has definitely brought some of her best tennis out in recent years here. After suffering Week 1 exits in her first three attempts (1998, 2000, 2001), she was a semifinalist in her next three, in 2002 (falling to Serena Williams), 2004 (falling again to Williams, this time in three sets) and 2005 (falling this time to Lindsay Davenport, in three sets). She is now 24-6 lifetime at this event. "I've always said, every year and again this year, the atmosphere, the tradition part of this tournament, I appreciate that. I really like to go on Centre Court. There's something special about it. It's great to still have one tournament like this that we can really appreciate. Maybe if it was all year long, like this one, would be different, but it makes it very special. And I really appreciate that." Former No.1 Henin-Hardenne chasing career Grand Slam Five years ago, a teen-aged Justine Henin-Hardenne reached her first major final here, falling to Venus Williams. Since then, she has been one of the grittiest Grand Slam performers, claiming Roland Garros three times (2003, 2005, 2006) in addition to the US Open (2003) and Australian Open (2004). Now, the Belgian has a chance to avenge the aforementioned championship loss on the very same court, and according to her, she is a much different person and player this time around. "A lot of things have changed. It was my first Grand Slam final. At that time I was still very young. All my successes in Grand Slams and all my victories on the Tour and the fact that I grew up, that gave me confidence and experience. That's the biggest difference, I would say. It seems far away from now. I've improved so much and I've grown up a lot and I've done great things in my career since then." Despite the fact that Wimbledon is the only one missing in Henin-Hardenne's Grand Slam resume, she is a stellar 22-5 here. In addition to the 2001 finals run, the Belgian posted back-to-back semifinal runs in 2002 and 2003, falling to Venus and Serena Williams. The looming final with a fellow all-court player is most likely going to be a different experience than playing a Williams, in her opinion. "When I lost here in 2001, 2002, 2003, it was a time in my career when I was very scared about the power of the other players. I was impressed by these players. I was younger and didn't have the experience I have today. It's not the best memory of my career, the final here. But now I'm back, healthy, and at my best level." Henin-Hardenne leads head-to-head series, 5-4 The history between the finalists is very back-and-forth. Neither won consecutive matches in their first six encounters, between 1999 and 2004. Henin-Hardenne won their only 2005 meeting in three sets, and they've split two 2006 encounters. With the absence of any prior meetings on grass, or even on carpet, perhaps the most telling head-to-head comes from their championship round encounters. They've played three times for a title. Henin-Hardenne won their first two final battles fairly routinely, 64 64 in the 2004 Sydney final and 63 63 in the 2004 Olympics final; but Mauresmo emerged victorious at this year's Australian Open, winning 61 20 when the Belgian was forced to retire with a gastrointestinal illness. "She is probably very happy to have the opportunity to have a revenge after the final of Australia," said Mauresmo on Henin-Hardenne. "I'm just taking it as it comes. I watched a little bit of her match today and she seemed in great shape and also aggressive, she likes to come in also. It's gonna be interesting one." "It's in the past," said Henin-Hardenne on Melbourne. "I want to think about myself, and an opportunity to win another Grand Slam and win Wimbledon; but not thinking about what happened a few months ago because the situation is different. I hope we can both be in our best shape and show a good tennis to the crowd." Nifty numbers through first six rounds from both finalists Both finalists have shown much grass court know-how in reaching the final. While Mauresmo has excelled in serve stats, including first serve percentage (65%-60%), points won on first serve (80%-72%) and second serve (61%-49%), and average first serve speed (108mph-103mph), Henin-Hardenne has excelled on the return, winning more receiving points (57%-50%). The Belgian also has cleaner numbers in terms of winners-to-errors, leading that differential significantly (+55 to +32). Both women have also been venturing into net often this fortnight. Mauresmo has come in more, winning 100 of 155 points (65%), while Henin-Hardenne has been more picky in her forecourt ventures but more successful, winning 88 of 117 (75%). Look for both women to continue this pattern in the final. "Going forward, that's a bit better for me," Mauresmo said. "But as we've seen in the second set [against Maria Sharapova in the semifinals], when the first serve is not here, it makes it a little bit more difficult. And Justine has been very aggressive also on the return, from what I saw this week. So we'll see." "It's been hard for me in the past to be an aggressive player, come to the net," Henin-Hardenne said. "I'm doing it more often now. Still, it takes effort, it's not very natural. I have to keep working on it but it's much better than a few months ago. Here on grass, I don't have any other choice than being aggressive." -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 61.216.89.99
文章代碼(AID): #14hes-JR (Henin)
文章代碼(AID): #14hes-JR (Henin)