[新聞] Season comes full circle for Henin

看板Henin作者 (J'adore Henin.)時間18年前 (2007/09/09 14:20), 編輯推噓3(300)
留言3則, 3人參與, 最新討論串1/1
寫得還不錯 給juju很高的評價 也分析得很透徹 也有很多內容是一般新聞沒有的 ex.教練的話 值得一看!... http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/usopen07/news/story?id=3010076 Season comes full circle for Henin By Bonnie D. Ford Special to ESPN.com Updated: September 9, 2007, 1:54 AM ET NEW YORK -- If Justine Henin had taken time last week to fill out one of those stress tests found in pop culture magazines -- the ones that assign point totals to dramatic events in your life over the last year -- she would have been off the charts. Henin began 2007 as No. 1 in the world, with one of the most admired tactical games in tennis, but all was not well beneath the brim of her businesslike ballcap. Her marriage was on the rocks and she hadn't spoken to most of her immediate family in seven years. Although Henin had five Grand Slam wins under her belt, her fellow players and much of the public and press perceived her as frosty and criticized her for withdrawing from big matches when she didn't feel exactly right. Here's what Henin did. She let things fly, both on and off the court. This was her Year of Living Interestingly, the season she got on the plane and understood there would be turbulence and decided she wouldn't let it unnerve her. This was the year she began to do what her longtime coach and mentor Carlos Rodriguez has been urging her to do for a long time. She dropped some of her reserve and let people get a glimpse of her passion for the sport as well as her skill. The results -- well, the results have been "magical," as Henin said after winning her second U.S. Open on Saturday night with a 6-1, 6-3 whitewashing of Russia's No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetsova. "At the beginning of the year we really asked ourselves where we were going -- we talked about a year of transition," she told French-speaking reporters, referring to the winning combination she has with Rodriguez, who has coached her for 11 years. "I've grown up a lot. I've had the sense that this is the first time in my life that I'm doing things for myself. I realized that life is short and that it's a precious gift. Now I don't do anything I don't want to do. I do everything because I want to do it." Henin, 25, of Belgium, called this championship -- which came after defeating Serena and Venus Williams back-to-back in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds -- her most satisfying Slam. "There aren't many women who could do that here in New York," she said with quiet conviction. She did it without dropping a set, as was the case in May when she captured her third straight French Open title. She has reached at least the semifinal round of every tournament she has played since the middle of last season, and she's healthy. Henin actually knocked wood when she said this might be the first season she gets through without injury. Nothing has diverted Henin -- not divorce, not being diagnosed with a sudden onset of chronic asthma last March, not an emotional reconciliation with her family a few weeks before the French Open spurred by an older brother's near-fatal car accident, not the stunning upset that pudgy French wonder Marion Bartoli handed her in the Wimbledon semifinals, not the fact that announcer Dick Enberg inadvertently addressed her as "Henin-Hardenne" -- her now-defunct married name -- during the trophy ceremony. "No, I don't care about that," she said, flashing the smile that has been a standard all season. "I heard it, but that was OK." Rodriguez told reporters he felt Henin had finally come out from behind the wall she'd constructed to try to hide any frailty from fans or competitors. "She understands, 'I am a human being and human beings can have failures,'" he said. Henin readily admitted the change. "I could feel a big difference this time in the States when I came here," she said. "People were coming much more easily to me. I think I look more open. I look [like] myself. I can be a funny person. You know, people that really know me, I love spending time with people that I love. I'm a normal person. " … I think that people really start to really know me a little bit better, and it's been a big difference in my life the last few months." Not that she doesn't have small lapses. Serving for the match, Henin was briefly distracted by a spectator who let out a war whoop between her first and second serves. She committed a double fault, one of seven she logged for the night. Two Grand Slams Titles, Same Season Without Dropping a Set In the Open era, Justine Henin is only the sixth player to win two Grand Slam titles in the same season without losing a set. Year Player Slams 2007 Justine Henin French, U.S. 2002 Serena Williams Wimbledon, U.S. 1997 Martina Hingis Australian, U.S. 1988 Steffi Graf Australian, French 1983 Martina Navratilova Wimbledon, U.S. 1972 Billie Jean King French, U.S. Henin didn't necessarily play her absolute best tennis against Kuznetsova, but she didn't have to. The amiable Russian, who still wields a powerful forehand but is somewhat thicker around the middle than she was when she won the Open in 2004, played the same kind of uninspired, error-plagued tennis she got away with in a sloppy semifinal win over Anna Chakvetadze. Kuznetsova stared straight ahead, obviously gutted, as she waited for her runner-up trophy, and apologized to the crowd for not bringing her A-game. Henin, by contrast, sprinted up into the stands to hug Rodriguez, and thanked him publicly even though he would prefer she didn't. Asked why he thought their relationship had lasted so long, the animated Spaniard responded, "It doesn't surprise me. I'm surprised the players can change [coaches] so often. I can't work like this. I have to know the person." Clearly, Henin is grateful to Rodriguez because, as the one person who gave her some continuity all these years, he knows her well enough to bring down the hammer. He has asked her to come forward. To come forward in the technical sense -- lashing angled volleys that are her only chance of consistently beating bigger, stronger players -- and in the personal sense, where she needed to work through her issues the way she tries to read a match in progress. "I said to her, 'Try to have the courage to solve your problems -- only you, nobody else, not even me,'" Rodriguez said. "What advice can I give her? I'm a married man with two kids, 20 years older than her. She did this herself. … She has taught me as much as I've taught her." Maybe Henin can be an example for other athletes. Personalities, even the ones on most public display, don't have to be set in stone. Change is possible, the same way a baseliner can start going to the net. Henin is still No. 1 and has a good chance to end 2007 there, but she's actually in a very different place from where she started in January. We've all known for a long time that she would move mountains to win a match. We just didn't know she'd try to reach a personal peak and wave to us when she got to the top. Bonnie D. Ford is a frequent contributor who is covering the U.S. Open for ESPN.com. -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 220.137.165.130

09/09 14:22, , 1F
我正看完這篇,寫的很棒
09/09 14:22, 1F

09/09 22:19, , 2F
內容真不錯..
09/09 22:19, 2F

09/10 13:16, , 3F
推~
09/10 13:16, 3F
文章代碼(AID): #16uv2XlW (Henin)
文章代碼(AID): #16uv2XlW (Henin)