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Home / Sport / Tennis

Tennis: Patched-up warriors lead fight against Super Sisters

25 Aug, 2002 10:22 AM4 mins to read

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By RONALD ATKIN

Chanda Rubin and Lindsay Davenport have met twice this year.

The first time was in January, when Davenport was being wheeled into an operating theatre for knee surgery as Rubin was brought out.

Testimony to the skills of the people at the Steadman-Hawkins Clinic in Vail, Colorado, came with
their second meeting, in the final of a Los Angeles tournament a fortnight ago.

Rubin won in three tight sets after Davenport had served for the title.

It was the first time for seven years the 26-year-old daughter of a Louisiana judge had beaten her childhood friend and rival, and marked another step in one of the sport's more remarkable comeback yarns.

To get to that LA final, her fifth title, Rubin defeated the top seed and world No 1 Serena Williams in the quarters, snapping Williams' 21-match winning streak.

Now these two rehabilitated knees, along with the repaired ankle of Martina Hingis and the yo-yo form of Jennifer Capriati, are the principal hopes of derailing the juggernaut of the Williams sisters at the US Open, which begins tonight (NZ time).

This Grand Slam has been hogged for the past three years by Venus (2000 and 2001) and Serena (1999), who are comfortably in control of women's tennis at the moment.

Six of the last nine Grand Slams fell to the Super Sisters and, should they contest the final of this one, it would be the third in a row, Serena having beaten Venus in the finals of the French Open and Wimbledon.

No wonder some of the opposition appear to have given up, the most prominent among these being Jelena Dokic, seeded fifth for Flushing Meadows.

"It's almost impossible to beat them with their power," said a gloomy Dokic, never the happiest of bunnies. "They play a different game."

There is a brighter response from the up-and-coming Slovak Daniela Hantuchova: "At the moment they are dominating. But there will be a way to beat them. It will just take a little bit of time."

Time is what Rubin does not possess in abundance, having lost the best part of two years to injury, in 1996 to the right hand, and over the last 18 months because of a left knee which needed two operations.

Since her latest comeback, in May, she has clocked up 24 wins against eight losses.

As a supporter of worthy causes, Rubin avidly pursues lost causes, too, notably against Jana Novotna at the 1995 French Open when, from 5-0 and 40-0 down in the final set, she saved nine match points to win.

Marked down by one of her early coaches as someone with a penchant for turning straightforward victories into epic struggles, Rubin is indisputably the marathon woman of the record books: winner of the longest Grand Slam singles after beating Patty Hy-Boulais 7-6, 6-7, 17-15 in 3h 45m at the 1995 Wimbledon, and holder of the Australian Open mark, too, 6-4, 2-6, 16-14 in 3h 33m over Arantxa Sanchez Vicario in 1996.

Remembering how she defeated Serena could open the way to victory over the second-seeded Venus, Rubin's scheduled fourth-round opponent in New York.

Should Venus get past that, she could face either Monica Seles or Hingis in the quarter-finals, though the Swiss woman's lack of match fitness was highlighted last week when, in her second tournament since May's ankle operation, she led Anastasia Myskina 7-6, 4-1 at New Haven, then crashed, losing the next 11 games.

Provided Capriati can get past the likes of Amelie Mauresmo, who beat her at Wimbledon and again to win Montreal last week, and Kim Clijsters, struggling with a chronic shoulder problem, there could be a Capriati-Venus rematch of last year's semifinal.

All in all, it adds up to a tough draw for the older Williams.

Serena's path looks friendlier and includes a possible second round against Marat Safin's sister, Dinara.

Davenport, a scourge of Williams family ambitions in the past, could be waiting in the semifinals.

And, should the knees (and nerves) of Rubin and Davenport prove too strong for Venus and Serena, the folk at the Colorado clinic would be entitled to whistle up a crate or two of fizz.

- INDEPENDENT

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