Stosur ends Henin’s Open hopes Nadal marches on PARIS, May 31, (AP): Sam Stosur ended Justine Henin’s hopes of a comeback victory at the French Open by converting a second match point on Monday for a 2-6, 6-1, 6-4 fourth-round victory, while Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic were winners at the same stage on the men’s side. Needing one point to secure the upset win, Stosur wavered and hit a double-fault. The Australian player took a deep breath and tried again, this time launching a confident serve into the corner which set her up for an overhead slam to seal the biggest victory of her career. Stosur ended the four-time French Open champion’s streak of 24 consecutive victories at Roland Garros and will play in the quarterfinals top-ranked Serena Williams, who beat Shahar Peer 6-2, 6-2. No. 4 Jelena Jankovic committed only 11 unforced errors in her 6-4, 6-2 defeat of No. 23 Daniela Hantuchova.
Nadal, another four-time champion, advanced by beating No. 24-seeded Thomaz Bellucci 6-2, 7-5, 6-4. The Spanish player, who lost in the fourth round in 2009, has yet to drop a set in this year’s tournament and will next play compatriot Nicolas Almagro, seeded 19th. Third-seeded Djokovic eliminated the last American in the men’s draw, Robby Ginepri, 6-4, 2-6, 6-1, 6-2. Henin’s defeat was her first in the tournament since 2004. She was seeded 22nd and playing at Roland Garros for the first time since ending a 20-month retirement, looking like a title contender in the early rounds.
“I just wanted so much that the adventure could keep going,” she said. But after taking a 4-3 lead in the final set against the No. 7-seeded Stosur, Henin showed signs of nerves and was betrayed by her elegant backhand. Serving at 4-4, the Belgian player double-faulted to reach break point, then yanked a backhand wide. In the final game, she pushed three backhands into the net, including a potential putaway on the first point.
“My nerves were simply not strong enough,” said Henin, forced to play for a fifth consecutive day because of weather interruptions. “I felt very nervous, very upset, which is normally not the way I am. Maybe today I was feeling some nervous fatigue. Maybe that nervous fatigue prevented me from seeing things in a calmer way.” In the final two sets, Stosur had a 20-8 edge in winners and converted four of five break-point chances. “I knew what I had to do,” she said. “I kept going for it and I believed in myself.” As for that double-fault on the next-to-last point, she said: “I just tried to shake it off and tried to have a laugh at myself, not worry about it and get the next one in.” The 26-year-old Stosur has won 18 matches on clay this year, the most on the women’s tour. She was a Roland Garros semifinalist last year and has the highest ranking for an Australian-born woman since Wendy Turnbull in 1985.
Williams advanced easily, looking shaky only after her fourth-round victory, when she tried to speak French to the crowd. “I get so nervous,” she told the interviewer with a giggle in English when she was done. Otherwise, she advanced smoothly to the quarterfinals. “I seem to always be able to turn it up during this particular stage,” Williams said. “Hopefully I turn it up again.” She complained of dizziness from a cold following a seesaw three-set win in her previous match, but the only wobble against the No. 18-seeded Peer came at the start. Williams lost the first seven points, then swept nine in a row.
From 2-2, Williams won five consecutive games to take charge of the match. Stosur’s win spoiled the prospect of a showdown between longtime rivals Williams and Henin. “You can never underestimate anyone, and Sam is actually a wonderful clay-court player,” Williams said. “She’s someone you can’t overlook.”
Against Djokovic, Ginepri was serving at 0-1 in the third set when he went down face-first chasing a shot. He made the most of his awkward court position by doing push-ups, but lost the next two points to lose serve, and won only three games the rest of the way. “I felt a little stupid slipping and falling on my face, so I tried to get the crowd back to my side,” Ginepri said. “Maybe that took a little bit of my focus away doing that. I’ll probably never do push-ups again on court.” Djokovic’s next opponent will be No. 22 Jurgen Melzer, a first-time Grand Slam quarterfinalist playing in his 32nd major event. The Austrian advanced by beating qualifier Teimuraz Gabashvili 7-6 (6), 4-6, 6-1, 6-4. Almagro beat fellow Spaniard Fernando Verdasco 6-1, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4.
On another chilly, cloudy, windy afternoon, center court was half empty for the start of Williams vs. Peer. It didn’t last long: Williams hit six aces, broke six times and won in just over an hour. Serena’s sister Venus, eliminated Sunday, watched from the stands. She did not wear a corset.
Serena is bidding for her 13th Grand Slam championship, and her second this year. Her lone French Open title came in 2002.