|
|
Americans face tough foes on clay By Greg Garber ESPN.com
It is dirt, after all. It is a maddeningly slow surface if you have a cannon for a serve; a torturous venue if you have a short attention span and live for quick points. Patience is the only virtue in the City of Light. "When you grow up playing on clay, you know the points are going to be long," Argentina's Juan Ignacio Chela, the No. 12-ranked player in the ATP's Champions Race, told ESPN.com. "You know you are going to have to fight for every point, scramble for every ball. "To play well on clay, you must be patient. Hitting winners is much harder than on grass or hard courts." This is why the ugly Americans typically disappear in the early rounds, although last year Jennifer Capriati was the first American-born French Open women's winner since Chris Evert won back-to-back titles in 1985-86. Andre Agassi broke through in 1999 with the first American win there in nine years. The Europeans and South Americans, in particular, grew up playing on clay and tend to have the steady, point-building game that flourishes on the more forgiving surface. The clay-court season, which began in early April, has confirmed this fact: In 20 tournaments on clay (11 on the women's side), Americans have won only five titles: Venus Williams at Amelia Island and Hamburg, Serena Williams in Rome, Roddick in Houston and Andre Agassi in Rome. Spain had four winners, while Argentina had three. It is worth noting that Spain's Angeles Montolio has as many tournament wins as Williams, while household names such as Argentina's Gaston Gaudio and Morocco's Younes El Aynaoui have two titles each, or the same number as Roddick and Agassi combined. The young Argentines have been notably en fuego thus far this season. There are four inside the top 25 of the ATP Champions Race: Gaudio, 23, is No. 13; Chela, 22, is No. 12; Guillermo Canas, 24, is No. 17; and David Nalbandian, 20, is No. 24. They are all threats to do damage at the French Open. Beyond Kuerten, these little-known (at least in America) clay-court phenoms merit consideration:
Juan Carlos Ferrero, Spain
Gaston Gaudio, Argentina
Albert Costa, Spain
Guilliermo Canas, Argentina "I love the clay season in Europe," Canas says. "They are similar to the ones I grew up on Buenos Aires. Here, I am motivated to play well."
Juan Ignacio Chela, Argentina "Even though he is not in top form, Guga [Kuerten] is the favorite in the French," Chela insists. "Then you have Ferrero, [Alex] Corretja and Agassi." How about Chela? "I'm playing OK," he said, laughing. "It is hard for me. Maybe not to win but to do well." While people complain about the women's game being numbingly predictable, the French Open still has the ability to surprise. The past five winners: Iva Majoli, Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario (nine years after her first triumph there), Steffi Graf (just shy of 30 and retirement), Mary Pierce and Capriati.
Capriati, of course, is the favorite, having won three of the past five Grand Slams. She was last year's French champion after losing the first set to Belgian Kim Clijsters 1-6, then rallying to take the second set 6-4 and the third by a staggering 12-10. In this year's Australian Open, Capriati won a memorable final in the wilting heat, saving four championship points against Martina Hingis before prevailing in three sets. A win in Paris would give Capriati the first two Slams in 2001 and 2002 -- the first four of her career. Clijsters and another Belgian, Justine Henin, will make their presence known -- count on it. Clijsters made a name for herself in last year's final and now at only 18 she is becoming a fixture in Grand Slam semis. This year, she defeated Henin in the quarterfinals to reach the Australian Open's Final Four before losing to Capriati again. Clijsters is ranked No. 4, despite missing six weeks with a broken arm she suffered in Australia. All Henin (No. 5) has done is reach five finals: Gold Coast, Antwerp and Amelia Island -- losing to Venus Williams in all three -- plus Hamburg and Rome that she split with Serena Williams. Lindsay Davenport (knee injury) and France's Nathalie Tauziat (retirement) will be missing, but a number of athletes are playing well. Majoli, for one, has resurfaced after a more than four-year absence at the top of the women's game due to injuries and poor form. Ranked for three straight years in the top 10, Majoli saw her ranking plummet as low as No. 163. Now ranked No. 32, she won in Charleston last month, beating Patty Schnyder in the final, her first WTA title since 1997, the year she won the French Open. Schnyder, too, has shown flashes of the game that once vaulted her into the top 10. To reach the Charleston final, she took out Capriati, Serena Williams and Amelie Mauresmo -- top 10 players all. Schnyder currently is sitting at No. 23. Here are some players not on the marquee that could make a good impression at the French, as well:
Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia
Anna Smashnova, Israel
Francesca Schiavone, Italy
Lina Krasnoroutskaya, Russia Greg Garber is a senior writer for ESPN.com.
Send this story to a friend | Most sent stories |
Garber: A world of difference |
|