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Russia's Dinara Safina celebrates after
defeating her compatriot Maria Sharapova during the French Open tennis
tournament at Roland Garros in Paris June 2, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, June 5 -- Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia
reached the French Open semifinals Wednesday with a 7-5, 6-2 win over Kaia
Kanepi of Estonia.
It was a tougher match than expected for Kuznetsova,
though as rank outsider, Kanepi had her back-pedalling in the first set with the
weight of her groundstrokes.
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Russia's Svetlana Kuznetsova reacts
during her match against Belarus' Victoria Azarenka during the French Open
tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris June 2, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
The fourth seed will play compatriot Dinara Safina
for a place in Saturday's final.
Safina pulled off a second successive miracle
comeback to reach her first career Grand Slam semifinal.
In a virtual carbon copy of her stunning fourth-round
win over top seed Maria Sharapova, Safina came back from a set and 2-5 down, and
saved a match point, to beat compatriot Elena Dementieva 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-0.
The 13th seed ran away with 11 of the last 12 games
of an enthralling quarterfinal and will now face another Russian, Svetlana
Kuznetsova, for a place in Saturday's final.
The last, and only time, Kuznetsova and Kanepi had
met was in the junior girls final here in 2001, when the Estonian won on her way
to taking the world No 1 junior ranking.
They went different ways after that, Kuznetsova
basing herself in Spain to further her career, while Kanepi elected to stay at
home.
The Russian went on to win the US Open title in 2004
and was runner-up here last year as well as rising to second in the world.
Kanepi struggled to make the switchover to the
seniors and she has yet to win a WTA Tour level title.
She was the first to threaten, though, breaking serve
in the sixth game when Kuznetsova netted a forehand drive.
But the Russian bit back immediately to level the
scores and then broke serve for a second time to lead 6-5. A confident service
game to love followed as Kuznetsova went one set up in 54 minutes.
That visibly settled the Russian, who had sped into
the last eight for the loss of just 19 games, the fewest by any player apart
from second seed Ana Ivanovic.
She grabbed early breaks in the third and fifth games
of the second set and that appeared to deflate Kanepi, the first Estonian to
play in a Grand Slam quarterfinal.
Kuznetsova was fully in command and she raced away to
reach her fourth Grand Slam semifinal.
In other action, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic set
up the semifinal clash the French Open had demanded on Tuesday while Ana
Ivanovic suggested only a minor miracle could stop her from being crowned the
new queen of Roland Garros.
Three-time champion Nadal evidently wanted the party
to start early as he celebrated his 22nd birthday in style by battering fellow
Spaniard Nicolas Almagro for the loss of a paltry three games.
Not even Nadal had won more clay matches than Almagro
this season, but the second seed made it look like men against boys as he
bulldozed his way to a 6-1, 6-1, 6-1 win, his 26th consecutive victory on the
red Paris dust.
Nadal was facing his first right-hander at this
year's event, but for all the resistance Almagro offered he may as well have
played left-handed as the champion once again showed his astonishing powers of
retrieval and pace generated from the most unlikely angles.
"Uno, uno!" Almagro roared to the heavens in
frustration as he finally started to produce the service form that had seen him
crack a tournament-best 78 aces on his way to the quarters.
But it was too little too late, and Almagro's
miserable day was summed up when he slammed a straightforward overhead into the
net to hand the insatiable Mallorcan victory.
Asked what had happened in the match, he deadpan
replied: "Didn't you see? Well, I think there was a guy called Nadal on the
center court, and he played much better than me."
Djokovic and Latvian Ernests Gulbis, former hitting
partners at the Niki Pilic academy in Munich, took to Court Suzanne Lenglen like
a couple of giggling schoolchildren caught with their hands in the sweet jar.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)