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Dementieva - if she could only serve
Photo
by Julian Finney - Getty
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Zheng Jie
Was GREAT !!
Photo
by Adam Davy - AFP -
Getty |
Nothing
I've seen this week gave me quite the same feeling of exhilaration as
watching
Zheng Jie scare Serena Williams in the second set of their Wimbledon
semifinal
match, eventually won by Ms. Williams 6-2, 7-6 (7-5).
After
having been more or less smoked in the first set, Zheng ran Serena
around for
the first six games of the second, eventually going up 4-2, only to
have Serena
come back in the seventh game to break back, all of which eventually
did manage
to break Zheng's back But not before the fiery little Zheng had
Serena
on the ropes, driving her left, driving her right, testing her forehand
and
backhand and speed.
Much
to Serena's credit, she showed she had all those things, especially the
speed. And the serve, always the serve with these Williams
sisters.
They seem to have no equal on grass, not when they're in shape, which
they
obviously both are at this juncture.
But
Zheng goes about 5'4". A faster and more powerful woman at that
height I'm sure I may never see again. Not on tennis courts at
any
rate. What a shotmaker ! In that great second set, Zheng
had to
turn it up, had to take some risks, and she came up aces. No, not
literally "aces". Alas, she was short on those.
Otherwise, we may have been watching a Venus-Zheng final
tomorrow.
Surely, Serena didn't want a third set.
Not
that there's anything wrong with an all-Williams final. Venus is
no
slouch on grass herself and possesses an even more formidable serve
than her
sister. She's fast, changes directions well, and with those long
arms of
hers, it's almost impossible to pass her on anything, even the finest
volley. You don't see many forehand or backhand winners down the
line
against Venus.
Serena
holda a 3-1 edge in matches against Venus. And their father once
maintained that Serena would eventually go further in the game.
He knows
their games better than anyone. But I think he was considering
the
single-mindedness of Serena rather than their actual games. And
on
surfaces in general, not on the turf.
I’d like to say it’ll be a matchup of
power vs.
finesse, but that’s not entirely true. Neither sister has a huge edge
on the
other in either quality. It’ll come down tomorrow to which sister
wants
it more. Doesn’t it always between the great ones? In any
sport you
can think of?
There’s
no question, though, that Venus had the easier semifinal. Venus
played
Elena Dementieva, the queen of the Russian female contingent, which is
prodigious. But Elena has trouble with her serve at all times,
and it was
no different against Venus. Williams the elder smoked Elena in
the first
set, and, although Elena staged a nice comeback of her own in that
second set,
you never really considered the possibility of an upset.
So
Venus will come into tomorrow’s match feeling fresher and less beat up,
but
will those advantages outweigh Serena’s feeling of confidence she
gained
playing that little Chinese whirlwind? Who knows, maybe still one
more
pressure-packed situation will break her.
That is, unless Serena wants it so
much that she’ll
go through anything to hold still another Wimbledon title. Surely
at this
point in their careers, both sisters have given some thought to their
rightful
place in tennis history. And their prowess in that crown jewel of
them
all.
Venus
will battle for her 4th Wimbledon
title while Serena will battle for her 3rd. Venus is
two years
older, of course, but at 28 years of age, Venus still could win a few
more.
I think Venus’s game is more suited to that hallowed place than
is
Serena’s, and I think Venus will want it more, or at least just as much.
Whatever
the outcome, a very deserving tennis player will have won it.
Hopefully
the weather will allow for an uninterrupted match, although, come to
think of
it, Serena will take an edge after any stoppage in play. There is
no
finer actress than Serena. And nobody who has more of a knack for
turning
chance into opportunity.
But
I thank the fates for Zheng, who introduced a measure of heart and
pathos into
this 2008 Wimbledon. Zheng
shocked the
world, not to mention the All-England Lawn Tennis Club, by, first,
getting
into the tournament as a wildcard, and before too long vanquishing Ana
Ivanovic, the newly proclaimed tennis number one.
She
then ripped into Agnes Szavay, the 15th-ranked woman, and beat her in
straight
sets, making it 8 straight sets of undefeated tennis for her.
Then it was
Nicole Vaidisova's turn. Nicole finally gave Zheng a bit of a
problem,
but still lost in three sets6-2, 5-7, 6-1. After the ignominy of
losing
that second set, Zheng really turned it on, dark hair flying hither and
yon,
sneakers scorching the Wimbledon
earth, and
the willowy Czech didn’t have a prayer.
Pardon
me if I had been getting bored of the women’s game, even if Ivanovic in
the
number one spot was something of a lark. For
too long, it had been the same chorus of
Russians and Czechs, every
once in a while throwing in a Frenchwoman or even an Italian here and
there. And all with seemingly the same
game, power and shot-making from the baseline, all big, all power, back
and
forth, all match long.
The
men’s game is even worse, Federer and Nadal, Federer and Nadal ad
infinitum. And again in the 2008 Men’s Wimbledon final. Ho-hum.
So,
take some time out to watch this women’s final. It’ll
truly be matching the finest women’s grass
players in the entire
world. That they’re sisters makes it
that much more intriguing. That Serena
has the edge in grand slam finals vs. her sister adds a smidge, that
Venus has
the edge at Wimbledon a little more.
But
only one of them had to beat that Chinese fireball. My guess is that it
will
have taken its toll.
