Clijsters wins all-Belgian final over Henin
Kim Clijsters held on to win a momentum-swinging all-Belgian final
at the Brisbane International in a vintage finish Saturday in
Justine Henin's tour comeback.
Clijsters, only five tournaments into her own comeback which
has already netted the U.S. Open title, saved two match points and
then wasted three before winning 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (6) over the
seven-time Grand Slam titlist.
Clijsters started strongly and led by a set and 4-1 before
Henin staged a dramatic rally.
Henin, playing in the top tier for the first time since she
quit while holding the No. 1 ranking in May 2008, won eight of the
next nine games to take a 3-0 lead in the third.
Clijsters rallied to 3-3, then gave up a break and gave Henin
match points in the 10th game.
She held her nerve and, 15 minutes later, held her arms in
the air, celebrating what she thought was a championship-winning
backhand down the line in the tiebreaker when the umpire overruled.
Henin got back to 6-6 in the tiebreaker but then
double-faulted to give Clijsters a fourth match point. She made no
mistake this time, with a forehand that Henin couldn't get.
"Huh, what a match!" Clijsters told the crowd at Pat Rafter
Arena. "I think we set the bar pretty high for ourselves for the
rest of the year.
"It's a great tournament to start the year with. I couldn't
be happier with myself."
Henin said after the match that an injury to her left leg
will force her to withdraw from the Sydney International, where she
could have met top-ranked Serena Williams in the second round.
Henin said she would rest and prepare for the Australian Open
beginning Jan. 18 in Melbourne.
The top-seeded Clijsters closed Henin's lead in career
head-to-heads to 12-11, ending the three-match winning streak that
Henin had in 2006 -- maintaining a sequence in which no player won
more than three straight.
Clijsters took more than two years off the tour and got
married to American Brian Lynch and had a daughter, Jada, in
February 2008.
She was only three tournaments into a comeback when she won
the U.S. Open in September and became the first mother to win a
major since Evonne Goolagong Cawley at Wimbledon in 1980.
Clijster's daughter and husband were in the crowd on
Saturday, when she donated her tournament winnings to Brisbane's
Royal Children's Hospital, which she had visited earlier in the
week.
Henin, who beat second-seeded Nadia Petrova in her opening
match and third-seeded Ana Ivanovic in her semifinal, joked that
she didn't know what to do after a match.
"I forgot how to make a speech!" she said, laughing. "It's
just great to be back. I want to congratulate Kim. It was a great
fight. I really enjoyed my time out here tonight.
"It couldn't expect more. It was a dream."
Men's top seed Andy Roddick has a final to play Sunday
against defending champion Radek Stepanek before he heads to
Melbourne.
Roddick rallied for a 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over fourth-seeded
Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic in the semifinals earlier
Saturday.
Stepanek easily beat Frenchman Gael Monfils 6-2, 6-1 in an
hour in the first semifinal.
Roddick dropped serve twice in the opening set against
Berdych, when he didn't convert any of his four breakpoint chances.
It was the first time in the tournament that his serve had been
broken, ending a run of 30 straight winning service games.
But he rebounded in the second set, building a 3-0 lead with
an early break. The third set was on serve until Roddick broke for
a 5-4 advantage.
"I like to confuse and conquer sometimes," Roddick joked of
his first-set lapse. "I didn't feel like I was hitting the ball
that badly, but he played really well.
"The biggest part of the match was the first couple of games
of the second set, where I didn't want to let him keep rolling ...
to stop the momentum early in the second."
Soon after his singles win Saturday, he joined James
Blake for a doubles semifinal, but the American pair lost 6-4, 3-6,
13-11 to Frenchmen Jeremy Chardy and Marc Gicquel.
The French duo will meet top-seeded Lukas Dlouhy and Leander
Paes in Sunday's doubles final.