Serena and Sharapova set for French Open bids
PARIS, May 26 (AFP) - Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova, two
players better known for their hardcourt and grasscourt abilities, are
the form players going into the climax of the claycourt season at the
French Open.
Between them they won the four main leadup events on the surface at
Charleston and Madrid for the American and at Stuttgart and Rome for the
Russian.
The question is whether one of them can sustain their form through
two weeks and seven matches in the often unpredictable playing
conditions that are a mark at the famed Roland Garros complex on the
western edge of Paris.Williams, whose only win here came 10 years ago
when she defeated sister Venus in the final, has staged yet another
impressive return to form in recent weeks.The 30-year-old defeated Lucie
Safarova in the final at Charleston before pounding world number one
Victoria Azarenka 6-1, 6-3 to take the Madrid Open title at the start of
May.
She subsequently withdrew from the semi-finals of last week's Italian
Open with a lower back injury but has expressed confidence she will be
fully fit to challenge for the title in Paris.
On top of that she has re-dedicated herself to her sport following
the nightmare she went through with injuries and illness in 2010-2011.
"I think in general I have much better commitment in tennis. I just
am really 100%," the 13-time Grand Slam champion said.
"I love being on the court now. I love every moment. This is what I
live for. After going through everything that I went through, I really
kind of appreciate every moment more, especially being out on the
court."
Sharapova, at 25, is a late convert to claycourt tennis having once
described her movement on the slippy red dirt surface as being "like a
cow on ice". She reached the semi-finals last year before losing to
eventual champion Li Na and it was the Chinese player she defeated last
weekend to defend her Italian Open crown in Rome.
She also chalked up a straight sets win over Azarenka in the final at
Stuttgart, a win that followed losses to the Belarussian in the finals
at the Australian Open and Indian Wells. But her only encounter so far
this year with Serena Williams resulted in a 6-1, 6-3 thumping in the
quarter-finals in Madrid.
There is also the question of whether Sharapova's notoriously
inconsistent serve can survive through two weeks of outdoor conditions
with gusts of wind whipping up the dirt particles and causing all sorts
of havoc. The Russian though is quietly confident that she has a
realistic chance of completing her career haul of Grand Slam titles
having previously won Wimbledon and the US and Australian Opens once
apiece. |