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Post by Annie on Sept 7, 2006 8:59:02 GMT 3
Youzhny Ousts No. 2 Nadal in Thrilling Upset ;D ;D ;D
by Clair Maciel Wednesday, September 6, 2006
In perhaps one of the biggest upsets of the US Open tournament thus far, unseeded Mikhail Youzhny of Russia dismissed the No. 2 seed and fan-favorite Rafael Nadal in an edge-of-your-seat 6-3, 5-7, 7-6(5), 6-1 slugfest.
For the first time in this tournament, Nadal's vulnerability on hard courts was vastly exposed, and Youzhny took that opportunity to step up his game, maintaining a high level of quality tennis for three hours and 15 minutes to hold off the 20-year-old clay-court expert.
Youzhny's win moves him into the semifinal round and earns him a career-best US Open and Grand Slam appearance. There, he will face another tough obstacle in Andy Roddick, who is fresh off a straight-set win over Lleyton Hewitt and hungry for a chance to redeem himself and return to the finals again this year.
Throughout the contest, Nadal showed off his all-court game, muscling his way through hard-hitting rallies and then coming into the net to finish with a soft finesse drop shot to win points. But during those rallies, Youzhny handled Nadal's heavy, diving topspin shots with relative ease, firing back with shots that found the lines for a total of 49 winners compared to Nadal's mere 23.
Simply put, Youzhny was just unstoppable Wednesday afternoon. Toward the end of the match, the nearly invincible Nadal began playing uncharacteristically inconsistent tennis and committed too many unforced errors to be able to keep up with Youzhny.
"He was beginning very fast, very hard in the fourth," Nadal said of Youzhny's surge at the end of the match. "I (was) trying to fight, but I wasn't -- I don't know. The balls (were) going out all the time. I was not my best in the fourth, no? I know a lost a big opportunity. And after that, Mikhail is playing unbelievable. All balls inside, all winners."
Youzhny started the match playing incredibly solid tennis, breaking Nadal's serve in the first set with a cross-court passing shot to go up 5-3 and close out the set on his serve. His serve-and-volley tactics served him well during the match, as he went a successful 77 percent on net approaches.
The second set saw both men trade games on serve while grinding out points from the baseline. Midway through the set, they broke each other's serve once, but Nadal came away with another last-minute break to level the match and steal the second set 7-5.
By the third set, Youzhny was still going for big winners and matching Nadal's consistent baseline game shot for shot. Twice Nadal held triple break point on Youzhny's serve, and twice Youzhny fought his way out of it to hold serve. On one of those instances, Nadal had a 5-4 game lead and 40-0 advantage for a chance to take the third set, but Youzhny rallied back to hold and even it at 5-5.
By the time the two men reached a tiebreaker in the third set, the crowd was on its feet and getting behind Youzhny, who pulled out the 7-5 tiebreak win.
The fourth and final set was all Youzhny, and unfortunately for Nadal, his own tremendous strength couldn't carry him through this match. Youzhny dropped just one game in the final set and rolled through to close out the match in convincing form.
The absence of Nadal in the final stages of the US Open dashes many fans' hopes of the possibility of yet another Rafael Nadal-Roger Federer Grand Slam final.
With the loss, Nadal sees there is room for improvement as he prepares for the next Grand Slam.
"I improve my tennis here in New York," Nadal said. "It is the first year I play better here. But, sure, I am disappointed, no? I need (to) improve, no? My goal now is (to) improve. I was playing not the best moment in the year the last three tournaments. I want improve my tennis. My special goal is next year in Australia, no? So I want to improve. I have four months, and I gonna try my best."
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Post by Annie on Sept 7, 2006 10:06:59 GMT 3
Spirited Russian Youzhny sends Nadal packing by Greg Heakes September 7, 2006
NEW YORK (AFP) - World number two Rafael Nadal crashed out of the US Open losing to unseeded Mikhail Youzhny who has made a habit of ousting Spanish top seeds at the 18.5 million dollar event.
The Russian defeated the two-time French Open champion and Wimbledon finalist Nadal 6-3, 5-7, 7-6 (7/5), 6-1 in a quarter-final match.
"He did the little things better," Nadal said. "I was not playing with my best calm on the important points. Mentally I need a little more confidence."
Youzhny will play American Andy Roddick who fired off 17 aces en route to a 6-3, 7-5, 6-4 victory over Lleyton Hewitt of Australia for a place in the final.
A bruising encounter between Nadal and Youzhny turned on the third set tie-break which the world 54th ranked Youzhny won 7/5 after a series of gruelling rallies.
Playing inspired tennis Youzhny ran away into a 5-0 lead in the fourth set leaving Nadal shaking his head in disbelief and with a mountain to climb.
The 20-year-old Spaniard managed to win one game and had a break point in the next, but Youzhny held firm and he converted his first match point when Nadal hit a forehand inches wide.
"It was a very tough match. I can't believe I beat Rafa in four sets," the 24-year-old Muscovite said.
"When we started all the crowd was for Rafa because he was the favourite, but I hope I have managed to change their opinion," he said.
Youzhny was facing his third-straight Spaniard in New York. He upset sixth seed Tommy Robredo 6-2, 6-0, 6-1 in the round of 16 and 11th seed David Ferrer 4-6, 6-4, 7-5, 6-4 in the third round.
Nadal had been seeded to meet top seed and defending champion Roger Federer in Sunday's final.
The two met in both the French Open and Wimbledon finals which they shared with one win each.
Federer extended his Flushing Meadows' winning streak to 17 matches by easily beating 29-year-old Frenchman Marc Gicquel 6-3, 7-6 (7/2), 6-3 in a fourth round match.
The world No.1 moves to the quarters where he will meet fifth seeded American James Blake who ousted Czech Tomas Berdych 6-4, 6-3, 6-1 on Wednesday.
Russian Nikolay Davydenko meets Germany's Tommy Haas in another quarter-final.
Roddick has put an end to a miserable run of form this year by winning five straight matches in New York.
"The losses have been a little too frequent for my liking this year. I'm the new Andy Roddick. I spent too much time this year looking back. I feel like it is a new chapter," Roddick said.
The 24-year-old Roddick ousted Hewitt in almost two hours in the night match to reach the semi-finals where he will face Youzhny.
"I am not going to give him as many balls to hit as Nadal did," Roddick said of Youzhny.
This was his ninth career meeting between the two former world number ones with Hewitt still holding a 7-2 lead overall.
"He came out serving so well didn't give me too many looks at second serves," Hewitt said. "When Andy is serving that well you have got to clean up your own service games and I didn't do that."
Roddick posted an 80 percent success rate on his first serve points and survived a key set point to win the second set in front of a crowd of about 21,000 at the Arthur Ashe Stadium.
The American won seven straight points on serve late in the first set then broke Hewitt in the last game of the first to clinch it.
He broke Hewitt again in the third game of the second set but the Australian returned the favour in the next game. They stayed on serve until Roddick broke the Aussie again in the 11th game to go ahead 6-5.
Roddick finished off Hewitt in just 38 minutes in the final set as he stepped up his game on big points and on service breaks.
The 14th seeded Haas advanced to the quarter-finals of the US Open for the second time in three years, rallying to beat former champ Marat Safin of Russia and win his second five-set match in a row.
The 26-year-old Haas beat Safin 4-6, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, 7-6 (7/5), equalling his best performance when he reached the round of eight in 2004.
Davydenko needed just 36 minutes on Wednesday to end Andy Murray's hopes of a first US Open quarter-final berth.
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Post by Annie on Sept 7, 2006 20:22:02 GMT 3
An interview with: MIKHAIL YOUZHNY
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. What was most surprising: To beat Nadal or be in the semifinals of the US Open? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: I cannot say. Is both surprise. But I understand I can beat Nadal. It's very tough, but I can. I didn't think before the tournament I can go to semis. I didn't think nothing. I think is more surprise for me now, in semis.
Q. How do you explain you played so well in this tournament? You had a lot of big wins. Against Massu, you had five sets. MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Actually, all year was very tough for me. I work very hard end of last year and beginning of this year. Sometimes I was just waiting results, because I saw I play very well in practice. When I go in to play matches, I cannot show my best tennis in the court. I cannot understand what's happen. After, I think after Hamburg, when I lost first round to qualify guy, Garcia Lopez, it's very easy, 6 Love, 6 4. I understand I cannot waiting any more for results because results are not coming for just coming. I need to do something for results is coming me. I just work hard, and that's why results is coming.
Q. Rather than make excuses, Rafael said he played his best tennis, and it simply wasn't good enough to beat you. What does that say about the way you played? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Yeah, I think it was one of the best match in my career now. But, you know, it's of course very tough to play against Rafael. I understand I have only one chance to beat Rafa, if I play together with my head. Because I don't have any chances to beat like, you know, if you play like, boom, boom, like a lot of players do, like I have no chances. It would be very easy to Rafa to beat me. I start to play with my coach. Watch last year's match. We talk before the match about the tactic, how to play against Rafa, better against Rafa. I think it was a good tactic, and so I can beat him.
Q. I asked him about the atmosphere. He said the crowd MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Atmosphere, I'm very glad about atmosphere. Because when I came to court, it was almost all spectators was for Rafa. I understand he is like come here to play, he is No. 2 in the world. But I was really, really glad when during the match a lot of people start to say, "Misha, Misha." They call "You, You, You," because Youzhny is too tough for. That's why I was really, really glad. I can contact with spectators, with public, and they help me a little bit.
Q. He said he heard more Mishas than Rafa. MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: I don't think was more, but I think it was half.
Q. Why did you do the gesture you did at the end of the match? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: I think is, you know the best was doing Agassi before. It's the best one, I think, what he is doing. If I doing the same, it was not really correct to Andre because where is Andre, where is me. I saw what is doing Srichaphan. He's always doing like this after the match (bowing). I was thinking what I can do after the match. I think it's really Russian, what I am doing. I start doing like this.
Q. What does it mean? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: It's the same. I want to say thanks for spectators. They just watch our match, and they help me maybe, maybe no.
Q. When you talked about your tactics, what were your tactics? Were you surprised that he played so much heavy topspin short balls, so many short balls? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: It's one of a part of our tactics. It was. You know, I tried to play of course, against Nadal, is stupid to play only to his backhand, because you can play one, two balls to his backhand, and after he start to play his forehand because he is already in this corner. I don't want to tell you exactly... No, really, because, you know, it may be not really correct to Rafa if I tell you I beat him because I play like this, I play like this. If you see the match, maybe you see some shots where it was really tactics. Because the match, all match it was the same from first set until end of set. I didn't change the tactics. If I change tactics for one moment, I was (indiscernible), I think. I had only one chance to beat Rafa, I play like I play today.
Q. What did you feel after 5 4 and three set points against you? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: I think I didn't have time for think about it (laughing). If I think about this, I think can lose. I just I understand, for me it was to play against Rafa very easy because I didn't lose nothing. That's why when the score 5 4, Love 40 for me, is nothing. If I play against other guys, yeah, maybe I start to thinking. But against Rafa, he's favorite. He's play well. He's one of the best player in the world. I need just play what I'm doing. And Love 40, I just play. I just start to serve. Of course it was I was lucky because he miss forehand at 15 40. But I just to play, and I was lucky again because I serve good. At Love 40, I think it was three first serve, good ones.
Q. You had success with the Davis Cup. You became instantly a hero, I'm sure, in Russia. The rest of the world suddenly knew about you. What impact did that have on your development? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Again Davis Cup hero. You know, Davis Cup was four years ago, and it was a great match for me. You mean about the final, yeah?
Q. Yeah. MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: It was great match for me. It was not really for me. It was great match for our country because for first time we won the Davis Cup. But for me, it was really tough time because three months before the Davis Cup, my father has died. He doing a lot for me and he cannot watch this match. And I cannot be glad. I be happy, but I cannot be happy for hundred percentage after this match because it was just three months after the father. Of course all country, we going to presidents', to one presidents, to former presidents. It was huge, huge for Russia, you know. But for me, it was like I cannot feel the same would feel, I think, a lot of people in Russia. Of course after, when it was maybe one or two years ago, I understand what our team is doing for Davis Cup. That's why for me, it's really tough to compete this match in Davis Cup. Actually for me was very tough time. I not was happy like I must be happy after this match, you know. If I win like one years before or now, it will be now another situation. But in this year it was really tough for me.
Q. Do you prefer to play Roddick or Hewitt? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: You know, for me, it doesn't matter. Against each, it will be very tough. I have some pluses and minuses with Roddick and with Hewitt. For sure against both is guys who play very tough very, very tough. Will be another match, not like was against Rafa or against another Spanish guys. Because we play (indiscernible) tennis. I need just go in and play.
Q. Will you watch the match? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Actually, I don't like to watch the match. My coach watch the match. For me, it's the best way.
Q. You said this is the best match of your life today? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Yeah, I think it was my best match because I play the same tennis from first point until last.
Q. Was that just because of the matchup, or was there something in you that brought you to this point, or did you feel going into the match that you were going to play well, or is it a surprise? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: No, it's not surprise for me what I play good today. Because all matches before in US Open, I play really good. Against Robredo was really nice match. Against Ferrero it was. All matches I play, I play good, you know. That's why I understand this match I can play good, but I didn't know how I can play good, you know, which level I can play good. And for me, I very glad because I play from first to last points the same, you know. For me, it's very important now.
Q. Why is it you have gotten to this level now? What has brought you here? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Because I work hard beginning of the year, starting. I play almost the same tennis in practice starting from April. I have the same tennis in Miami on practice. It was unbelievable. I play with top 20 guys, and for me, it was really, really good because I can beat him on practice. After, I think I am going to court and I play the same. When I going to play against Rusedski, I lost 6 3, 6 1. First time in my life, I cannot show like 50% is from my game and practice on my match. Now, the time is coming. That's why I start to I coming from practice to match now. Not early, not later, but just now. But I can say thanks to all my team, my coach, my fitness coach, my physio, everybody who helped me, and this is results of work.
Q. There are many years that they are saying that you could be a strong, strong player. There are at least four years apart from Davis Cup, other tournaments. All players, they say that you are dangerous one. But are you disappointed by this last year, the fact that you didn't really succeed as much as everybody was expecting? You are 54, I think, in the world, and you could be much better. Are you disappointed? You think what is the reason? Is just mental? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Is not just mental, you know. I have some last year, 2002, start in 2002, it was Davis Cup year. After Davis Cup in Russia, everybody bring me up because I win last match. They didn't say what Safin win all matches before in Davis Cup. He won two matches in Paris. Everybody says, "Youzhny won the Davis Cup, he is like national hero." Everybody start to talk about me, he is next No. 1 in the world because actually people in Russia who understand the tennis, it was not a lot. It's a lot who doesn't understand the tennis. They know just he won, Russia won Davis Cup, he is the best. But I tell you before, for me, it was very tough time. In 2003 I start very good with season. I was fourth round to Australia open. Was two sets up against Roddick and I lost this match. And after, is end of 2002 and beginning of 2003, I play only on my emotion because I have to play, because I always thinking about my father and I have to play, I have to play. And after January, I was really down because it's impossible to play always on your emotions. 2003, I start to injury a little bit. 2004, I play very good, I think. I begin not so good, but end of year, top 20. I was No. 15 in the world. Again, I start very good. I remember Australian Open against Rafa, I have matchpoints, very easy match points and volley forehand. But I have injury, knee injury in this match. I start to going to clinic in Russia. It was wrong step to me. I didn't know before what is wrong, but I just miss three weeks. I going to play Dubai, Davis Cup in America, and I have the same problems. I have knee injury. After America, I going to Germany, make the operations, rehabilitations. After, come back to Rome, fourth round against Rafa 6 2, 6 0. End of the year, I have problems with back. And after, doctors tell me, Misha it's knee injury is because your back is not good enough. I start to work with my back. I work very harden end of last year, beginning of this year. Beginning of this year I said I have some personality problems with my family. I didn't say what kind of. But, you know, that's why I work hard and sometimes I waiting results. I tell you, beginning of the year I waiting results because I start play well. After, I stop to look results and start to play. Now I just go on court and try to play my best tennis. That's why I'm going up and down. I understand in Russia, I am lucky. I am very lucky because now is a lot of person forget about the Youzhny. We have a lot of good players now. Davydenko, top 10. Safin come back now. Tursunov play good. Andreev. We have many good players. I am really glad for not many people start to say Youzhny have to going, but up, up and down. Yes, some players, some journalists or somebody says, Misha, when you going up and down. But I believe to my coach, I believe to my team. I just try to work hard, and I understand this is, yeah, now I'm 54, but my game is much better than 54. Now I stop to thinking about the result, about the ranking. I think only about my game, what I need to improve. I know what I need to improve. I have a lot of things what I can improve. That's why it's looking positive to my future.
Q. Can you look ahead to your semifinals and talk about your match against Roddick and then your match against Hewitt and your chances. MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Is better if you talking about my chances. I just go in and play.
Q. If you were playing Hewitt, in other words... MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: Hewitt, I never beat Hewitt in my life. You know, of course it will be both very tough and will be two difference matches against Roddick and against Hewitt, because it's two different players. I don't want to talk about my chances, because before Rafa, also I have not a lot of chances. Against Robredo, against Ferrer, I always was not favorite. That's why against Hewitt and against Roddick, I think I again will not be favorite for sure. Guys already play semis in Grand Slams. For sure, it will be very, very tough match for me, because it will be now in our match not like against Spanish guys, because Roddick and Hewitt, it's another players and they prefer this surface. They play very good in hard. This is two players very dangerous for me.
Q. What makes Lleyton so difficult to beat? You obviously haven't beaten him before? MIKHAIL YOUZHNY: You know, it's I have, against Roddick, like against Roddick I have some chances. But, you know, he serve very well. And if he serve very well, very tough to beat him in this surface. Against Hewitt, he's both players former No. 1, and Hewitt, good return and he's very fast, you know. He play very good. Of course he play very good. That's why, you know, I don't want to think now against who I am going to play Saturday, because it's two more days. Now I have to play, go and play doubles, and I need to think how we can beat the Bryans, because really they are much tougher to this Roddick or Hewitt.
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Post by yse on Sept 8, 2006 8:23:13 GMT 3
From USOPEN SITE Who’s “the Youzhny”? by Neil Schlecht Posted Date: Thursday, September 7, 2006 I can’t say that I saw this coming. Yesterday, a little-known Russian, 24-year-old Mikhail Youzhny, pulled a shocking one-two upset punch, felling top seeds in two late-day matches that rank as the two biggest upsets of the 2006 US Open. As the afternoon faded, Youzhny stunned second-seed Rafael Nadal in Louis Armstrong Stadium in four sets, and the Russian came back under two hours later, after a shower and a press conference, to upend, along with his even less-known Czech partner, the Bryan brothers, the No. 1 seeds in men’s doubles. As a one-man act of giant killing, the back-to-back showing was positively fairytale-like, a Russian version of “Jack and the Beanstalk.” As the reverberations rippled around the grounds of the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center yesterday, the news was more often than not met with: “Youz who?” You have to be either Russian or a tennis geek to know much about Youzhny. A solid veteran ranked No. 54 in the world, Youzhny had made a couple of splashes on tour, but he’d never sent such shockwaves through a major. In 2002, he was feted as a national hero in Russia when, in the fifth and deciding match of a Davis Cup final, he became the first player to come from two sets down, beating Paul-Henri Mathieu in 4 hours and 37 minutes, capturing the title for Russia over France. Youzhny has two career titles, both smaller ATP events, to his credit. His previous deepest run in a major was the fourth round at Wimbledon and the Australian Open. Youzhny reached a high ranking of No. 16 in 2004, but more often he has hovered in the mid-40s. While he’s racked up about $3 million in prize money—not exactly chump change—Youzhny has never really threatened the titans of tennis at crunch time. Yesterday, though, the Russian had the boisterous crowd at Armstrong screaming “Misha, Misha,” drowning out scattered choruses of “Rafa!” The crowd was so enthused by Youzhny’s confident, emphatic victory over the Spaniard that one man was arrested when he raced onto the court in jubilation. Afterwards, Misha reflected on his win. “I understand in Russia, I am lucky. I am very lucky because now is a lot of person forget about the Youzhny.” For those who saw him cut down the indefatigable force that is Nadal and the dominant tag team in men’s doubles, the Bryans—who had reached seven consecutive Grand Slam finals—it will be hard to forget Youzhny’s stellar Wednesday performance. He pounced on Nadal's short-bouncing shots with free-flowing, one-handed backhands and wicked corkscrew forehands. As Nadal and Youzhny took the court for their quarterfinal matchup, an affair most observers expected to be a routine victory for the Mallorcan, a couple of young women in our office looked up at the monitor and declared Youzhny, with his shorter-than-average shorts, buzz cut and chin stubble, “hot.” As he strode across the big stage late in the match and seized the moment like a cocky pop star, Youzhny was on fire. Call him Russian Timberlake. “What did you think about Youzhny?” I asked my friend and fellow tennis geek Kelly. “He’s waaay better looking than that pinhead Timberlake,” she offered. Youzhny finished off the upset by smoking Nadal in the fourth set, 6-1. The Russian performed an encore that Lance Bass, Timberlake’s bandmate in N’Sync who was on the grounds yesterday, might have appreciated. Basking in the stadium’s applause, Youzhny stood erect in the center of the court and saluted the four sides of the stadium with his racket covering his head. The militaristic gesture was, according to Youzhny, styled after Agassi, but with a Muscovite twist. “I think it's really Russian, what I am doing.” Two weeks ago, during qualies on the Wednesday before the Open began, Youzhny was out on Armstrong hitting with Nadal in the bright sun. Youzhny looked strong, and Rafa was having all kinds of trouble with the Russian’s serve. Little did I know that that practice session would foretell a seismic shakeup in the tournament. I mean, Sharapova took the same court afterwards with Ashley Harkleroad, and you didn’t see Maria going down to any to mid-tier players. Nadal was not Youzhny’s first seeded victim in the draw. He beat two other Spaniards, Tommy Robredo, the sixth seed, and David Ferrer, seeded 11. In the first round, Youzhny toppled 19th-seed Dominik Hrbaty. Youzhny has long been considered a dangerous player on tour, but he has been beset by a series of back and knee injuries. “All year was very tough for me,” said the Russian yesterday. “I work very hard end of last year and beginning of this year. Sometimes I was just waiting results because I saw I play very well in practice. When I go in to play matches, I cannot show my best tennis in the court. I cannot understand what's happen.” Youzhny added, somewhat enigmatically, “Beginning of this year, I said I have some personality problems with my family. I didn't say what kind of.” All of Russia was captivated by Youzhny’s Davis Cup victory in 2002, but for him it was a difficult time. “It was great match for our country because for first time we won the Davis Cup. But for me, it was really tough time because three months before the Davis Cup, my father has died. He doing a lot for me and he cannot watch this match. And I cannot be glad.” As for the semis, where he now faces Andy Roddick, Youzhny expects to be the underdog. “I don't want to talk about my chances, because before Rafa, also I have not a lot of chances. Against Robredo, against Ferrer, I always was not favorite.” Perhaps not with the oddsmakers. But with the fans, it may be another story.
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Post by safinette on Sept 8, 2006 8:30:34 GMT 3
“What did you think about Youzhny?” I asked my friend and fellow tennis geek Kelly. “He’s waaay better looking than that pinhead Timberlake,” she offered. LOL!!!!! ;D I agree Youzhny stood erect in the center of the court and saluted the four sides of the stadium with his racket covering his head. The militaristic gesture was, according to Youzhny, styled after Agassi, but with a Muscovite twist. “I think it's really Russian, what I am doing.” I loved it! Thank you yse
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