Anik
Junior Member
Anik roullllllle !!!
Posts: 94
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Post by Anik on Sept 19, 2004 19:27:10 GMT 3
BEIJING, Sept. 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Fifth-seeded Russian Marat Safin survived an attempted Center Court mugging as he surpassed his compatriot Mikhail Youzhny 7-6 (7-4), 7-5 to lift his long-waited first title of the year here on Sunday.
The match started with Mikhail Youzhny breaking Marat Safin in the opening game with the bounce and net chords falling in his favor to appall the fifth seed.
High-spirited Youzhny got a quick pace in the first set and seemed can do anything with accurate landing points and wonderful saves, but Safin soon recovered from one game down to blast powerful serve and heavy hitting, which proved too strong for Youzhny, who was kept running a lot to suffer an energy draining.
With the diminish of power, Youzhny's unforced errors came up. Safin took the chance to return a break in game eight after 2 deuces to level the score 4-4 and compelled a tiebreaker. Safin waked up his big serve by firing four consecutive aces out of total nine to collect his first four points, ending the tiebreaker 7-4.
The second set also proved to be a rock-versus-stone collision with both players holding their serves until Safin broke in game eleven taking the advantage of Youzhny's double faults to pack his first title the year.
Safin walked around the court to express thanks for the crowd's thunderous applause holding the trophy.
"My serve was great. My serve helped me to win the first set. Mikhail was a tough player, but my serve and baseline help me a lot," said Safin. "It was two years for my last title. It's great feeling to win again today and it won't be the last hopefully. I hope to come here next year,"
"I'm surprised the crowd is so kind to me. The title surely help me to reach the Masters Cup and it won't be my last title in China," the Russian No. 1 added.
The loss did not like to bother Youzhny, who attended the press conference with full smile. The runner-up became the first person to say congratulations to Safin.
"If you want to beat a player like Marat, you can not play only baseline. You need to play slide, volley and everything you can control," said the 32-ranked Youzhny. "Marat played better than me. His serve was good. He could play great serve, good baseline and also volley."
"If I could play more finals, I think it will do good to me. I didn't feel regret for the loss, I know I was close to him. I played good today, but it's not my best," added Youzhny.
Safin, the former world number one and 2000 US Open winner, lifted his last title in November 2002. He has had a lackluster recovery following an injury-plagued season in 2003, falling in the first round of US Open.
After beating Andy Roddick and Andre Agassi on his way to the Australian Open final, Safin was looking to enjoy a successful year, but after reaching the semi-final at the Monte Carlo Masters, his form suffered a slide. Enditem
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Post by Annie on Sept 19, 2004 19:30:45 GMT 3
*knock knock* Is there room for one more person to join the party? ;D I'm so happy happy happy for him right now! After all the months of waiting and hoping and praying, to see him finally lifting a trophy is just so fantastic... I feel so proud of him *sniff sniff* and for his mum and sister t obe there: and an all Russian final: and the fantastic score (not too easy, but not too tough - perfect final ), well it's just the icing on the cake!! *basks in the wonderful moment* Not even Vass' bad vibes could spoil this (jus' jokin', Vass )
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Sarat
New Member
Posts: 26
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Post by Sarat on Sept 19, 2004 19:51:20 GMT 3
It's really a party for us!!! ;D I'm really happy that marat won the title, not only that, the important is he won that in CHINA. As a chinese fan, that's my honour that he had a new start in china and we can expect his more victories!!! The best wishes to marat and congrats him once again!!!
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Anik
Junior Member
Anik roullllllle !!!
Posts: 94
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Post by Anik on Sept 19, 2004 20:04:57 GMT 3
;D
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Post by christina on Sept 19, 2004 20:18:42 GMT 3
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Post by SAFINNO1 on Sept 19, 2004 20:29:47 GMT 3
Hey Ruth good to see you ;D
it is also good to see those pics. Including the ones of him picking up the title
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Post by SAFINNO1 on Sept 19, 2004 20:31:27 GMT 3
Just posted on the ATP Tennis Website. CHINA OPEN Beijing, China September 19, 2004 Safin Claims First Title of Season
© Getty Images Fifth seed Marat Safin captured his first ATP title of the season with a 7-6(4), 7-5 victory over Mikhail Youzhny in the inaugural final of the China Open in Beijing.
Safin registered his 12th career title after what was the first all-Russian final on the ATP circuit since he defeated Yevgeny Kafelnikov to win the title in Tashkent in 2001. Safin also became the ninth player this season to win a title without losing a set.
The final was the second meeting between the two Moscovites, with Safin winning their only previous meeting in the third round at the 2002 Australian Open in straight sets.
Safin, who was appearing in his third ATP final of the season (Australian Open, Estoril) captured his first title since the 2002 ATP Masters Series tournament in Paris. The 24-year-old now has a 12-9 record in finals and has a 33-18 record so far in 2004. Safin's victory moves him up one place to eighth position in the INDESIT ATP 2004 Race, three points above Andre Agassi.
En route to the title, Safin recorded straight set victories over Alex Bogomolov Jr., Hao Lu, Kevin Kim and Jarkko Nieminen.
Youzhny was appearing in his first ATP final since St. Petersburg in 2002 and was looking to claim his second career title and first since Stuttgart earlier that same year on clay.
Youzhny now has a 28-23 record in 2004 and is four victories away from a personal best for the season. His previous best was a 31-24 record in 2002 when he finished No. 32 in the world.
Youzhny also reached the final without dropping a set with victories over Ivo Heuberger, No. 4 seed Rainer Schuettler, No. 8 seed Dominik Hrbaty and No. 6 seed Paradorn Srichaphan.
Earlier in the tournament, top seed Carlos Moya went out in the first round against French qualifier Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, while second seed Juan Carlos Ferrero suffered a second round defeat at the hands of Kevin Kim.
DOUBLES REVIEW Second seeds Justin Gimelstob and Graydon Oliver captured their first title together in just their second tournament as a team after defeating fellow Americans Alex Bogomolov Jr. and Taylor Dent in the final of the China Open in Beijing.
Gimelstob and Oliver, who first teamed up at the US Open and advanced to the third round before losing to eventual champions Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor, came through 4-6, 6-4, 7-6(6) to claim the title. It was Gimelstob's 11th ATP career doubles title and his first of the season, while Oliver captured the second ATP doubles title of his career.
Bogomolov Jr. and Dent were appearing in their fifth ATP tournament together after making their first team appearance at the NASDAQ-100 Open in Miami earlier this year. The Americans were 0-4 before arriving in Beijing. Both Bogomolov Jr (0-6) and Dent (0-5) were win-less in doubles coming into the tournament and both were looking to claim their first career ATP doubles titles.
WHAT THE PLAYERS SAID: Safin: "Actually my serve saved me in the first set. I was happy in the long run. I served really well, it brings me confidence on the baseline."
(On winning a title): "You forget this feeling. I started to feel happy…Not party time, time to continue working."
(On how his coach Peter Lundgren has helped him): "To hold my emotions a little bit longer, keep everything in yourself, there is a chance the other person will be surprised…to play better, perform better, remain calm to give a chance to win a match, not go crazy."
"I hope this is not going to be the last tournament I win in China. This one is the breaking points of winning more titles in Asia.
"I'll try to get into the Top 8, to get into the [Tennis] Masters Cup. That's my goal of course."
Youzhny: "If you want to beat him, you need to do something more. That's why I threw in some slice, came into net.
"Against Safin, Srichaphan, everything's the same, nothing special. All players have respect. We fight on court, but we all have respect."
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Dee
Junior Member
Posts: 53
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Post by Dee on Sept 19, 2004 21:07:11 GMT 3
;DCan I join the party too? ;D ;D ;D ;D Congrats Marat, and all you fans. Thanks for the great pics, especially the shirt changing one mmmmm lovely ...cheers Magda! I'm so glad he's won at last! love A very happy Dee
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ivy
Full Member
HOLA! Go Marat! Go Hewitt! Go Guga!
Posts: 317
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Post by ivy on Sept 19, 2004 21:12:23 GMT 3
Darn, you guys beat me to it.
I was just going to post that with the 40 points from the China Open Marat moves into 8th place in the face, about a couple points in front of Agassi.
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Post by christina on Sept 19, 2004 21:15:46 GMT 3
Darn, you guys beat me to it. I was just going to post that with the 40 points from the China Open Marat moves into 8th place in the face, about a couple points in front of Agassi. thank u anyway, btw, anyone know wat he's gonna move up 2 in the entry after this? dee>> the party's an open house, any happy marat fans are welcome ;D
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ivy
Full Member
HOLA! Go Marat! Go Hewitt! Go Guga!
Posts: 317
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Post by ivy on Sept 19, 2004 21:19:21 GMT 3
No idea. I have no idea how many points CO was in the entry. Here's a picture that they put with the article on the ATP website Back when Marat was shaven!
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Post by Elisabeth on Sept 19, 2004 21:22:24 GMT 3
WHOUAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'm back ...and what i saw??......... .....Marat won the tournament!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! it's better than my vacation! ;D so so happy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! realy,realy good marat!!!!
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Post by |-Safin_Coria-| on Sept 19, 2004 21:33:12 GMT 3
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Post by christina on Sept 19, 2004 21:34:34 GMT 3
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Post by christina on Sept 19, 2004 21:39:43 GMT 3
from le bbc...
Safin secures China title Latest results Marat Safin claimed his first title in 22 months after beating Mikhail Youzhny 7-6 7-5 in the final of the China Open. The former world number one, who did not drop a set in Beijing, had to dig deep to claim his first victory since the Paris Masters in November 2002.
He recovered from an early break to win the first-set tie-break 7-4 with the help of four booming aces.
Safin broke in the 11th game of the second set and converted his first match point with another big serve.
Afterwards, Safin expressed his relief at finally ending his title drought.
"It's so good to finally win another title," he said. "He was playing well and I was nervous at the start.
"I'm not used to playing these matches for titles. I lost serve in the first game but then I steadied. I didn't want to lose, we both played well."
"I had to fight the pressure and my expectations. Youzhny had nothing to lose. But I now have a lot more confidence in my game."
Russian compatriot Youzhny said basic errors let him down.
"We were both playing well, but I had that forehand error and then the double-fault in the 11th game in the second set," he said. "By then the match was just about over.
"I mixed up my game well to try and fight the Safin serve, that's his biggest weapon. I know I can improve my game and I will work to do so."
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