Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark pumps her fist during her
6-3, 6-4 win over Maria Sharapova of Russia in the fourth
round of the US Open tennis tournament in New York. (AP
Photo/Kathy Willens)
Forehands, backhands, big serves. Caroline Wozniacki got
almost everything back today, frustrating Maria Sharapova in a
6-3, 6-4 victory to advance to the quarterfinals of the US
Open.
Top-seeded Wozniacki won the way she always does - by chasing
down hundreds of balls and forcing the other player into
making mistakes.
The 14th-seeded Sharapova, trying to return to the
quarterfinals at Flushing Meadows for the first time since
winning it all in 2006, fought for longer than any of
Wozniacki's opponents to this point. But as the pressure of
Wozniacki's consistency built, the hard-hitting Russian went
for even more, with limited results.
Sharapova wound up making 36 unforced errors. Wozniacki
finished with 10 in what was, by far, her biggest challenge
of the tournament thus far.
"I knew it wasn't going to be easy," said Wozniacki, who lost
to Kim Clijsters in the final last year. "I got a lot of
experience from last year, so it definitely helped me today."
Wozniacki improved to 18-1 since Wimbledon and stretched her
winning streak to 12 matches. Through her first four U.S.
Open matches, she has lost a total of 10 games. Maybe most
impressive, though, is this stat: She's made 40 unforced
errors, compared to 123 by her opponents.
The Dane, ranked second in the world but seeded first because
of Serena Williams' withdrawal, eliminated what is largely
considered her toughest opponent remaining on her side of the
draw.
Next up, "Woz" plays 45th-ranked Dominika Cubulkova, who
defeated No. 11 Svetlana Kuznetsova 7-5, 7-6 (4) earlier
Monday. In the other quarterfinal on this side of the draw,
No. 31 Kaia Kanepi will play the winner of a late-Monday
match between No. 7 Vera Zvonareva and Andrea Petrovic.
Kanepi defeated No. 15 Yanina Wickmayer 0-6, 7-6 (2), 6-1 on
Monday.
The Wozniacki-Sharapova match was the best show of three
afternoon matches in Arthur Ashe Stadium, where earlier No. 3
Novak Djokovic sucked all the life out of the crowd by
routing No. 19-seeded American Mardy Fish, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1.
Fish's loss left only one American in the draw, No. 20 Sam
Querrey, who plays No. 25 Stanislas Wawrinka on Tuesday.
Djokovic, eyeing his third straight U.S. Open semifinal, will
play No. 17 Gael Monfils in the quarters. Earlier, Monfils
beat fellow Frenchman Richard Gasquet 6-4, 7-5, 7-5.
Since a five-set scare in the first round, Djokovic hasn't
dropped a set. Against Fish, who has played two five-setters
in addition to doubles over the first week, the Serb was the
better, fresher player.
"I'm playing with a lot of confidence," Djokovic said. "It's
definitely great to raise the level of performance toward the
end of the tournament. It's been a great couple years for me
in New York. Hopefully, I can go on."
With countrymen Andy Roddick and John Isner already gone,
Fish was hoping to make Labor Day something memorable for his
country - an underdog trying to get some momentum, and the
crowd, on his side early, maybe channel his inner Jimmy
Connors and turn the stadium into his own, personal cheering
section.
That never came close to happening against Djokovic, who
dictated most points from the baseline and wound up with 30
winners to 13 for Fish. The occasional shout of "Don't give
up, Mardy" echoed from the stands, but mostly, this was a
flat afternoon and Fish couldn't do much to perk things up.
Midway through the final set in the windblown stadium, Fish
changed tactics and tried coming to the net more often. That
didn't go well, either. He went 2 for 6 on serve-and-volley
points and won only half the 22 points he played at the net.
"I felt so many times today, like even off my first serves, I
was sort of fighting to neutralize the point," Fish said. "I
was on my back foot quite a bit, even when I was with the
wind."
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