Click photo to enlarge
Russia's Svetlana Kuznetsova holds up the trophy after
defeating compatriot Dinara Safina during the women's
singles final of the French Open tennis tournament at the
Roland Garros stadium in Paris. Photo by AP.
Svetlana Kuznetsova never struck Dinara Safina as a Grand
Slam champion in the making when they were kids in Russia.
Kuznetsova showed up for matches toting a 2-liter bottle of
soda and wearing rock band T-shirts.
As of Saturday, Kuznetsova owns two major titles - and that's
two more than Safina.
Far steadier, if not all that spectacular, Kuznetsova took
advantage of the No. 1-ranked Safina's assorted errors and
won the French Open final 6-4, 6-2. Hardly a work of beauty,
the 74-minute match ended, fittingly, with Safina's seventh
double-fault.
"She was too tight. She had so much pressure on her," said
Kuznetsova, who also won the 2004 U.S. Open. "I just played
the match. It was just one more match. ... Definitely it was
a lot of emotions inside of me, but I control it."
Not at the outset: She lost the first three points and was
broken in the first game. Quickly, though, the seventh-seeded
Kuznetsova took control, yanking Safina from side to side
with the same powerful groundstrokes that eliminated Serena
Williams in the quarterfinals.
More dispiriting to Safina, perhaps, was Kuznetsova's
defense.
Time and time again, Safina - sister of two-time major
champion Marat Safin - delivered a hard, well-placed shot.
And time and time again, Kuznetsova scrambled to get the ball
over the net.
If the champion seems to have a cyclist's strong legs, it's
because she does: Kuznetsova's father coached her mother to
six world championships and her brother to an Olympic silver
medal in that sport.
On a cloudy afternoon with the temperature in the low 50s,
Kuznetsova also delighted spectators by showing off her
soccer skills, juggling a tennis ball off her right foot and
knee for several seconds.
Her best work came with her racket, and she broke back at
love to make it 1-all, then again to go ahead 5-3. Safina
began that eighth game with a double-fault and rolled her
eyes. As mistakes accumulated, she muttered to herself or
smacked her left palm with her racket.
On match point, Safina's second serve hit the net tape and
popped up, sailing beyond the doubles alley.
"I was, like, 'Oh, my God. Double-fault,'" Kuznetsova said.
When Kuznetsova would allow herself to imagine winning the
French Open, she always pictured herself dropping to the clay
in joy. But the anticlimactic way this one ended didn't call
for such a celebration.
Instead, Kuznetsova simply turned to make eye contact with
her coach and supporters in the stands, then walked to the
net for a handshake and kisses on the cheek.
At the other end of the court, Safina covered her forehead
with her left hand - disbelief written all over her face -
then spiked her racket.
"I was a little bit desperate on the court," said Safina, who
appeared to be fighting tears late in the match and during
the on-court trophy presentation. "Didn't stay tough
mentally."
Kuznetsova did, which hasn't always been the case. Aside from
her U.S. Open championship, also in an all-Russian final,
Kuznetsova has her own history of faltering at key moments:
She entered Saturday 10-18 in tournament finals.
The French Open, in particular, was the site of trouble. In
2004, Kuznetsova held a match point in the fourth round
before losing.
The next year, in the same round, Kuznetsova led 5-3 in the
third set and held two match points before losing. And in
2007, Kuznetsova lost the final at Roland Garros to Justine
Henin in straight sets.
Running through that list of setbacks, Kuznetsova noted one
significant difference about Saturday.
"I was calm," she said. "It was similar feeling when I won
the U.S. Open. I cannot explain it."
Her coach, Larisa Savchenko, surmised that maybe three
difficult, three-set matches before the final - against No.
12 Agnieszka Radwanska, then Williams, then No. 30 Samantha
Stosur - helped settle down Kuznetsova.
"Really," Kuznetsova insisted after accepting the champion's
trophy from six-time French Open winner Steffi Graf, "I
didn't expect it to happen this year."
Safina was the one who was supposed to finally make her
breakthrough after losing in the finals at last year's French
Open and this year's Australian Open. Since rising to No. 1
in the rankings in April, Safina had won 20 of 21 matches,
including 16 in a row.
The only woman to beat her in that span? Kuznetsova.
There are those - including Williams and Henin - who have
wondered whether Safina deserves to be No. 1 if she hasn't
won a major. Safina insisted the only pressure she felt came
from within.
"I really wanted to win," she said. "I just didn't handle
it."
About a decade ago, at age 12 or 13, Svetlana living in St.
Petersburg, Dinara in Moscow, they first played each other.
Dinara won in a rout. Svetlana's highlight was asking her
opponent's older - and better-known - brother, Marat, for an
autograph.
Oh, how far Kuznetsova's come.
"Didn't happen just by luck," she said. "To have two Grand
Slam trophies - big, you know."