Belgium's Justine Henin celebrates after defeating
Serbia's Ana Ivanovic in the women's final match at the French Open tennis
tournament at Roland Garros in Paris June 9, 2007. [Reuters]
Belgium's Justine Henin kisses her trophy after defeating
Serbia's Ana Ivanovic in the women's final match at the French Open tennis
tournament at Roland Garros in Paris June 9, 2007. [Reuters]
|
PARIS -- Justine Henin claimed
her third consecutive French Open title and her fourth overall Saturday, taking
advantage of 19-year-old Ana Ivanovic's shaky play to win 6-1, 6-2.
Henin closed out the victory with a forehand volley winner, then flipped her
racket, buried her head in her hands, leaned on the net and exhaled.
"It's surreal to win for the third time in a row," the Belgian said. "I am
struggling to take it in."
She became the first woman since Monica Seles in 1990-92 to win three
consecutive Roland Garros titles, and only the second since 1937.
Ivanovic, a Serb playing in her first Grand Slam final, started well before
her play deteriorated. The first sign of trouble came when she awkwardly hit a
serve 10 feet long, prompting groans from the crowd. She double-faulted to fall
behind 3-1, and the unforced errors came in flurries after that.
"I started getting nervous," Ivanovic said. "I couldn't control the serve,
and she used that well."
Ivanovic committed 26 unforced errors to 13 for Henin and also double-faulted
five times.
On Sunday, top-ranked Roger Federer will bid for the only Grand Slam
championship to elude him when he plays Rafael Nadal, who will try to become the
first man since Bjorn Borg in 1978-81 to win three consecutive French Open
titles.
Federer is seeking his fourth consecutive major title, something last
accomplished by Rod Laver in 1969.
The women's final was tight at the start. Henin trailed in each of the first
four games, which took 24 minutes, but won 18 of the next 22 points.
Pumping her fist after nearly every point she won, Henin kept up the pressure
in the second set with a vast repertoire that ranged from delicate backhands to
overhead smashes. During the final changeover she opened an envelope and pulled
out a note bearing the word "Allez" -- French for "Let's go."
Then she finished the job. Ivanovic shanked consecutive shots during one
rally to fall behind 30-0, and Henin closed out the victory two points later.
Henin has won all four of her French Open finals in straight sets, never
losing more than eight games. She has reached the final of the past five majors
she has played, but she missed this year's Australian Open because she was
separating from her husband.
"I had some very tough times at the start of the year," she said. "I hung in
there these last few months. And now I've found an immense pleasure on the court
once more."
Henin extended an Open era record winning streak of 35 consecutive sets at
Roland Garros. She became the first top-seeded woman to win the title since
Steffi Graf in 1996.
The Belgian became the fifth woman since 1925 to win the French four times.
Chris Evert leads with seven titles.
Henin won the French Open for the first time in 2003 and now has six Grand
Slam titles, moving her ahead of Venus Williams and Martina Hingis. She trails
only Serena Williams' eight among active women.
Henin won $1.34 million -- same as for the men's champion. Ivanovic, the
first player to represent Serbia in a major final, received
$670,000.