joseph Posted January 21, 2003 Report Share Posted January 21, 2003 In tennis : Nalbandian out`s no.6 Swiss Roger Federer in 5-set match Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJ Posted January 25, 2003 Report Share Posted January 25, 2003 Agassi aims for fourth straight Australian Open crown January 25, 2003 MELBOURNE, Australia (Ticker) - Andre Agassi looks to become the first man from another country to capture four Australian Open titles Sunday when he faces underdog Rainer Schuettler. Agassi is one win away from becoming just the fourth man to lift the Australian Open trophy at least four times and the first non-Australian. Roy Emerson won a record six crowns (1961, 1963-67), and Jack Crawford (1931-33, 1935) and Ken Rosewall (1953, 1955, 1971-72) each captured four. With a win Sunday, the second-seeded American will hold the record for the most consecutive match victories at this event. He tied Ivan Lendl with 20 in a row Thursday with a 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 triumph over Wayne Ferreira in the semifinals. After capturing the title here in 2000 and 2001, Agassi withdrew from last year's event due to a wrist injury. He also won the tournament in 1995. Bidding for his eighth Grand Slam crown, the 32-year-old American has been awesome. He has dropped just one set and yielded only 43 games - 15 of those in his four-set fourth-round win over Frenchman Nicolas Escude. Agassi is the obvious favorite against Schuettler, the 31st seed. He will be appearing in his 14th career Grand Slam final while his opponent has reached a major final for the first time. The American will be gunning for his eighth career Grand Slam triumph - which would tie him for sixth on the all-time list - and 55th title overall. Schuettler has won just two tournaments since turning professional in 1995. However, the Australian Open often produces unpredictable winners. Last year's champion, Thomas Johansson, was not expected to beat Marat Safin, nor was 1998 winner Peter Korda, the underdog vs. Marcelo Rios. "It would be an unfortunate thing if you could sit in your home or your hotel room and phone in the result, because sports wouldn't be what it is if you could do that," Agassi said. "You've got to come out and play and you've got to come out and earn it, regardless of how many times you've done it (and) how many times you haven't done it. It's a job that still needs to get done." Agassi routed Schuettler, 6-1, 6-4, in their only career meeting in the second round at the 1998 BMW Open and has won 11 straight matches against German players. "Maybe he eats something wrong the day before, then I have a chance," Schuettler joked. "No, I have no pressure at all. I just go on the court. He's in good shape. He played the matches unbelievable. So I go out there, try to give my best." Schuettler became only the second German in the event's 98-year history to advance to the men's championship match here with a 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 victory over ninth-seeded Andy Roddick. The 26-year-old, whose path to the final was eased when Safin - the third seed and last year's runner-up - withdrew from their third-round encounter with a wrist injury, joined 1991 and 1996 winner Boris Becker as the only German men to reach the finals at the Australian Open. Schuettler previously had never gotten past the fourth round at any major. "It's a dream for me, a dream to be in the final," he said. "Sometimes you have a dream and you're able to reach it. I guess it's one of the best moments of my life." Also Sunday, Martina Navratilova will try to make history when she teams with India's Leander Paes against Australian Todd Woodbridge and Greece's Eleni Daniilidou in the mixed doubles final. Navratilova, 46 and playing at this event after a 14-year absence, will try to become the oldest Grand Slam champion in the history of tennis. A win here also will give her a career sweep of all three titles - singles, doubles and mixed - at all four majors. The Australian mixed doubles crown is the only major title missing from Navratilova's career, which boasts 18 Grand Slam singles crowns, 31 major doubles championships and seven mixed doubles titles. From Yahoo News Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Azat Posted January 26, 2003 Report Share Posted January 26, 2003 just few minutes ago Agassi won. -------- All AndreThe whole two weeks, no matter how big Andre Agassi's lead got, he never let up. It wasn't any different in the final on Sunday. Agassi demolished Rainer Schuettler 6-2,6-2, 6-1 to win his fourth Australian Open title. It's Agassi's eighth Grand Slam title. The question now is will wife Steffi Graf pay off her mixed doubles bet. From espn.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wh00t Posted January 26, 2003 Report Share Posted January 26, 2003 Schuettler (eliminated Nalbandian in quarters) was able to get by one Armenian but not two. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.