Thursday, January 20, 2011

Juan Martin del Potro Comeback Slam Ends With Marcos Baghdatis in .

Juan Martin Del PotroMELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - The last man to win a Grand Slam - who is not named Rafa or Roger - was eliminated from the Australian Open on Thursday.

Juan Martin del Potro, winner of the 2009 U.S. Open and the rising star of that season, spent most of 2010 recovering from or on his right wrist.

The 22-year-old Argentine returned to Melbourne for his first Grand Slam event in a year, but he has not returned to top form.


In the final couple of the night Thursday, the 6-foot-6 (1.98-meter) del Potro lumbered off center court with a roll after losing 6-1, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 to 2006 finalist Marcos Baghdatis.

"It's very tough. I'm still improving," del Potro said, adding that he played better than he had last week in Sydney, his comeback tournament where he exited in the 2nd round. "I think that's positive for the next tournament."

The big-serving, power-swinging Argentine fired 10 aces and serves as tight as 128 m.p.h. (207 k.p.h. but couldn't overpower Baghdatis, who served 15 aces that peaked at 132 m.p.h. (213 k.p.h.). Baghdatis made only 29 unforced errors, compared to 41 by del Potro.

Del Potro called the trainer on 3 consecutive changeovers during the bit set to get his wrist examined, but later said it was "only for safety" after making a "bad movement" while serving. He remains the lone actor to have defeated both No. 1 Rafael Nadal and No. 2 Roger Federer at a Grand Slam tournament.

The 21st-seeded Baghdatis said his manoeuvre was to fire fast balls at del Potro and to prevent him running, knowing that "he didn't cause a lot of matches under his feet." He faces No. 11 Jurgen Melzer of Austria in the 3rd round.

DON'T ASK, DON'T TEXT: Working mother Kim Clijsters took the chance to clarify on center court at the Australian Open that she is not fraught with No. 2.

Add one more rule to the proverb that you should never ask a woman if she's pregnant: Don't text message the motion to her friend, either.

Former Australian tennis star Todd Woodbridge learned that lesson the laborious way. And Clijsters reveled in publicly chiding him, in one of the more amusing on-court interviews at a Grand Slam tournament.

The U.S. Open champion had barely won her second-round match Thursday, swiftly beating Carla Suarez Navarro 6-1, 6-3, and was greeted by Woodbridge for an on-court interview.

"You thought I was pregnant?" she lightheartedly asked Woodbridge, drawing stadium-wide laughter as she informed him she had seen the text message he'd sent to Australian doubles player Rennae Stubbs.

"Are you?" he asked, blushing.

"No, I'm not" she said, leaning into his microphone to propagate that his message said Clijsters "looks really grumpy" and more voluptuous than usual. Woodbridge joked that his TV career was now over.

The 27-year-old Clijsters, known as one of the friendliest and polite players on the women's tour, later said she'd enjoyed the playful banter.

Stubbs had shown Clijsters the text message a day before while they were chatting about "babies and having a moment one," the Belgian said. When Thursday's match ended and Clijsters saw Woodbridge was her interviewer, she chuckled.

"I saw him walk out there, it's like, 'OK, I'm going to get him back now,"' she said, smiling.

Motherhood clearly agrees with Clijsters' career. The other No. 1-player took time off the go when she married and had a child-daughter Jada, born in February 2008. She returned from a 2 1/2-year retirement to win the U.S. Open in 2009, just three tournaments into her comeback.

The acquisition made Clijsters the first get to win a Grand Slam singles title since Evonne Goolagong Cawley at Wimbledon in 1980. In protection to motherhood-and to the Australian tennis great-Clijsters is wearing a green shirt-and-skirt outfit at this year's tournament that was divine by what Goolagong wore in her Grand Slam win.

Clijsters said that her sponsor, Fila, also sponsored Goolagong and came up with the idea.

"It's an honour to be wearing it," she said.

OUT OF STEAM: David Nalbandian used up so much vitality in his five-set, first-round marathon against former No. 1 Lleyton Hewitt, he felt "empty" by around two.

Only two nights after extinguishing Australia's best hope in the men's draw, the 29-year-old Argentine retired from his second-round match Thursday against Richard Berankis of Lithuania due to exhaustion. Berankis was leading 6-1, 6-0, 2-0.

Asked if Hewitt's match had anything to do with his fatigue, Nalbandian replied "a lot."

"Today I was, like, empty," he said. "I tossed the globe for a do and everything was moving around. It's tough playing like that. I called the doctor. He told me it was dangerous playing like that. So I retired."

Nalbandian, ranked 18th, is a former No. 3 with 10 career titles. He was a 2002 Wimbledon finalist and reached the French Open semifinals in 2004 and 2006.

He returned to the tour last February after 9 months off following hip surgery but withdrew from his first tournament back with a good leg injury. A left hamstring injury then sidelined him from the French Open.

TENNIS DIPLOMACY: The doubles team that proudly calls itself the "Indo-Pak Express" is giving new significance to the thought that athletes can do as ambassadors for their countries.

U.S. Open doubles finalists Rohan Bopanna of India and Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi of Pakistan have written letters to their national leaders proposing they encounter a check for peace on a court spanning the Indian-Pakistan border-a chance that political analysts might consider unimaginable.

The adjacent countries have been done three wars since gaining independence from Britain in 1947 and spent nearly all the clock between in a land of heightened military tension.

"The letters have departed to both the prime minister and presidents of both countries," said Qureshi, adding the letters were sent last year. "We're still waiting."

The mind is that Bopanna would work on the Pakistani side of the frame and his Pakistani teammate would be on the Indian side.

"It is a political topic in the end because there are a lot of security concerns," Aisam said.

Bopanna added: "I remember right now they receive more priorities."

The No. 10-seeded doubles team has been playing together on-and-off since 2003. They gained attention at Wimbledon last year where they started wearing sweatshirts with the slogan "Stop War, Start Tennis" as percentage of a campaign backed by a Monaco-based group called Peace and Sport.

Requests for the sweatshirts started pouring in, giving the players the mind to construct and deal them online, said Bopanna. Momentum continued at the U.S. Open where the United Nations ambassadors from their long-at-odds countries sat together in the stands to catch their matches-a development that Aisam called "a vast thing."

The mate says they are optimistic that the proposed peace match will be allowed.

"Inshallah,"-God willing-Aisam said.

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