Sep
13 2008
Serena’s
Number One

Serena
Williams flung her racket straight up and
jumped for joy, hopping and skipping and screaming
and generally looking like someone who had
just won her first U.S. Open title or earned
her debut at No. 1. Nope. It sure had been
a while, though. Displaying the talent and
tenacity that allowed her to dominate tennis
earlier in the decade, Williams outlasted
Jelena Jankovic 6-4, 7-5 Sunday night in a
thrill-a-minute match chock full of marvelous
strokes and momentum swings to win her third
U.S. Open championship and ninth Grand Slam
title.
And
there was this "added bonus," as
Williams termed it: She returns to the top
of the rankings. "I think this title
meant more to Serena than any title she's
ever won," her father and coach, Richard
Williams said. As the women met at the net
when it ended, Williams felt compelled to
say to Jankovic, "I'm sorry I got so
excited." No apology necessary. Four
times a single point from heading to a third
set, Williams was simply relentless. She took
the final four games, and 13 of the last 19
points. "I felt I had her. I had her,
because she was really tired at the end of
the second set," Jankovic said. "Who
knows what would have happened if I had got
into a third set? I probably would have had
the upper hand. But who knows?"
Instead,
Williams took the title without dropping a
set. The closest she came to losing one? In
the quarterfinals, when she beat older sister
Venus in two tiebreakers.On this night, Venus
was in the guest box, cheering for Kid Sis.
"Her desire is unbelievable," Richard
Williams said. "I describe her as being
a combination of a pit bull dog, a young Mike
Tyson and an alligator."It was his youngest
daughter's first triumph at Flushing Meadows
since 2002, and it guaranteed that the American
will lead the rankings Monday for the first
time since a 57-week run ended in August 2003
-- the longest gap between stints at No. 1
for a woman.
Williams'
previous Grand Slam title came in January
2007, at the Australian Open. For Jankovic,
it was her first Grand Slam final anywhere,
and she was having the time of her life. She
smiled even after losing points, and she kept
a close eye on the overhead video boards,
either to watch replays or to check out which
celebrities were in the audience. "They
should turn it off, because I keep looking,"
the Serb said. "You see your big face
up there and you can't help but look up."
Jankovic was ranked No. 1 for one week last
month and would have returned there by winning
a title match that was postponed from Saturday
night because of Tropical Storm Hanna. During
the postmatch ceremony, Jankovic charmed the
crowd, asking how much her runner-up check
was worth (for the record: $750,000). Later,
she said the drama of her matches and her
fun-loving style of play meant she deserved
an Oscar instead of a silver dish.
As good as the second-seeded Jankovic is at
retrieving balls and extending points, Williams
can do that with the best of them, too. That
led to point after point lasting more than
a dozen shots as both women scurried around
Arthur Ashe Stadium, their sneakers squeaking
loudly. But the difference in strength was
clear: Repeatedly after those lengthy exchanges,
Jankovic was left shaking her racket hand,
trying to lessen the sting. On the match's
first point, Williams drove a backhand winner
with such force, such ferocity, that she sent
one of her earrings flying. The fourth-seeded
Williams finished with 44 winners, 29 more
than Jankovic, and smacked serves at up to
120 mph, a 14 mph edge over her opponent's
fastest. The finish was fantastic. Williams
somehow prolonged the second set after falling
behind love-40 while serving and trailing
5-3. – story from usopen.org
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