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 Friday, January 28
Capriati blows past Sugiyama in quarters
 
Associated Press

 Results

MELBOURNE, Australia -- The smile is back, and so are those thunderous groundstrokes into the corners that leave echoes in the air.

Nearly a decade after landing in her first major semifinals as a precocious, smiling 14-year-old, Jennifer Capriati is in the Australian Open semis and challenging for a Grand Slam title again.

Ai Sugiyama
The ball almost tore through Ai Sugiyama's racket strings during her loss to Jennifer Capriati.

"Right now I believe I can go all the way," Capriati said. "I've come this far, so I'm not going to think otherwise."

If there were any doubts that Capriati, at 23, is ready to contend for major titles once more, she erased them Tuesday.

Not even a strained abdominal muscle, which caused her to take an early injury timeout, slowed Capriati in a thorough 6-0, 6-2 thrashing of Ai Sugiyama, who had knocked off No. 4 Mary Pierce.

Capriati will face Lindsay Davenport, who "did everything I was supposed to" in a 6-1, 6-2 victory over No. 9 Julie Halard-Decugis.

Davenport hit nine aces and yielded only five points in her first six service games before being broken for 5-2 in the second set. She immediately broke Halard-Decugis at love for the match, ending with a sharply angled backhand pass.

Davenport, who at 23 is the same age, said Capriati's comeback "is one of the best stories that women's tennis has had. When I was 13, she turned pro and she was one of my idols for about a year because she did so well and I wasn't ever near that level when I was 13 or 14."

In Thursday's semifinal, "if she was playing anyone else, I would want her to win," said Davenport, who lost close semifinals here in 1998 and 1999.

Capriati hadn't reached a Grand Slam semifinals since Wimbledon and the U.S. in 1991, when she was almost universally viewed as the future star of women's tennis.

But she fell in the quarterfinals of majors six times over the next two years, then drifted out of the game and didn't return to play the full Grand Slam circuit until last year, when she failed to get past the fourth round.

This time, at a tournament where she had never gone past the quarters, she showed that all her work in coming back, all the practice sessions with coach Harold Solomon, all the counseling she has undergone, have paid off.

Playing under the closed roof because of light showers, Capriati crushed returns so consistently that Sugiyama managed to win only four points on serve in the first set, which lasted just 24 minutes. Capriati kept pummeling groundstrokes down the lines to race to a 4-0 lead in the second set before finally yielding on her own serve.

After Sugiyama held serve for the first and only time, Capriati closed out the match by holding serve easily and breaking Sugiyama for the sixth time to win in 55 minutes.

"I really felt in a groove out there," said Capriati, who hit 16 winners to Sugiyama's one.

Capriati shrugged off the injury and said it won't hamper her in the semis.

Capriati giggled when asked whether, one year ago, she would have thought somebody predicting Tuesday's result was "smoking something."

"No comment," she said, but then added: "A year ago, maybe not; but a couple of years ago, yeah."

Was her 1998 goal getting back into the top 20?

"Fifty," said Capriati, who had dropped out of the tour after losing in the first round in the 1993 U.S. Open.

She struggled through a period of personal problems, including drugs, and didn't return to Grand Slams until 1996.

"I didn't accomplish everything that I wanted," said Capriati, who was ranked as high as No. 6 between 1991 and 1993. "If I would have stopped, it would have been a really short career. I thought I had a lot more tennis left in me."

Coming back, she didn't get past a Grand Slam first round until 1998 Wimbledon, but last year reached the fourth round in the French and U.S. Opens.

With her confidence growing, "I wanted to start this year just keeping going forward, forward, forward," she said.

New coach Harold Solomon has helped.

"He said that he really believed could go all the way, even No. 1 maybe. I have a lot of respect for him and I think he knows a lot about the game and knows what he's talking about. ... That just right there lifted my confidence," she said.

In addition, "I've stopped thinking about what the world was going to think of me. That's a big step in my progress."

She also drew encouragement from Agassi's resurgence.

"It just so happened that it was just at the same time that we were both trying to make a comeback," she said. "He has been an inspiration. I can't say I'm an inspiration for him because he just got there before I did."

Agassi said, "I'm certainly pulling for her."

He said he had held doubts during his own comeback, and "I know it's not easy. She has certainly shown a lot of perseverance and strength of character. ... The results don't come right away, so when they do start happening, it is a pleasure to be out there and it's a pleasure to watch her."
 


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