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Mauresmo fights back vs. Capriati for Italian Open title

ROME -- No matter how bleak things looked Sunday, Amelie Mauresmo refused to let Jennifer Capriati beat her.

 

Now Mauresmo heads to the French Open looking like a favorite.

Coming back from a set down, then saving a match point, Mauresmo beat Capriati 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (8-6) to win the Italian Open for her second straight title.

"It was so close," said Mauresmo, who also defeated Capriati en route to the German Open title a week ago.

"When you get to the third-set tiebreaker, you don't really know what is going to happen. You just hang in there, go for it if you have the opportunity, and I felt that's what I did."

The only other women to win the German Open and Italian Open consecutively -- Steffi Graf in 1987, and Monica Seles in 1990 -- went on to take home the trophy from Roland Garros.

So does that make Mauresmo the leading candidate to win in Paris, where play starts a week from Monday?

"I hope. We'll see. Of course it gives you a lot of confidence to win these kind of matches, especially in the final," the Frenchwoman said. "Next week, I want to rest a bit, and then there's Roland Garros. I hope to carry on like this."

At the last big men's French Open tuneup tournament, top-ranked Roger Federer defeated Guillermo Coria 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 to win the Hamburg Masters in Germany. Federer improved to 32-3 in 2004, and he ended Coria's 31-match winning streak on clay, which dated to last year's French Open.

Mauresmo's run on the surface is more modest -- she lost in the quarterfinals of a tournament in Warsaw on April 30.

Jennifer Capriati stumbles against Amelie Mauresmo for the second straight tournament. (AP) 
Jennifer Capriati stumbles against Amelie Mauresmo for the second straight tournament.(AP) 
She also came quite close to losing Sunday. Capriati held a match point on Mauresmo's serve while leading 5-4 in the third set, but the American hit a forehand long.

Mauresmo, the runner-up at Rome's clay-court tournament three of the past four years, closed out the win on her second match point, when Capriati's backhand sailed long.

"I felt that I had some more energy left than she did," Mauresmo said. "It was a very intense match - very long and very intense from the beginning. The level was unbelievable from the first game."

The match was filled with long baseline rallies, including a 28-stroke point won by Capriati in the opening game. Capriati later saved Mauresmo's first match point with an impressive running forehand cross-court passing shot.

Mauresmo beat Capriati in the semifinals at Berlin.

"Last week, she played really well, and I wasn't ready for her," Capriati said. "So I had something to prove to myself and to her."

At 4-3 in the first set Sunday, Capriati produced a running passing shot that helped break Mauresmo, then served out the set.

In the second set, Mauresmo stepped up her game and broke to go up 3-1. With Capriati spraying forehands long or into the net, Mauresmo maintained the advantage and forced a third set.

"I felt like we were both playing unbelievable tennis and I didn't lose, she had to win the match," Capriati said. "I don't feel that bad right now.

"It was just a really fantastic match. That's what I thrive for and that's what I play for, these kind of matches."

Mauresmo, who won $189,000, dedicated the victory to her father, who died in March of cancer.


AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2004, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
 

 
 
 
 
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