January 26, 2002 - - MELBOURNE, Australia -- It took the greatest moments,
along with the worst, from a certain Grand Slam tournament in France,
to produce a historic final between Jennifer Capriati and Martina Hingis.
Capriati and Hingis were influenced by their Paris past in the Australian
Open. It was as though the ingredients for this final came from France
and were mixed in a blender. And out came a classic as the defending
champion and top-seeded Capriati survived four match points and a 4-0 deficit
in the second set, defeating No. 3 Hingis, 4-6, 7-6 (7), 6-2, in 2
hours 10 minutes on a day when temperatures neared 100 degrees in a rematch
of last year's women's final.
It was the first time in 46 years in a final that a female player survived
a match point and won in Australia. In 1956, Mary Carter defeated Thelma
Long after holding match point. The last time it happened in the final of
any Slam for women came in 1962 when Margaret Court came back to beat Lesley
Turner in Paris.
Here, the foundation for a memorable encounter seemed to come from two French
Open finals. Last year, Capriati did not play well in the beginning and dug
deep, finding a new level of strength, beating Kim Clijsters, 12-10, in the
third set.
As for Hingis, this was a reminder of her close call in the 1999 French Open
final. She was three points from winning against Steffi Graf, and served
for the match before unraveling in a petulant mess. Until today, that was
as close as she had come to winning a Grand Slam since her Australian Open
title in 1999.
Instead of a complete mental meltdown, Hingis had a physical one today. She
needed an injury timeout in the third set, suffering from cramps and heat
exhaustion, winning only three points in the final three games after the
treatment.
Capriati didn't quite know how she won her third Grand Slam title, her first
since the French Open in June. "I couldn't believe finally that I won," she
said. "Maybe I thought the third set would be a lot harder. I was cruising
in the third set because Martina didn't feel well. The first one was great,
but to come back and win like this, I don't know what's better."
Raw emotions were running through the 21-year-old Hingis, who was appearing
in her sixth consecutive Australian Open final.
"I think I'm overwhelmed with feelings," she said. "Jennifer was too good
today...
Capriati, 25, "I didn't know if I was going to make it"... "Martina, you
are a great champion. It's going to take a while to get to your status, being
here six times. It's a tremendous effort. I don't know how I won."
It was easier for her to describe how she got out of trouble. Capriati simply
refused to play it safe on the match points against her. The first one came
at 5-3 in the second set with Hingis serving for it. Capriati smacked a hard
cross-court backhand winner on the match point and escaped with the game
when Hingis double-faulted on break point.
The next one came in the 12th game, with Capriati serving. She survived by
crushing a hard forehand, which drew an error from Hingis. The third one
came in that same game when Hingis hit a forehand passing shot long off a
Capriati volley.
Finally, Hingis' fourth match point came during a tense rally in the tiebreaker
when Hingis hit a backhand long. That made it 7-7 in the tiebreaker, and
Capriati forced the third set when Hingis missed a volley and hit a backhand
wide.
The heat and the missed four match points caused Hingis to erupt. She threw
her racket to the side of the court, getting pretty decent distance with
the toss.
"I kept fighting on those match points I was down," Capriati said. "I went
for it. I don't know why I didn't play like that when I was ahead. The heat
was incredible. You saw the way we were sitting down between points. I got
a second wind, third wind, fourth wind. I don't know how many winds I had."
Because the temperature was close to 100, the extreme heat policy rule was
invoked and the players took a 10-minute break after the second set. Hingis
changed clothes. Capriati did not, saying: "I forgot to bring another outfit."
After she finished with such a flourish, her celebration was a lot like last
year in Melbourne. Capriati clasped hands with her father Stefano and spoke
on the cell phone with her brother Steven, who was home. This time, her mother,
Denise, was able to share in the Australian victory.
"She was very brave," Stefano said. "Without a heart, she couldn't go through
this match."
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