3 straight double-faults doom Davenport at US Open
NEW YORK â One double-fault? Lindsay Davenport could accept that. Two in a row? Tough to swallow, but it happens, even to the best of players. But three, back-to-back-to-back? Ugh. Finally having worked her way back into her third-round match at the US Open, finally even in the second set against Marion Bartoli at 5-all, Davenport devolved into an amateur for a few rough minutes Friday night. To put it in the simplest of terms: Davenport â a three-time Grand Slam title winner, a woman formerly ranked No. 1 â could not get a serve in. She hit seven consecutive faults, then later double-faulted a fourth time in the game en route to a 6-1, 7-6 (3) loss to the 12th-seeded Bartoli at Flushing Meadows. âI guess they call it âthe yipsâ on your serve. I donât know where it came from," Davenport said. âProbably came from all my years making fun of people that had it. That was my karma coming back." For the 32-year-old Davenport, this might have been her final singles match at the US Open, which she won in 1998. The American turned down a chance to speak to the crowd afterward, and later said she was too angry about what had just transpired to consider whether she would be back. âAll I know is I have doubles at 2:30 tomorrow. Thatâs about as far as Iâm thinking," said Davenport, who returned to the tour last year after taking an 11-month break when she had a son. âI think itâs tough to make any kind of decision in a rash moment, and there was no decision made before the tournament, so, you know, I donât think itâs time to make a certain statement now." After a no-contest first set, Davenport fell behind 4-2 in the second and faced three break points there. In other words, Bartoli had three chances to take a 6-1, 5-2 lead. But 2007 Wimbledon finalist wasted each of those opportunities. Then, serving while down 5-3, Davenport faced a match point but saved it with an ace that curled onto a line. âNothing I can do about it," Bartoli said. With Bartoli serving for the match at 5-4, Davenport broke her to get to 5-all â and then handed the break right back in the most inexplicable of ways. Looking much like you or me at a local public park, instead of a seasoned professional on as big a stage as the sport has, Davenport just kept double-faulting. Yes, three in a row, four in a single game! After one of her misses, Davenport dropped her shoulders, slumped over and shook her head. âGosh," Davenport said. âPlayed one of the worst games of my career." Quite a statement, coming from someone who has played 947 matches. âAt the end, maybe she was a bit tired," said Bartoli, who hits two-handed off both wings. âMaybe thatâs why she didnât serve so well." The fourth double-fault, on Bartoliâs sixth break point of the game, put the Frenchwoman in position to serve for the match again. Yet again, Bartoli folded, allowing Davenport to convert her second break point with a big forehand to force a tiebreaker. Davenport wasnât done with those âyips." She double-faulted on the tiebreakerâs opening point, and this time, there was no recovery. Davenport slapped a forehand into the net on Bartoliâs third match point, then chucked her racket to the sideline. âIt was some of my least great tennis out there," Davenport said, âand I still was trying to stay positive and try to, you know, turn it around. That was probably the one positive Iâll take out of this match." â AP