Chakvetadze claims Ordina Open title over Jankovic
Ljubicic edges Wessels in men’s
final to stop Dutchman’s miracle run
By
Abe Kuijl, Special to TennisReporters.net
Cynthia Lum/WireImage.com
Luby wins first grass event
For the third straight year,
the Croatian flag was waving high in Rosmalen. After
two tournament wins by Mario Ancic in 2005 and 2006,
Ivan Ljubicic claimed the honours in his countryman’s
absence, besting Dutch journeyman Peter Wessels in
the final 7-6(5), 4-6, 7-6(4).
“I have never played quarterfinals
on grass, so to win here is unbelievable,” the
big-serving Croat said.
He may have come up short in
his match against Ljubicic, but Wessels played some
excellent tennis to reach the final in Rosmalen.
His biggest win of the week came in the quarterfinals,
when the Dutchman thumped the top-seeded Spaniard
Tommy Robredo 6-3, 6-3. Wessels played serve and
volley throughout the match, and charged the net
whenever possible on Robredo’s serve. The No.
7 had no answer to his opponent’s aggressiveness
and suffered a firm beating.
Wessels had a career best ranking
of 72, but injuries and motivational problems have
seen him drop to a current No. 488. The 29-year-old
decided on the last minute to enter the qualifying
event, from which he successfully advanced to the
main draw. The Dutchman did not lose a set in the
main event en route to the final, and he was not
broken once in his match against Ljubicic.
“Before the tournament
I would have been very happy with my final here,” Wessels
said, “but I never lost my serve today and
even though I managed to break him I couldn’t
win. About that I am disappointed.”
Wessels qualified for the final
earlier in the morning, when he beat veteran Frenchman
Antony Dupuis in two tiebreaks. Their match was suspended
due to darkness the night before, after rain had
set back the programme.
Wessels was playing in his first
ATP tournament of the season and only his second
event in two years time. Had he won the final, he
would have become the second-lowest -ranked player
to win an ATP tournament, behind Lleyton Hewitt,
who won in Adelaide in 1998, as a 16-year-old.
The Dutchman says he has set
no goals anymore for the remainder of his career “because
with me that never works out.” He will be returning
to the challenger circuit, as he is not accepted
in the Wimbledon draw.
– Abe Kuijl
FROM THE ORDINA OPEN IN ROSMALEN – Anna
Chakvetadze and Ivan Ljubicic will be heading to Wimbledon high on
confidence, after both Eastern European players claimed career first
grass titles in The Netherlands on Saturday. Anna C. bested Jelena
Jankovic 7-6(2), 3-6, 6-3, while Ljubicic outlasted No.488 Peter Wessels
7-6(5) 4-6, 7-6(4).
Chakvetadze had a false start in her first-round
match against Belarussian up-and-comer Victoria Azarenka, when the
20-year-old Russian dropped the opening set, but she has been playing
solid tennis for the rest of the week. She convincingly dispatched
Daniela Hantuchova in straight sets for a final berth, after the
13th-ranked Slovakian had thrashed Roland Garros finalist
Ana Ivanovic 6-3, 6-1, in the quarterfinals.
In the final, she faced red-hot Serb Jankovic,
who had won the tournament of Birmingham last week, beating Maria
Sharapova in three sets in the final. Jankovic had a pass to the
quarterfinals in Rosmalen, with a bye and a walkover win over American
Meilen Tu.
Amidst two rain delays early on in the match,
Chakvetadze raced out to a 5-0 lead, but faltered when she had the
set for the taking. Jankovic almost closed the gap, when more rain
stopped play with the No. 3 serving at 4-5, advantage Jankovic.
The covers went on and off for the next three
hours, and the players were called up twice during some of the dry
spells, but not a single point was played over the entire second
half of the afternoon. The clock had struck six when the skies finally
cleared and play could be resumed.
Jankovic held for 5-5, but she had another cold
start coming out of the rain delay, spraying numerous unforced errors,
that helped Chakvetadze take the opening set in a tiebreak.
In the second set, Jankovic stepped it up a notch
and she dominated most of the points. Chakvetadze was playing well
herself, but Jankovic displayed the ability to up the pace and take
control of the rally with a single shot. The Serb served out the
set at 5-3, after having missed four set points in the previous game.
Jankovic was looking for the early break in the
third set, but Chakvetadze hit some excellent serves from 1-1, 15-30
down to go up 2-1 and she pumped her fist in celebration.
With Jankovic serving at 2-3, deuce, Chakvetadze
hit two cracking backhands to force the break, but she lost her next
service game by sending a backhand wide on break point.
Where her emotions have
let her down in big matches in the past, most recently against
Sharapova in the quarterfinals of Roland Garros, Chakvetadze displayed
the fighting spirit of a champion on Saturday, when the Russian
rebounded directly after dropping the break. She aggressively pounced
on Jankovic’ next service
game to again take the advantage.
Serving for the match at 5-3, Chakvetadze faced
three break opportunities, but she dominated each point with her
backhand to hang in the game. With a forehand winner the Russian
got her first match point, and she immediately claimed the win with
a strong first serve.
“I was nervous in the last game,” Chakvetadze
said, “because in the first set I was 5-0 up, and if I didn’t
take my serve at 5-3, I know Jelena would fight for every point.”
Despite the nerves near
the end of the match, Chakvetadze confirmed that she felt strong
out there. “I didn’t
have pressure. I like the tournament here, it’s nice and quiet
and it almost feels like I’m playing exhibition.”
She said she feels no
added pressure for Wimbledon, having beaten one of the hottest
players on tour “It doesn’t
put extra pressure on me, it just gives me more confidence.”
Chakvetadze also thinks
having gone through the tough weather conditions on Saturday will
help her in London.“It
was the first time I stepped on court six times [for one match],
so now I have experience,” she said with a smile.
It was the fourth career title for Chakvetadze,
and her second in 2007. In January, she won the Tier IV tournament
in Hobart. Her biggest win came in Moscow last year, where she won
the Tier I Kremlin Cup. She is now 4-0 in finals.