
Jankovic
fatigued, but confident ahead of Wimbledon
Jelena: 'I feel like I’m the No. 2
player'
By
Abe Kuijl, Special to TennisReporters.net
Anne-Marie Stark
Has too many tournaments hurt
Jelena Jankovic's chances at the tiring Grand Slams?
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FROM THE ORDINA OPEN IN ROSMALEN – She
used to be a bit of a mental roller coaster, but Jelena Jankovic says
experience has helped her improve her focus and not to worry about
having lost a point anymore. In her semifinal match against Dinara
Safina at the Ordina Open, the Serb dropped the second set to the No.
12 after having won the first, only to retake control of the match
in the third. She then went from 5-3 up to 5-6 down, but coolly held
serve for a tiebreak. Jankovic took a 6-2 lead and wasted all four
match points, but she won the next two to close it out 8-6 nonetheless.
You may point to the
22-year-old No.3 saying she lacked the killer’s instinct
to finish Safina off, but when it comes to Jankovic and her history
of mental lapses, one can only applaud the fact she notched the
win after dropping dramatic leads twice.
“I think the experience definitely helped
me,” Jankovic told TennisReporters.net, “I’ve
played so many matches this year. I’ve been in the situation
many times. I lose the point; I forget about it. I don’t think
about it; just play the next point.”
Jankovic has by far
the most wins of any player on tour this season. Her 51 matches
won are followed by Anna Chakvetadze’s
34 victories. “It’s unbelievable to have 51 wins in half-a-year,” she
says. “It gives me more confidence and it shows that I belong
in the top of the game.“
Even though the Serb
has moved up from No. 34 last year to her current No. 3 position,
her self-assurance
came popping out. “I feel like I’m the No. 2 player.
I am number one in the race and I have beaten all the top players
except Justine. But she is the better player and has more experience.”
Despite her excellent season so far, Jankovic
has been criticised for how many tournaments she has played. It already
started in January, when she entered two consecutive warm-up events
for the Australian Open, reaching the final in both tournaments.
She beat Vera Zvonareva for the title in Auckland, before she lost
a three-set thriller the next week to Kim Clijsters in Sydney.
Jankovic admits the
long two weeks before the first Grand Slam of the year drained
her for the event in Melbourne.“I
didn’t expect to do so well the first tournaments of the year.
I prepared so well for the Australian Open, but when I played Serena
in the fourth round I was just flat.” Jankovic lost the match
against the future champion 6-3, 6-2.
JANKOVIC KEEPS PLAYING AND PLAYING
So how would
one prepare for Roland Garros when you’ve overplayed yourself
earlier in the year? When it comes to Jelena Jankovic, play more!
The Serb competed in four consecutive clay-court
events leading straight into the Grand Slam event in Paris. She lost
in the semifinals of Warsaw to Henin, fell to the Belgian again the
next week in the quarterfinals of Berlin, and won the tournament
in Rome the week after. Jankovic then retired in the semifinals of
the small Tier III event in Strasbourg, just two days before the
start of the French Open.
“I started to win everything,” she
says. “I played sometimes thinking I want to lose so I can
take some rest, but I just can’t lose because I want to go
[rest]. If I lose, it has to be because the other player plays better
than me. She has to earn the win.”
Jankovic says she normally
would have skipped the tournament in Strasbourg, had she not committed
to the event at the beginning of the year. “I wanted to take the week off
but I had to play because I had the Gold Exempt.” Jankovic
has had to sign up for three minor events at the start of the year
and Strasbourg was one of them. Her early commitments also sent her
to the Ordina Open in Rosmalen, even though she won the title in
Birmingham over Maria Sharapova the week before. If she reaches the
second week of Wimbledon, the Roland Garros semifinalist will have
played for 10 straight weeks.
Mal Taam/MALTphoto
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Jankovic knows she has
been playing too many tournaments and says she will definitely
not enter as many events next year. “This
has been the busiest half a season of my life. It feels great to
win so many matches but I also feel very tired.”
Jankovic was beaten
in the final of the Ordina Open by No. 8 Chakvetadze in
three sets, but the Serb was not too disappointed with the loss. “I only let her win to
give her some confidence for Wimbledon,” she said with a smile.
She says the favorites
for the third Grand Slam event of the year are Henin, “and
probably the Williams sisters. They always do well on grass.”
Asked if she considers
herself to be among the candidates for the title, she jokingly
said, “All I have to
do is beat Justine.” Jankovic has been drawn in the same half
as Henin, and just like at Roland Garros, both players are scheduled
to meet in the semifinals. She continues, “No, I don’t
want to say I’m a favorite. It’s a long two weeks and
I just want to take it one match at a time and see how it goes.”
She may not see herself
as a favorite just yet, but one day Jankovic hopes she’ll be able to hold the winner’s
trophy at SW19. “As a young girl I always dreamed about winning
Wimbledon. It’s my favorite Grand Slam for sure. I like playing
on grass, although it can be tough because you get a lot of bad bounces.”
She feels that if she
is to defeat her big rival, Justine Henin, whom she hasn’t beaten once in six career meetings,
her best chance to do so would be on grass. “For sure the best
chances to beat her are on the faster surfaces.”
Jankovic will open her Wimbledon campaign against
British wildcard Anne Keothavong. She is scheduled to meet Chakvetadze
again in the quarterfinals, before a possible rematch with Henin
in the semis.
The Serb may not want
to look too far ahead in the draw, she can already see past the
event in London. “I
will have rest after Wimbledon. I think I deserve a vacation,” she
smiles.
© TennisReporters.net 2007

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