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U.S. leads Belgium 2-0

France and Russia tied 1-1 in Fed Cup semifinals

Posted: Wednesday November 19, 2003 10:45AM; Updated: Wednesday November 19, 2003 1:44PM
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MOSCOW (AP) -- Anastasia Myskina battled back from match point down to prevent a disastrous first day for Russia as the Fed Cup favorites tied France 1-1 in their semifinal Wednesday.

The United States had an expected 2-0 lead over Belgium, but only after Meghann Shaughnessy also survived a match point in a grueling marathon against unheralded Kirsten Flipkens.

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"Sometimes you have to win ugly," U.S. captain Billie Jean King said.

Myskina evened the best-of-five tie 4-6, 7-6 (2), 7-5 over two-time Grand Slam champion Mary Pierce, after Russia's gamble on Vera Zvonareva backfired when France's Amelie Mauresmo dispatched her 6-2, 6-2.

"My hands are still shaking. I wanted to win so much and I was so nervous," Myskina said. As the top-ranked player on a team behind 1-0, "I just had to win a point for my team today."

Zvonareva, the lowest-ranked player on the formidable Russian team at No. 13, was chosen by captain Shamil Tarpischev because he believed she'd be in better shape than No. 7 Myskina and No. 8 Elena Dementieva, who played in the season-ending WTA Championships last week in Los Angeles.

But Mauresmo, who reached the Championships final, kept Zvonareva on the run and trapped her in the corners in an hourlong match.

"I fought as hard as I could," Zvonareva said.

After trading breaks in the opening games of the first set, Mauresmo came back from love-40 to break Zvonareva for a 3-2 lead, and never looked back.

In the second set, Zvonareva could hold only twice before Mauresmo, who beat the Russian in the Kremlin Cup this season, won four straight games to take the match.

"I didn't let her put her game together and do what she likes to do, which is dictate the points," Mauresmo said.

Myskina, after losing the first set by faltering twice on serve, rallied from match point down in the second to break for 5-5 against Pierce, who was making her first Fed Cup appearance in six years.

The Russian won the next game -- pumping her fist amid a din of support from a Moscow crowd that included former President Boris Yeltsin -- and then prevailed 7-2 in the tiebreaker.

Myskina and Pierce traded breaks in the third set for the Russian to serve for the match at 5-4. But Myskina netted an easy backhand and Pierce evened it at 5-5 -- only to fall behind love-40 and surrender on serve again to Myskina, who held on to win.

In the first semifinal matches, Lisa Raymond cruised past Els Callens 6-2, 6-1, and Shaughnessy outlasted Flipkens 6-7 (4), 7-6 (8), 9-7 in a 3-hour, 12-minute battle.

World No. 17 Shaughnessy reached set point at 6-5 in the first, but sent a forehand long, and soon found herself down 6-1 in the tiebreaker, eventually losing it 7-4 to Flipkens, the world's top-ranked junior at age 17.

Shaughnessy, seven years older, opened the second set with a break, but Flipkens broke back with a forehand down the line to tie the set at 4-4. In another tiebreaker, Shaughnessy quickly took a 2-0 lead before Flipkens tied it 2-2 and eventually went ahead 7-6, but the American survived match point and went on to win 10-8 with an ace.

A weary-looking Flipkens took two lengthy timeouts early in the third set to have her legs massaged, but she went ahead 4-3 when Shaughnessy sent a shot long following four deuces after recovering from 15-40 with two aces.

The American broke back to even the match at 5-5, and send it into a harrowing series of service wins before Flipkens netted a backhand at 30-40 on her serve in the 16th game.

"She found a way with her heart and her guts to win that match," King said of Shaughnessy.

Raymond got the second-string Americans off to a good start in the best-of-five series against an inexperienced Belgian team that's worse off without its top players, world No. 1 Justine Henin-Hardenne and No. 2 Kim Clijsters.

Facing a service break in the fifth game, Raymond powered a forehand past Callens to even it at deuce, and then finished it with two quick points, returning to her seat with a big grin and a 4-1 lead. Playing in her first ever Fed Cup singles, Raymond later dropped a backhand just over the net to take the set 6-2.

In the second, Callens outlasted Raymond in a second game that went to deuce five times, but couldn't manage another win.

"I don't think I could have played too much better today, or asked too much more of myself," Raymond said.

The United States, with Martina Navratilova scheduled to play doubles alongside Raymond on Thursday after the reverse singles, is seeking its 18th Fed Cup title.

Belgium won the Fed Cup in 2001 behind Henin-Hardenne and Clijsters, and France was the 1997 champion, while Russia has played in four finals without a win.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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