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Posted: Thursday September 17, 2009 5:14PM; Updated: Thursday September 17, 2009 5:14PM
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INSIDE TENNIS

Safina's problems all on 'her side'

Story Highlights

Dinara Safina's fragile psyche was on display at the U.S. Open

The 23-year-old lacks the aggression she used to ascend to world No. 1

Ongoing disconnect between the mental and the physical invites disaster

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Dinara Safina didn't perform well under pressure at the U.S. Open.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images

It was predictable that Dinara Safina would struggle at the U.S. Open.

The initial clues could be seen not in her recent Grand Slam results -- which have been admirable if not extraordinary for a No. 1, with runs to the semifinals or better in her previous four majors -- but her fragile psyche and the mounting pressure over the four months she's held the top ranking.

It didn't take long for those hints to germinate into obvious warning signs in New York. She went a set down in her opening match against an unknown 18-year-old Australian named Olivia Rogowska -- a player in the field only because of a wild-card exchange program between the USTA and Tennis Australia -- and looked ready to burst into tears at any moment until rallying from a 3-0 deficit in the third to advance. Same thing in the second round against Kristina Barrois, who won the first set before fading.

But that bend-don't-break pattern was untenable as a long-term approach in the Open pressure cooker. And reckoning came in the third round when Safina lost a three-setter to Petra Kvitova, a 19-year-old ranked in the 70s, an opponent so anonymous that many in the Louis Armstrong Stadium crowd spurred her on with shouts of "Yellow!" -- the color of her tank top.

Safina's nightmarish performance over her six-day stay at the Open revealed everything you need to know about her season and mental game -- and stripped the shock value from the outcome.

The 23-year-old is no longer a climber, the aggressive player whose breakthrough at the 2008 French Open (where she made her first Grand Slam final) kick-started a rapid ascent. Now she's got the No. 1 ranking -- the dream of her life, as she's called it so many times -- and she's under the microscope. She is playing passively and scared. She spent long stretches of the Open five feet behind the baseline, smacking ball after ball into the middle of the court, desperate not to lose instead of driven to win, ultraconservative until her back was up against it.

Throughout the sport, the tennis court is a common metaphor for the psyche. When a player refers to "my side" or "their side," she's talking about the factors within her control or beyond it -- the internal versus the external. Whatever problems Safina is experiencing, whatever caused the poor performances in the most important tournament of her season, reside squarely on her side.

As she wrapped up a funereal press conference near 2:30 a.m. after her Open ouster, Safina probed the anxiety and pressure that undercut her season. "Everything is in the head because it knows how to do the right thing," she said. "It knows and it stops me."

The high tension of Safina's year sprung from a single event: the day she inherited the top ranking from Serena Williams. She's since been the target of misguided contempt for the rankings system. Two other players from this era who made No. 1 before winning a Grand Slam -- Kim Clijsters and Amelie Mauresmo -- were spared this degree of backlash and scrutiny because of the lack of a compelling alternative. But Safina has Serena, who's won three of the past five majors.

Safina says she can see what's wrong with her game but the ongoing disconnect between the mental and the physical invites disaster. "I step on the court and I do completely the opposite thing," she said.

The physical tools are there. But until the mind catches up, what may ultimately cost Safina the No. 1 ranking is her fear of losing it.

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