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1999 US Open

Eyes on the prize

Agassi wins in straight-sets to move into quarterfinals

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Posted: Tuesday September 07, 1999 01:53 AM

  French-fried: Andre Agassi had Arnaud Clement running ragged using an arsenal of shots to advance. AP

NEW YORK (AP) -- Midway through their first set at the U.S. Open, Arnaud Clement began huffing and puffing, chasing down Andre Agassi's shots from one side of the court to the other.

And right then, it was clear that the 21-year-old Frenchman who gave Agassi so much trouble on the red clay of Roland Garros, would be no problem on the green hard courts of the National Tennis Center.

Clement, who came within two points of beating Agassi at the French Open, arrived for this round-of-16 match Monday wearing a bandana and wraparound goggles. He could have used a bicycle to keep up with the second-seeded Agassi, who advanced into the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 victory.

What was the difference from the French Open, Agassi was asked.

"I played him at the U.S. Open," he said. "It's a hardcourt. It's much different. He's very fast. When he has time, he can really take the ball with a backhand and hurt you. On the hardcourt,I can hit through a little bit easier, end the point when it calls for it."

At the French, Clement was up a set and leading 30-0 in the fourth before Agassi won nine straight games to turn the match around. That win came at the start of a stretch that has now produced 32 victories in 36 maches for Agassi.

No dramatic comeback was necessary on a humid afternoon when the air seemed as heavy as some of Agassi's serves and Clement was left to toss his racket in frustration.

"I felt good, start to fiish," Agassi said. "I was making him earn everything out there."

Agassi led the French player on a merry chase, some of his shots kissing the lines, others overpowerig his opponent. Invariably, Clement would go one way and Agassi's shots would go the other way. Passing shots, ground strokes, short points, long points, Agassi brought the whole arsenal on the lightning-fast court.

"It's never my intention to keep a point going if I can end it," Agassi said. "He's quick and doesn't give you much pace. He can bait you into taking unnecessary risks. You don't want to fall victim to that.

"You want to play disciplined tennis, punching the clock, stay disciplined with your shot selection."

On one Clement return tat was well wide, Agassi hit a winner anyway, just because he could.

Clement did manage to break Agassi in one game, no small accomplishment at the Open, where that had happened just once before.

In the end, Agassi just wore his man down.

"My game is built around my work ethic," he said, "making every point as valuable as the last, getting on top of my opponent and sucking the life out of him."

At 29, Agassi keeps reinventing himself.

After getting as high as No. 2 in the rankings in 194 when he won the Open and 1995 when he won the Australian Open, his ranking dipped as low as 122 two years ago, when he sat out three Slams, playing only at Flushing Meadows.

He then dedicated himself to coming back and says he now is in better shape that at any time in his career. The reason? 'Hard work,' he said.

"It's individual why people break down," he said. "I never fell in the rankings because of injuries. My game didn't leave me. I fell because I wasn't in shape. There's a certain work ethic to why I fell. I knew I could address it."

He finished 1998 ranked sixth in the world, then won the French, completing a personal Grand Slam. Then he reached the finals at Wimbledon and now is in position to finish the year as No. 1 in the world if he wins the Open.

Next for Agassi is the quarterfinals against qualifier Nicolas Escude, who upset No. 10 Marcelo Rios 6-2, 6-3, 7-5.

"I have no intentions of making further dreams come true for him," Agassi said.


 
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