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Guga gets it done

Brazilian wins second French Open title

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  Gustavo Kuerten survived a late surge by Magnus Norman to capture his second French Open title. AP

PARIS (AP) - It wasn't easy, and it certainly wasn't pretty, but Gustavo Kuerten managed to capture his second French Open title on Sunday.

After having ten chances to close out the match, the Brazilian finally won on the 11th championship point when Magnus Norman hit a forehand barely wide to give Kuerten a 6-2, 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 (8-6) victory.

"Every time I thought I was going to win, and then it was one more, and one more, and one more," an exhausted Kuerten said.

It took the Brazilian three hours, 44 minutes to earn his second French Open title.

Norman faced the first championship point serving at 4-5 in the fourth set, and he hit a forehand that Kuerten thought landed wide. But umpire Francois Pareau climbed out of his chair, looked at the ball mark and ruled the shot good, making the score 30-40.

Kuerten argued briefly, but the drama was jut beginning. Norman won the next point and a third championship point in the game as well.

Then another close call went against Kuerten: He hit a forehand that was first called good, but an overrule by Pareau gave Norman the point and the game, making the score 5-5.

As the tension built, Norman saved four more championship points serving at 5-6, finally winning the 24-point game when Kuerten dumped a backhand into the net.

That forced the tiebreaker. Kuerten took a quick 3-0 lead, Norman rallied to 3-3, and Kuerten went ahead 6-3.

That gave the Brazilian three more championship points, and each ended with a Kuerten error -- a lunging forehand long, a wild backhand and then another forehand long.

 
Match Stats
Statistics from Gustavo Kuerten's 6-2, 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 (8-6) win over Magnus Norman
Kuerten  Category  Norman 
49  First serve percentage  55 
Aces 
Double Faults 
47  Winners  66 
72  Unforced Errors  86 
7/32  Break points won/total  5/13 
Match duration: 3 hours, 44 minutes
 

At 6-6, Kuerten regrouped with a service winner for 7-6. Norman then slugged a forehand that landed just wide, giving Kuerten the victory. He also won the title at Roland Garros in 1997.

"Here I am again," the 23-year-old Kuerten (pronounced Keer-ten) told the crowd during the trophy ceremony. "I'm so happy to be here."

The scruffy, scrappy Brazilian overtook Norman atop this year's ATP rankings race and earned 4.24 million francs (about $600,000). Norman received 2.12 million francs (about $300,000).

"You did a great job," Norman told Kuerten. "You really deserved to win."

After the match, a small group of Brazilian students playing percussion instruments celebrated the victory by leading several dozen fans in a victory procession through the crowd.

CNNSI.com On Site
"Magnus Norman usually is an early riser, but he forgot to set his alarm Sunday morning. Not until the third set did he come out of his sleepwalk to produce some breathtaking tennis. While Norman was shaking off the cobwebs, Gustavo Kuerten -- the much calmer of the two -- was on his game, particularly his backhand, taking an easy two-set lead. But with new gal pal Martina Hingis looking on from the players box, Norman finally turned the final into a great match, winning the third set and pulling to 4-4 in the fourth. The Swede went down fighting, stretching the deciding set to an epic one hour, 36 minutes before Kuerten extracted an error on his 11th match point to claim his second Grand Slam title -- both at the French -- and overtake Norman atop the points race."
-- SI's Jon Wertheim.

Frenchwoman Mary Pierce won her second French Open title in 24 hours Sunday, teaming with Martina Hingis to win the final in women's doubles. They swept the last six games and beat Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Suarez 6-2, 6-4.

The last woman to win both titles in the same year was Martina Navratilova in 1984.

The fifth-seeded Kuerten dominated the first 90 minutes but then began to tire, and the third-seeded Norman won six consecutive games to get back into the match.

Kuerten, bothered by a sore back and pushed to five sets in his past two matches, received back and calf massages from a trainer and looked increasingly weary as the match tightened.

But then, down a service break in the fourth set, Kuerten caught his second wind. He broke back and then held serve for a 5-4 lead to set the stage for the wild finish.

The matchup of the hottest players on the men's tour was a mismatch at the start, with Norman erratic in his first Grand Slam final. The normally steady Swede, apparently unnerved by the occasion, trailed 4-0 after just 15 minutes.

Norman changed his racket, changed his shirt and finally changed his luck, winning the final five games of the third set.

A patient Kuerten rarely ventured inside the baseline at the outset. Instead he kept his groundstrokes deep, mixed in a few drop shots and waited for his opponent's mistakes to mount.

Norman uncharacteristically was called for two early foot faults, a sign of nerves. He shanked several forehands, including one that sailed 30 feet high on set point to end the second set.

The capacity center court crowd was divided in its loyalty, chanting Kuerten's nickname of "Guga, Guga," but also rooting for the Norman comeback that finally came.


 
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Gustavo Kuerten is grateful to have won the French Open for a second time. (186 K)
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