Check your Mail!

CNN Time Free Email US Sports Baseball Pro Football College Football 1999 NBA Playoffs College Basketball Hockey Golf Plus Tennis Soccer Motorsports Womens More Inside Game Scoreboards World
EVENTS
MLB Playoffs
Rugby World Cup
Century's Best
Swimsuit '99

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Teams
 Cities

AD PARTNERS

  Power of Caring
  presented by CIGNA


SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
 This Week's Issue
 Previous Issues
 Special Features
 Life of Reilly
 Frank Deford
 Subscriber Services
 SI for Women

FEATURES
 Trivia Blitz
 Free Email

TELEVISION
 CNN/SI - TV
 Turner Sports

SHOPPING
 CNN/SI Travel
 Golf Pro Shop
 MLB Gear Store
 NFL Gear Store

SI FOR KIDS
 Sports Parents
 Games
 Buzz World
 Shorter Reporter

SITE RESOURCES
 About Us
 myCNN
 
tennis

Tennis Results Players Stats

Rough ride

Hingis, Davenport advance; Pierce upset at Acura

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Saturday August 14, 1999 01:44 AM

  Hingis (above) managed to beat Schett on Friday, but her mind was on the retiring Steffi Graf. AP

MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif. (AP) -- Lindsay Davenport overcame the angles and slice shots of Conchita Martinez for a 6-7 (4-7), 6-3, 6-2 victory Friday night in the quarterfinals of the Acura Classic.

Martinez's game has given Davenport fits over the years, with the Spaniard holding a 7-3 edge. Martinez had won all four of their previous meetings on hardcourts, with her last loss to Davenport coming indoors two years ago.

"To win this match is a huge confidence booster," said Davenport, the top seed and defending champion. "On paper it might not look like a big win, but for me it is."

No. 2 Martina Hingis had an equally tough time, tossing her racket in a pique of anger before settling down to beat No. 7 Barbara Schett 6-7 (5-7), 6-3, 6-3.

No. 3 Mary Pierce was upset 7-5, 6-2 by Julie Halard-Decugis of France, who has beaten her countrywoman in all three of their career meetings.

Davenport led 4-3 with the game tied 30-all in the second set. She hit a forehand deep in the corner that the baseline judge called out before correcting himself. The chair umpire could have ordered the point to be replayed, but she gave it to Davenport to set up break point against Martinez.

"It looked like she was playing it anyway and missed it," Davenport said.

Davenport hit a forehand winner for a 5-3 lead and then served out the set. The call came when she was in the process of winning seven straight games.

Martinez protested furiously and was obviously angry as the third set began.

"Everything from then on was uphill for me," she said. "That wasn't a winner. I got there. We should've played two balls.

"There were many bad calls over there. You have to get some good linesmen. They made some mistakes. That's terrible."

Davenport didn't lose her serve in the second and third sets. She broke Martinez twice in building a 4-0 lead.

Martinez frustrated Davenport in the first set with sharply angled shots that pulled Davenport wide and slice backhands. The Spaniard led 4-1 before Davenport recovered for a 6-5 lead. She held four set points, but ended up losing a tiebreaker.

"The forehand bounces so high, the backhand bounces so low, she hits angles, she hits deep," Davenport said. "It's just incredibly tough to get a rhythm against her. I don't like her game."

Schett led 5-3 and had a set point before the second-seeded Hingis hit a backhand winner in the corner to tie the opening set 6-6. Schett, the world's 13th-ranked player, led 5-0 in the tiebreaker when Hingis began her rally.

Hingis hit consecutive forehand winners to close to 6-5, then sent a forehand long to lose the tiebreaker.

"I just tried to hang in there," she said. "When I broke her to go up 3-1 in the second set, I started believing in getting the match turned around on my side."

Schett broke Hingis with a backhand winner on the line to pull to 3-2, prompting Hingis to fling her racket across the court toward her chair on the changeover. Schett held serve for 3-3, then Hingis reeled off seven straight games to win the set 6-3 and take a 4-0 lead in the third.

Schett served a love-game, then broke Hingis and won another game to trail 4-3. She led 30-love on Hingis' serve, but she netted two consecutive forehands. Hingis served an ace and Schett sailed a backhand long as her opportunity slipped away.

"I wasn't aggressive. I tried to be, but I missed too much," Schett said. "When you play against her, you know why she's number one because she's always playing better at the big points. She anticipates very well and she's always there."

The day's matches were overshadowed by Steffi Graf announcing her retirement in Germany. Many of the players were surprised at the timing, with some expecting Graf to quit after the U.S. Open later this month.

"I never really liked playing her because I lost most of the time," said Hingis, who was 2-7 against Graf in her career.

In 1995, Hingis was 14 the first time she played Graf in the quarterfinals of a tournament in Paris. She lost in straight sets.

"When I played her she was No. 1 in the world. You always want to beat the No. 1, but I barely had a chance in the beginning," Hingis said. "She just killed me always."

Schett could say the same thing about Hingis, although the Austrian is getting closer. She lost a three-setter to Hingis early this year in Sydney and got beat 7-5, 7-5 at the German Open in May.

"I have the game to beat her," Schett said. "I like to play against her because she's not hitting the ball very hard, like Davenport and [Venus] Williams. I always have my chances and maybe next time."

Hingis advanced to Saturday's semifinals against sixth-seeded Serena Williams, who beat No. 4 Aranxta Sanchez-Vicario in straight sets Thursday.


 
Related information
Stories
Davenport rolls to easy Acura win over Huber
Pierce, Hingis advance at Acura Classic
Schett advances, Testud upset at Acura Classic
Frazier KOs 5th seed at Acura Classic
Multimedia
Click here for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

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



To the top

Copyright © 1999 CNN/SI. A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.