ADVERTISEMENT
Published: September 8, 2009
NEW YORK
Forget about forehands and backhands. Melanie Oudin's biggest weapon is her heart.
Oudin, the 17-year-old spark plug from Georgia, proved it again yesterday at the U.S. Open, extending her remarkable run to the quarterfinals with another come-from-behind victory, 1-6, 7-6 (2), 6-3 against 13th-seeded Nadia Petrova.
Oudin staved off two points that would have put her behind 5-3 in the second set, then rolled through the third, hitting corners with those underrated groundstrokes and taking advantage of 22 unforced errors by her more-seasoned, higher-ranked opponent.
Oudin, ranked No. 70, already had comeback wins over No. 4 Elena Dementieva and No. 29 Maria Sharapova at Flushing Meadows, along with one over former No. 1 Jelena Jankovic this summer at Wimbledon. Now, she's knocked off No. 13.
She is the youngest American to move into the quarterfinals at America's Grand Slam since Serena Williams in 1999.
"I think this is going to do a lot," Oudin said. "I think it's good for American tennis."
Not the same story on the men's side.
John Isner of Greensboro lost to No. 10 Fernando Verdasco, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, in Armstrong Stadium, assuring that the men's quarterfinals will be without an American for the first time in history.
Next door in Ashe Stadium, No. 1 Roger Federer extended his U.S. Open winning streak to 38 with a straight-sets victory over No. 14 Tommy Robredo. Next up in the quarterfinals for Federer is a match against No. 12 Robin Soderling, who Federer beat in the final of the French Open earlier this year to complete his career Grand Slam.
Soderling advanced when No. 8 Nikolay Davydenko retired with a leg injury at the start of the fourth set.
"It seems like he's on a good run again," Federer said of Soderling. "I think of him, I think obviously of the French Open final, which was a great one for me."
The U.S. Open is turning into a great one for Oudin. After hitting a forehand to the corner for her 19th and final winner on match point, Oudin threw her racket in the air.
"It's kind of hard to explain how I've done it," Melanie said. "Today, there were no tears because I believed I can do it. Now I know I do belong here. This is what I want to do. I can compete with these girls no matter who I'm playing. I have a chance against anyone."
Oudin improved to 6-1 at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open this year when she's lost the first set. She is 17-4 overall this year in three-set matches.
"I don't actually mean to lose the first set," she said. "Sometimes, I just start off slowly. Maybe I'm a little nervous. Today, my timing was off a little. But I just totally forgot about it, started off the second set like it was a new match, and I started playing better."
Oudin won this match without serving a single ace, another indication she is not blowing anybody away with sheer power. Instead, it's footwork, technique, precision. Mostly, though, she is thriving in pressure situations that make so many others in the sport shrink away.
"You don't know if she's winning or losing," said her father, John. "She doesn't seem nervous out there -- and I don't know where that came from."
In other women's matches, Kateryna Bondarenko and Yanina Wickmayer won to set up a quarterfinal between two players ranked in the 50s.
Little in the women's tournament has gone to form.
Unseeded Kim Clijsters, onto the quarterfinals in her comeback to pro tennis after a two-year break, is shredding up her side of the draw. Oudin is electrifying the other side.
Four of the top five seeds are gone, with only No. 2 Serena Williams bringing any sense of stability to the proceedings. She has yet to be challenged in any of her four matches.
Could Oudin eventually be the answer?
"Right now, I think she'll play Serena in the finals," said Oudin's twin, Katherine.
"We're not going anywhere," she said.
Winston-Salem Journal - JournalNow.com | Member Agreement and Privacy Statement | Work With Us
| * To: | |
| Your Name: | |
| Your Email Address: | |
| Personal Message [optional]: | |