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		<title>Unseeded Kim Clijsters wins U.S. Open</title>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 14 Sep 2009 15:56:01 GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Unseeded Kim Clijsters wins U.S. Open</title>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 14 Sep 2009 15:55:07 GMT</pubDate>
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			<description><![CDATA[<p>Sunday, September 13, 2009<br /><br />Unseeded Clijsters wins U.S. Open<br /><br />Associated Press<br /><br />NEW YORK -- Kim Clijsters cradled the baby in one arm, the trophy in the other.<br /><br />The joy of motherhood. The joy of winning the U.S. Open.<br /><br />Clijsters made history Sunday night, capping a comeback from two years out of tennis to become the first unseeded woman to win the Open -- and the first mom to win a major since 1980 -- with a 7-5, 6-3 victory over No. 9 Caroline Wozniacki.<br /><br />When it was over, Clijsters collapsed to the ground and started crying -- tears of joy, probably mixed in with a little bit of shock, too. Her 18-month-old daughter, Jada, watched from a suite with a pacifier in her mouth, but later came down to the court to take part in the celebration.<br /><br />Guess what mommy got for you, sweetie! A Grand Slam title.<br /><br />It still seems so surreal, Clijsters said. Because it wasn&#x27;t in the plan. I wanted to come back here, get a feel for it, play a Grand Slam so I wouldn&#x27;t have to come back next year and learn the new experiences all over.<br /><br />Talk about your quick transitions.<br /><br />It was all quite a different scene from the night before, when Clijsters&#x27; semifinal win over Serena Williams was closed out on a foot fault, an outburst and a point penalty, and the 26-year-old Belgian stood behind the baseline, looking bewildered as Williams ran over to shake her hand.<br /><br />Williams&#x27; tirade may have been the talk of the U.S. Open. But Clijsters was the winner.<br /><br />This was her second U.S. Open title, the other coming in 2005 -- her last appearance at Flushing Meadows and before a spate of nagging injuries eventually drove her out of the sport and led her to start a family. These days, she has her baby&#x27;s name tattooed on her left wrist, near the scar from an operation she needed back in her first career.<br /><br />When she came back, she was starting from zero, she said. The work to get back in shape was not pretty.<br /><br />No swear words like Serena yesterday, but a lot of swearing at home, Clijsters said.<br /><br />Some might have called this the mother of all upsets, but by the time she reached the final, against the resilient-but-still-learning 19-year-old from Denmark, it was hard to view it that way.<br /><br />Clijsters beat both Williams sisters and two players seeded in the teens. She matched Venus and Serena power shot for power shot and showed she could play Wozniacki&#x27;s patient game -- and play it better.<br /><br />She&#x27;s playing because she thinks it&#x27;s fun and because she likes it, said Wozniacki, who is too young to have played Clijsters during her first career. I really think she might be a better player now than she was before.<br /><br />This one was nothing like the Williams match -- before it turned sour -- which was filled with short, hard-hitting rallies in which Clijsters moved one of tennis&#x27; best players at will and made her hit shots from places she normally doesn&#x27;t.<br /><br />Instead, it was a waiting game, and when Clijsters fell behind 4-2 in the first set, she showed she was willing to play it.<br /><br />A 29-shot rally here, a 25-shot rally there. Drop shots and lobs. Clijsters did that. Went for more, too, and finished with two more winners than unforced errors (36-34) -- a good ratio on any day -- and 26 more winners than Wozniacki.<br /><br />Against the Williams sisters, you feel if you hang in there, they might give you some easy points, Clijsters said. She didn&#x27;t do that. You had to be patient, but not play along with her game.<br /><br />After getting back on serve, Clijsters held off two break points at 5-5, then broke Wozniacki for the fourth time to win the first set. The second set was easier and before they knew it, Jada was on the court posing for photographers.<br /><br />Clijsters didn&#x27;t even have a ranking coming into this tournament because she hadn&#x27;t played enough tournaments to get on the list. She&#x27;ll come in at around No. 20 when the new rankings are released this week, but probably won&#x27;t try to improve on that right away.<br /><br />It&#x27;s the greatest feeling in the world being a mother, she said. I just can&#x27;t wait to spend next the few weeks with her and have her routine schedule at home again.<br /><br />Her victory, a few hours after watching Ice Age with Jada during some quality time, came over the first Danish player to reach a Grand Slam final. But Wozniacki&#x27;s greater claim to fame is that she has won more matches on tour this year than anyone.<br /><br />She played like a winner over two weeks in Flushing Meadows, including that 6-2, 6-2 victory that ended the magical run of 17-year-old Melanie Oudin, whose rapid rise was the story of the tournament for the first 10 days.<br /><br />Oudin left, then the Williams imbroglio took over.<br /><br />Clijsters made her headlines, too. The mother-on-a-comeback story was a winner all the way.<br /><br />Beneath the surface of all these stories might also be a referendum on the state of women&#x27;s tennis. If an unseeded mother who has been away from the game for two years can beat five top-20 players and win the U.S. Open, maybe the talent pool isn&#x27;t so deep.<br /><br />In fact, stories have circulated recently that another Belgian, former No. 1 Justine Henin, might be also been thinking about a comeback.<br /><br />Could Evonne Goolagong Cawley be far behind? She was the last mother to win one of these Grand Slams, back in 1980 at Wimbledon.<br /><br />Clijsters last major title isn&#x27;t that sort of ancient history. It was only four years ago that she climbed into the stands and tightrope-walked across the railings to celebrate her first U.S. Open title.<br /><br />Same scene this time but with a few new characters in the mix. There was her husband, American Brian Lynch, with whom she shared a long, sweet kiss. Then there was Jada, clapping her hands with that binky in her mouth.<br /><br />We tried to plan her nap time a little later today so she could be here, Clijsters said.<br /><br />Looks like she&#x27;s getting the hang of that motherhood thing, too.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/33206">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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