Tuesday,
March 9, 1999
Home Edition
Section: Sports
Page: D-3
The Change
in Chang: Fight Is Missing, Psyche Fragile;
Tennis: He continues subpar play against Siemerink; Seles
has off day in loss to Nagyova.;
By: BILL
DWYRE
TIMES SPORTS EDITOR
Monica Seles and Michael Chang, two of the top name players
in pro tennis, left the premises Monday in the Evert Cup/Newsweek
Champions Cup combined events. There was little similarity in
their departures.
Seles, ranked No. 3 in the world and seeded No. 3 here, got
beat on a bad day, losing to Henrieta Nagyova of Slovakia, 6-2,
6-4.
"My mind wasn't there," said Seles, who made 27 unforced errors
to Nagyova's 16 and, basically, just didn't show up for the
match. It happens, and it happened to Seles on Monday.
Chang, on the other hand, went quietly, something of a trend
of late and something that the former Michael Chang, the one
that was ranked No. 2 in the world until mid-1997, never let
happen.
Chang lost
to Dutch journeyman Jan Siemerink, 7-5, 6-3, in a match that,
by Chang fight-to-the-death standards, was embarrassing for
its lack of exactly that.
Chang turned
27 a couple of weeks ago, still young even by pro tennis standards.
And he has won three times here, most recently in '97. But he
is now No. 39, and if there is a light at the end of his tunnel,
it is fairly faint now.
To that
regard, his post-match news conference focused on two topics,
neither favorites of Chang:
* The possibility
that he is at the end of his long and productive career.
* His memories
of his past glories, mainly the 10-year anniversary of his only
Grand Slam title, the 1989 French Open.
To the
first line of questioning, Chang responded, "I think I know
in time it's going to come around. I feel like it's a matter
of time. . . it's not there for me right now, but it will be."
He also
said, "I feel like I know my best tennis is ahead of me."
To the
second line of questioning, Chang said, "See, the thing is that
the French Open will always be a great memory for me. The thing
is, I'm 27 years old now. I feel like, when you start kind of
reminiscing too much about the past, you feel like you are looking
back in your career."
Were Sigmund
Freud alive today. . .
Chang always
lived on his grit and grind. He will remain forever locked in
the memory of tennis fans for his '89 French match with Ivan
Lendl, en route to the title, when he fought his way through
cramps and even served underhanded at one point.
Since he
began on the pro tour in 1987 as a fireplug junior star, he
has built a career of nearly $18 million in winnings through
perseverance. For years, one of the more frightening things
for his opponents was to end up in a fifth set with him. Or
a third. As one now-retired pro once said, "You'd know that
you'd have to shoot him to beat him, and you considered it."
Monday,
Siemerink had to do considerably less than that. No. 32 in the
world and a player whose best Grand Slam finish was last year's
quarterfinals of Wimbledon, Siemerink served and volleyed Chang
off the court--on a medium slow surface that is Chang's best.
And when Chang wasn't struggling with Siemerink's low 100s quirky
left-handed serve, he was struggling to hold his own against
Siemerink's chip-and-charge-at-will tactics. Against most of
the top pros, Siemerink could expect to get his head taken off
doing that.
Chang even
had a classic Chang-like opportunity presented to him when Siemerink,
serving just three points away from the match, took a hard fall
on a volley attempt and spent the next 10 minutes on the sideline.
Chang even broke that serve, but then, on his own serve, with
a fairly partisan crowd on the Stadium court conjuring up memories
of past heroic comebacks and cheering him on, he left like a
guy trying to catch a bus. At the end, Siemerink was even beating
him from the baseline.
"Right
now, the desire to go out there and work hard is still there,"
Chang said. "Maintaining a positive attitude, knowing that in
time, God's going to take care of everything."
Are you
listening, Sigmund?
*
No. 1 Martina
Hingis put a stop to the seeded casualties in the Evert Cup,
taking out 10th-seeded Patty Schnyder of Switzerland in Monday
evening's singles feature, 6-1, 6-3. No. 2 Lindsay Davenport
had lost Sunday, followed by No. 3 Seles' defeat earlier in
the day. . . . Andre Agassi, seeded No. 9 here, pulled out of
the Newsweek tournament with a hamstring strain he suffered
Saturday in a tournament in Scottsdale, Ariz., where he was
playing a semifinal match against Jan-Michael Gambill. Agassi
had played here 11 years in a row, losing in the final in 1990
and 1995. . . . Greg Rusedski of England, seeded 10th, beat
1998 Australian Open champion Petr Korda, 6-3, 6-4, and then
sent reporters from his country and the U.S. scrambling. In
his news conference, Rusedski, a member of England's Davis Cup
team that will play the United States in England next month,
said he had heard rumors that Pete Sampras was reconsidering
and might play for the U.S. after all. That was a big story,
if true, because the U.S. team is Jim Courier and Todd Martin.
Eventually, Sampras' agent debunked it. . . . Rusedski, who
holds the tour record with a serve of 149 mph, hit a couple
141 mph Monday. "It's great here. This is a place you can get
a speed record, because the air is so thin," he said. . . .
Paul Haarhuis of the Netherlands, a finalist here in 1996, turned
30 three weeks ago and celebrated by defeating 15th-seeded Alberto
Costa of Spain, 7-5, 6-1.
(BEGIN
TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC) Today's Featured Matches
At Grand
Champions Resort, Stadium Court
Beginning
at 10 a.m.
* Steffi
Graf, Germany (5) vs. Al Sugiyama, Japan.
* Patrick
Rafter, Australia (5) vs. Nicolas Kiefer, Germany.
* Gustavo
Kuerten, Brazil vs. Yevgeny Kafelnikov, Russia (2).
* Cara
Black, Zimbabwe vs. Serena Williams.
Beginning
at 6:30 p.m.
* Mary
Pierce, France (6) vs. Rita Grande, Italy.
* Hicham
Arazi, Morocco vs. Tim Henman, England (7).
Clubhouse
Court, beginning at 10 a.m.
* Todd
Martin (11) vs. Todd Woodbridge, Australia.
* Goran
Ivanisevic, Croatia (14) vs. Alberto Berasategui, Spain.
* Jana
Novotna, Czechoslovakia (4) vs. Brie Rippner.
PHOTO: Unseeded
Michael Chang continued his disappointing play of
late with a first-round loss to Jan Siemerink, 7-5, 6-3, at
Indian Wells.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Associated Press
Type of Material: Game Story
Descriptors: CHANG, MICHAEL; TENNIS PLAYERS; PSYCHOLOGY;
Copyright (c) 1999 Times Mirror Company
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