WTA, ATP and USTA Pro Circuit Tennis Action This Week
SINGLES
Round 1
Angela Haynes, USA defeated by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS
6-7(5), 2-6
DOUBLES
Round 1
Angela Haynes, USA and Natalie Grandin, RSA
defeated
Wen-Hsin Hsu, TPE and Junri Namigata, JPN
6-3, 6-4
Quarterfinal Round
Angela Haynes, USA and Natalie Grandin, RSA
defeated by
Alisa Kleybanova, RUS and Ekaterina Makarova
3-6, 3-6DOUBLES
Round 1
Ahsha Rolle, USA and Monica Niculescu, ROM
defeated
Maria Kondratieva, RUS and Sophie Lefevre, FRA
6-1, 7-5
Quarterfinal Round
Ahsha Rolle, USA and Monica Niculescu, ROU
defeated
Maria Elena Cumerin, ITA Ksenia Palkina, KGZ
w.o.
Semifinal Round
Ahsha Rolle, USA and Monica Niculescu, ROU
defeated by
Olga Govortsova, BLR and Tatiana Poutchek, BLR
1-6, 2-6SINGLES
Round 1
Gael Monfils, FRA vs. BYE
Round 2
Gael Monfils, FRA defeated Sebastian Grosjean, FRA
6-1, 6-1
Quarterfinal Round
Gael Monfils, FRA defeated Janko Tipsarevic, SRB
6-1, 4-2, Ret'd
Semifinal Round
Gael Monfils, FRA defeated Richard Gasquet, FRA
6-4, 6-3
Final Round
Gael Monfils, FRA vs. Philipp KohlschreiberSINGLES
Round 1
Brittany Augustine, USA defeated by Ani Mijacika, CRO
6-4, 6-7(5), Ret'd
Shenay Perry, USA defeated Ming Yuan, CHN
6-0, 6-3
Mashona Washington, defeated by Lindsay Lee-Waters, USA
4-6, 6-2, 4-6
Round 2
Shenay Perry,USA defeated Olga Putchkova, RUS
7-6(4), 4-6, 7-6(6)
Quarterfinal Round
Shenay Perry, USA defeated Frederica Piedade, POR
6-4, 5-7, 6-0
Semifinal Round
Shenay Perry, USA vs. Ani Mijacika, CRO
Eliminated during singles qualifying rounds:
Asia Muhammed, USA
Tiya Rolle, USA
DOUBLES
Round 1
Mashona Washington, USA and Riza Zalameda, USA
defeated
Varvara Lepchenko, USA and Coco Vandeweghe, USA
5-7, 6-4 [10-8]
Quarterfinal Round
Mashona Washington, USA and Riza Zalameda, USA
defeated
Brittany Augustine, USA and Ashley Weinhold, USA
6-7(4), 6-4 [10-7]
Semifinal Round
Mashona Washington, USA and Riza Zalameda, USA
defeated
Jorjelina Cravero, ARG and Frederica Piedade, POR
7-5, 4-6 [10-6]
Final Round
Mashona Washington, USA and Riza Zalameda, USA
vs.
Awaiting OpponentSINGLES
Round 1
Nicholas Monroe, USA defeated Tyler Hochwalt,USA
6-0, 6-0
Marcus Fugate, USA defeated Tim Goransson, SWE
6-3, 6-4
Round 2
Nicholas Monroe defeated Erling Tveit, NOR
6-3, 6-3
Marcus Fugate defeated by Michael McClune, USA
2-6, 5-7
Quarterfinal Round
Nicholas Monroe, USA defeated by Blake Strode, USA
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Posted by Shelia at 3:55 AM Labels: Ahsha Rolle, Angela Haynes, Ani Mijacika, Blake Strode, Brittany Augustine, Frederica Piedade, Gael Monfils, Jorjelina Cravero, Marcus Fugate, Mashona Washington, Nicholas Monroe, Shenay Perry Email this post
Monfils Into Quarterfinals At The Open de Moselle

Following a first-round bye, Monfils fired 10 aces and broke Grosjean six times in their first matchup in three years. Former world No. 4 Grosjean, a wild-card entry ranked 1,147th, underwent shoulder surgery last December and won his first match this week since 2008 Wimbledon. He had four break points in the very first game but was unable to convert them.
Monfils will next face Janko Tipsarevic of Serbia, who upset eighth-seeded Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia 6-4, 7-6 (3).
Ljubicic, who beat Monfils in the 2005 final, fought for nearly two hours before losing to Tipsarevic for the first time.
Fourth-seeded Philipp Petzschner of Germany beat wild card Michael Llodra of France 7-6 (3), 6-3 in their second-round match.
Llodra missed a set point at 5-4 in the first set, then Petzschner raced 5-2 ahead in the second before closing the match on his second match point.
Petzschner reached the Metz quarter-finals for the second time, having advanced to the last eight on his tournament debut in 2003. He will take on Richard Gasquet, who fought more than two hours to edge Belgian Christophe Rochus 7-5, 4-6, 6-2.
The Frenchman is trying to rediscover his form after he endured a ban of two and a half months for testing positive for cocaine at a tournament in Miami in March. Gasquet said he inadvertently ingested the drug by kissing a woman in a nightclub.
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Posted by Shelia at 3:45 AM Labels: Christophe Rochus, Gael Monfils, Ivan Ljubicic, Janko Tipsarevic, Michael Llodra, Open de Moselle, Philipp Petzschner, Sebastien Grosjean Email this post
Seen On The Scene: All Serena All The Time




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Posted by Shelia at 1:35 AM Labels: Alicia Keys, Donald Trump, James Blake, Lebron James, Mary J. Blige, Nicole Ari Parker, Serena Williams, Sophie Kodjoe, Star Jones Email this post
Zina Garrison Settles Discrimination Suit Against USTA
Friday, September 18, 2009
NEW YORK -- Former Fed Cup captain Zina Garrison has settled her racial discrimination lawsuit with the U.S. Tennis Association.
Papers filed in federal court on Wednesday show that a deal was signed on Aug. 27, though its terms were not disclosed.
U.S. Tennis Association spokesman Chris Widmaier said the association is happy the case was resolved and was looking forward to working with Garrison in the future.
Garrison filed her lawsuit in February, saying she was treated unfairly because she was paid a lower salary than Davis Cup coach Patrick McEnroe and was held to higher standards.
Attorneys on both sides did not immediately return messages for comment.
The USTA announced in December 2007 that 2008 would be Garrison's final season at the helm.
Garrison, the first black captain of the U.S. Fed Cup team, replaced Billie Jean King in 2004. As a player, Garrison was the 1990 Wimbledon runner-up, becoming the first black woman since Althea Gibson in 1958 to reach a Grand Slam singles final.
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Posted by Shelia at 1:30 AM Labels: Althea Gibson, Billie Jean King, Fed Cup, USTA, Zina Garrison Email this post
Serena Williams Amends Original Post Semifinal Statement
Monday, September 14, 2009
Hey guys!!!
I want to amend my press statement of yesterday, and want to make it clear as possible - I want to sincerely apologize FIRST to the lines woman, Kim Clijsters, the USTA, and tennis fans everywhere for my inappropriate outburst. I'm a woman of great pride, faith and integrity, and I admit when I'm wrong.
I need to make it clear to all young people that I handled myself inappropriately and it's not the way to act -- win or lose, good call or bad call in any sport, in any manner.
I like to lead by example. We all learn from experiences both good and bad. I will learn and grow from this, and be a better person as a result.
Xxxx,
S
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Posted by Shelia at 4:02 PM Labels: 2009 U.S. Open, Foot Fault, Kim Clijsters, Semifinal match, Serena Williams Email this post
Jasmyne A. Cannick: Don't Be Afraid Of The Black Girl - Serena Williams
What happened Saturday during the women’s semifinal at the United States Open between Serena Williams and Kim Clijsters is just another example of how Black women are still seen as threatening and hostile.
Serena Williams may be one of the world’s greatest tennis players, but don’t get it twisted, she’s still a sista who is known to be a very serious and tense player. So if she feels that she is being intentionally targeted with bad calls, she’s not going to just take it lying down. This includes challenging foot faults on match point.
Was Serena intense, yes. It was an intense moment in the match. After all, this is the U.S. Open’s women’s semifinal. Under an extreme amount of pressure, maybe it got to her. It can happen to the best of us. After all, a person can only take so much and it’s not as if the field of tennis rolled out the red carpet for her and sister Venus. From day one, the Williams’ sisters have had to fight for everything they’ve accomplished in tennis, including the continuing racism that keeps the Williams’ sisters from Palm Springs’ Indian Wells Tournament and allows for commentators to credit the sister’s “strength” and “athleticism” for their victories while their white counterparts win because they “play smart” and “have a good strategy” It’s also the reason that my hometown paper the Los Angeles Times can feel confident in reporting this latest news while using a photo of Serena Williams from the back seemingly towering over the lineswoman and gives license to every other news media outlet to have a field day.
It wasn’t that long ago that Serena Williams wrote on her blog about an incident at the German Open where she lost to Dinara Safina. She wrote that she could hear the entire players lounge “all happy and joyous” because she finally lost."It was funny when I lost I was in the locker room and I could hear the entire players lounge really loud like really happy and joyous. Like down goes the champ! Someone beat her!!! It was like a big hoopla…."
What ensued Saturday was nothing more than a few angry curse words that turned into Serena having to defend herself against unmade threats towards the lineswoman who was obviously suffering from a typical case of a white-woman-afraid-of-the-Black-girl syndrome. How else do you explain the lineswoman accusations of Serena threatening to kill her?
Williams could be heard saying to the lineswoman: “I didn’t say I would kill you. Are you serious?”
Yeah, are you serious?
Most Black women can relate to what happened to Serena. We get mad like everyone else. The only difference is that for some reason when white women get angry, they’re not seen as threatening as we are. Maybe it’s the expression on our face. Maybe it’s the seriousness with which we address issues when we are upset. Maybe it’s the tone of our voice. You know that “don’t fuck with me today” tone that can stop a person dead in their tracks and scares the shit out of most white people.
Like comedian Dick Gregory said about Black people’s hair, when we’re 'relaxed', white people are 'relaxed'. You could say the same applies in tennis.
Look—I’ve said nothing more than “good morning” to a white person and had that taken the wrong way. Maybe I didn’t smile big enough when I said it, I don’t know. What I do know is that I can recount the many times I have had to explain something I did or said that someone white took out of context or found “troubling.” So I am not surprised that Serena’s outburst on the court towards the lineswoman turned into a death threat.
Serena Williams is a very smart woman. She knew that when she opened her mouth to contest the call and the first curse word rolled off her tongue that there was going to be a price to pay for it and she did, she lost the match to Kim Clijsters. Kim Clijsters. It was obviously important enough to her at the time to have her say and that she did to the tune of $10,500.
What’s more of a concern to me as a Black woman is that white people recognize that we all aren’t foot stomping “aww heck!” kind of girls when we get upset, some of us are “what the fuck?” kind of girls, but that doesn’t mean that our words should be taken out of context, our actions scrutinized and then generalized to represent how all Black women act. Because come Monday morning, from Rush Limbaugh to Los Angeles’ shock jock Bill Handel, that’s exactly what is going to happen and once again Black women are going find themselves the brunt of crude and tasteless jokes meant to further demean and dehumanize not only Black women but Serena Williams.
Just ask former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney about her altercation with the the Capitol Hill police. Better yet, ask First Lady Michelle Obama who endured months of ridicule and scrutiny at the hands of the mainstream media that eventually resulted in an immediate campaign to “change” her image to a much kindlier and gentle Michelle right before the election that catapulted her husband into the presidency. And while many will say that the campaign was a success—Michelle’s image enhancement campaign, I must say that I never did quite understand what was wrong with the old Michelle.
There’s nothing wrong with Serena Williams. Perhaps when more Black women tennis players ascend to the level of the Williams’ sisters and the Women’s Tennis Association has the opportunity to interact with more Black women outside of Serena and Venus, they won’t be so afraid of the Black girls. Perhaps.
The author of Ebony Magazine’s July 2008 cover story on Serena Williams, unexpected and unapologetic, at Jasmyne Cannick, 31, is a critic and commentator based in Los Angeles who writes about the worlds of pop culture, race, class, sexuality, and politics as it relates to the African-American community. She can be reached at www.jasmynecannick.com
Posted by Shelia at 2:29 AM Labels: 2009 U.S. Open, Jasmyne A. Cannick, Kim Clijsters, Serena Williams Email this post