Stosur defeated: play it again, Sam

By Vinay Verma / Roar Guru

Australia’s Samantha Stosur, left, congratulates Italy’s Francesca Schiavone after being defeated in a women’s final match for the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Saturday, June 5, 2010. (AP Photo/Lionel Cironneau)

Court Philippe Chatrier could have been on the Gold Coast. 28 degrees was to Stosur a typical Queensland day. The sunnies stayed on and Schiavone was left to wonder if Sam had any emotion at all. Sam looked every inch the champion. Tall, composed and terrifically taut. Margaret Court would have been chuffed. But it was not to be.

The packed centre court sees Sam Stosur serve in her typical strong manner and she holds to love with an ace down the middle. It was looking good for our Sam.

Francesca Schiavone was a retriever in the best traditions of the Spinone Italiano. (An ancient breed of gundog). Stosur moved her from side to side and Schiavone ran her heart out. In the end she retrieved one ball too many for Stosur. Schiavone was serving well and to Stosur’s forehand and wide. The tactic paid off and she had many easy winners into an empty court.

Stosur was not the same player that imposed herself on three number ones’ in her last matches. Her service, usually so reliable, resembled Energy Australia on an exceptionally cold day. She had the occasional surge at 191 kph but it was too little and too late. Schiavone was not going away and her fans in the stand were cheering like at a football match.

At 4-4 with Sam serving, her forehand is called just long and before you can blink it is 0-40 and the Italian has three break points. A six point rally sees Sam save one break point when a Schiavone backhand clips the net and refuses to go over. Lucky Sam! But she promptly double faults and Schiavone will be serving for the set at 5-4.

Sam raises hopes of a fight back and has Schiavone down 0-30. The Italian is like a dog with a bone and refuses to let go. She scrambles to 40-30 and Stosur responds to deuce. Schiavone, once again, slices a serve wide to the Stosur forehand and puts away the loopy return with a backhand into the open court. Sam nets a weak return of the Schiavone second serve and the set is gone.

Shciavone has the momentum but Sam starts to show more intent and holds serve to 15. Her unforced error count is 15 to the Italian’s 10 and her first serve percentage is a lowly 50 to Schiavone’s 75. This was not in the script.
Stosur looked strong at 4-1 in the second set and had revived her game. But she is barely hanging in and Schiavone breaks back and levels at 4-4.

Sam decides to become more aggressive but Schiavone also lifts and it is now a dog fight. The inevitable tiebreaker comes around and it is the Italian who holds both her nerve and her serve. She wins the tiebreaker to two and falls flat on her back. Nicola Pietrangili, Italy’s greatest player, looks on in the stands and is overjoyed. The Italian fans celebrate as if they had won the World Cup.

The forensics post match showed 28 unforced errors to Stosur and 19 to Schiavone. Surprisingly, Schiavone served six aces to Stosur’s three. But the forensics cannot show the undoubted desire and focus of Schiavone. This was her appointed hour and a half. 6-4, 7-6 and the Suzanne Lenglen was hers.

The Lioness of Milan triumphed over a brave Sam Stosur. The analysts may say that Stosur was not at her best. The truth of the matter is that Francesca Schiavone played to her potential and beyond. Sam was not allowed to get into the match. And when she did with a break in the second the Italian lifted again and imposed her game.

Sam will live to fight another day. She has the game to be number one. She will win a Grand Slam sooner rather than later. For now it is a matter of lifting that self-belief another notch and concentrating on the Big W.

Sport can be both cruel and fair. There has to be a loser and a winner.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2010-06-06T00:30:04+00:00

Vinay Verma

Roar Guru


Harry,Kersi..thank you for your kind words. It is gratifying.

AUTHOR

2010-06-05T23:53:38+00:00

Vinay Verma

Roar Guru


Frank,there is always a temptation for a writer to let his feelings creep in and influence the reader. The hard part is to view a game objectively and eradicate your own wants. I find it disrespectful to the winner to blame the loser's "off-day" For a tour that can be bitchy these two played it in the right spirit. Schiavone is an emotional person and wears her heart on her sleeveless dress! Stosur compartmentalises her feelings and maybe she needs to relax a wee bit. Definitely the three victories over the number ones' would have drained her emotionally. These are not robots and the human body has thousands of miles of blood vessels. The brain has a trillion neurons. This sophistication of the human form is a secret no one has cracked. We think we have the answers only for another question to bob up. This is the beauty of sport..and life.

2010-06-05T22:56:14+00:00

Harry

Guest


BTW great writeups Vinay. Quality sports journalism.

2010-06-05T22:55:01+00:00

Harry

Guest


Good match and while Stosur was understandably tense and a little below her best, you had to admire the veteran Italian grapsing her once-in-a-lifetime (I'll bet) opportunity with courage and speed - of thought, and around the court.

2010-06-05T21:57:48+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Expert


I enjoy the writings of Ray Robinson and Peter Roebuck for their original metaphores and analogies. I must add you to the list, Vinay. For example: "Her [Sam's] service, usually so reliable, resembled Energy Australia on an exceptionally cold day. She had the occasional surge at 191 kph..." Brilliant! Well played Fransesca. Your winning smile was infectious despite me supporting Sam.

2010-06-05T20:04:27+00:00

sheek

Guest


I didn't watch the match, but I'm guessing with the biggest prize before her, & wanting it so badly, perhaps Sam tightened up a bit. If only we can control our minds..... ! I have no doubt if the tables were turned, & Shciavone was favourite, Sam would probably have prevailed. Again, the power of the mind & how it plays tricks on all of us. I guess another thought is no matter how big the occassion, you should still go out there to enjoy yourself, & try to remember why you took up the game in the first place. Anyway, well done to both girls & Sam, we're still proud of you all the same.

2010-06-05T16:49:49+00:00

Frank O'Keeffe

Guest


We all love sport for those fairytale stories and great moments we want to see. But the reality is normally in sport you don't get the result you want. Stosur didn't play much worse than the high standards she'd reached in the previous three games. But I did notice a few things: 1. She wasn't confident with her vollies after missing a few easy ones. There were a few times she could easy have followed the ball to the net, as there was no way Shciavone would hit a passing shot. Stosur hung back. 2. In the first set Shciavone made it happen when it was 4-4. She came to the net unexpectedly during one point and stole a game off Sam. Stosur seemed more content to let it happen rather than make it happen. 3. Stosur hit some strange shots at times, and missed some easy shots as well. It looked like nerves. She made a lot of nervous errors whereas Shciavone seemed to love the occasion. She was smiling, jumping, motivating herself etc. She loved being out there today. 4. Shciavone was incredible in attacking Sam's kick-serve and knocking off that strength. She actually hit a few winners off it which was impressive! 5. Shciavone was tremendous in keeping the ball away from Stosur's forehand as well. She exploited Sam's backhand quite a bit as well, and came into the net at the appropriate times. Hopefully this is one of those situations where an athlete learns from the experience, comes back, and is better off for it, like when Lleyton Hewitt lost to Pete Sampras during one US Open semi-final - the next year he won the US Open! I'm left with mixed feelings about Shciavone winning. Could she have beaten Henin, Williams, and Jankovic consecutively? Stosur had the tougher draw, seems tough that she should go through all that and stumble at the final hurdle. At the same time nobody can doubt she outplayed Stosur today. Her tactics were great and she deserved to win. Shciavone was unquestionably the better player on the day.

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