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May 27, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

Williams and Henin end Chinese dreams in Melbourne

Justine Henin
29 January 2010 / REUTERS, MELBOURNE
Serena Williams and Justine Henin blasted their way into the Australian Open final on Thursday, setting up a dream decider between the current and former world number ones and killing China’s hopes of a first grand slam finalist.
This tournament may one day be remembered as a watershed moment for Asian tennis with two Chinese making the semifinals for the first time, but a potential new world order was left on hold a little longer.

Williams used all her power and big-match experience to beat Li Na 7-6, 7-6 in an absorbing centre court contest to remain on course to defend the title she won for the fourth time last year.

The American was made to work much harder than she expected but the top seed was able to raise her game when she needed to.

“I am happy I was able to pull it out, it was really close,” Williams said.

“I wasn’t at my best today but I’m still here -- which is shocking -- and I’m just going to do whatever I can to stay.”

Henin, in only her second tournament since coming out of retirement, demolished Zheng Jie 6-1, 6-0 to continue her fairytale comeback to the sport she once dominated.

The Belgian, getting better with every match she plays, was at her ruthless best against Zheng, wrapping up a horribly one-sided victory in 51 minutes.

Few people gave Henin any real hope of winning the tournament when she arrived in Melbourne two weeks ago but the 27-year-old is starting to believe in herself.

“The dream continues,” Henin said. “I’m going to play the number one in the world. She’s a fighter as she’s proved here, and I’ll do my best and try and get the title.”

Already the first Chinese to make the semifinals of a grand slam, Li and Zheng had been bidding to become the first players from the world’s most populous country to reach a final.

Unlikely run

Their unlikely run to the semifinals had captured the imagination of millions of people in their homeland and given the tennis world a peek at the future of the game.

”This was good for both players and of course good for Chinese tennis,” Li said. “I think if [Chinese] children saw this, they will have more confidence. They might think some day they can do this.”

By reaching the semis, Li will become the first Chinese to make the top 10 when the new rankings are released on Monday and she showed why she is one of the most improved players in the game by pushing Williams to the limit.

The 28-year-old American, who is also playing doubles with her sister Venus, was panting heavily as Li forced her to run from side to side and was relieved to avoid going into a third set.

 
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