Microsoft Exchange Conference: April 22 - 24

Cut your internet cost now! -- Netwatch

Search
The Indian Express

The Financial Express

Latest News

Screen

Express Computer
Feedback
Travel

Matrimonials

Careers

Lifestyle

Astrology

E-Cards

Columnists

Graffiti

Crossword

Letters

Environment

Jewellery
Info-tech

Power

Steel

Advertisers Forum

Business Forum

In association with Amazon.com

Books Music

Enter keywords


INDIAN EXPRESS FRONT PAGE

Politics

Business

Expressions

General

World

Sports

Leisure

States

 

Sunday, April 25, 1999

Radhika has the final Sai

Arun Janardhan  
MUMBAI, APRIL 24: Radhika Tulpule felt good when she woke up this morning. Good enough to upset the top seed, as she later discovered, in the $ 5000 ITF Women's Circuit first leg final at the G A Ranade Tennis Centre.

J Sai Jayalakshmy served a tired double fault, her sixth in the match, to let Tulpule convert her fifth match point into a maiden WTA title. Along with it came Rs 26,000 and a 6-3, 6-2 victory over the top-ranked player in the event. Tulpule lost just 11 games and did not drop a set in four matches of her first senior ITF event.

Jayalakshmy overcame the singles horrors, which were accompanied by stomach cramps, by putting things together with Rushmi Chakravarthi in the doubles final. But not with ease, as 5-7, 6-0, 6-3 suggests.

Shruti Dhawan and Sheethal Goutham, displaying spunk and a generous dosage of teen-age enthusiasm with devil-may-care attitude jolted the top seeds by snatching the first set 7-5.

Big grins and giggles flowed, notwithstanding a second set washout, and a 0-5deficit in the decider. Dhawan held serve, Jayalakshmy's was ravaged again, and Goutham stayed steady. Two games separated the two and Jayalakshmy looked at the skies.

But Chakravarthi spared further heartbreak for Jayalakshmy with another solid service game, which included one of her three aces in the match, to put an end to the one hour, 40 minute affair.

TAME END: An anti-climatic singles final left both contestants in a daze. One hour and five minutes after the first shot was played, Tulpule could not believe she had won, Jayalakshmy could not figure out how she lost and Goutham, watching from the stands, needed to be pinched to believe it hadn't been a dream.

The 17-year-old, who said the ease at which Jayalakshmy capitulated was surprising, seemed too scared to close the match while serving for it at 5-1 in the second. She netted a backhand return, hit one long, netted again and lost the opportunity.

Jayalakshmy broke serve, as Tulpule served her only two double faults of the match, andthe improbable looked like happening.

Again, at 30-40, Tulpule got her second match point, with a masterly forehand crosscourt she got her third and with Jayalakshmy erring on the backhand, Tulpule earned her fourth. But lost them all soon after.

Three shots -- a netted backhand, Jayalakshmy's volley and a forehand driven long by the Pune girl -- delayed the inevitable.

But, the feel-good feeling returned moments later when a deep backhand slice set up a backhanded punch for Tulpule and then Jayalakshmy served wrong.

``I stuck to the game plan of hitting to her backhand, which is weaker, and it worked. But I am surprised at how easy it was,'' said Tulpule, who returns home for a few hours of bonding with parents before she heads for the second leg at Bangalore.

Results (all finals)

Singles: Radhika Tulpule bt J Sai Jayalakshmy 6-3, 6-2. Doubles: J Sai Jayalakshmy/Rushmi Chakravarthi bt Shruti Dhawan/Sheethal Goutham 5-7, 6-0, 6-3.

Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


Top


Phone Cards: 48c a minute to India

Seematti: For Silk and Cotton Dresses

 

Click here for a printer-friendly page Printer-friendly page

India Gift House: Send gifts all over India



EXPRESSindia.com
News   Business    Sports   Entertainment
The Indian Express | The Financial Express | Latest News | Screen | Express Computers
Travel | MatrimonialsCareersLifestyle | Astrology
E-Cards | Graffiti | Environment | Jewellery | Info-tech | Power