Serena bounces away with U.S. Open crown
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The drama queen came face-to-face with the comeback queen at Flushing Meadows on Sunday. Jelena Jankovic provided the on-court theatrics and Serena Williams bounced away with the U.S. Open trophy.
Nine years after winning her first grand slam title, Williams collected major number nine on the same Arthur Ashe Stadium court, silencing Jankovic with a 6-4 7-5 victory that also lifted her back to the top of the world rankings for the first time in over five years.
Jankovic had four set points to take the women's final into a decider for the first time since 1995 but blew her chances, allowing Williams to complete a merciless charge to her third Open title without losing a set in seven matches.
"I'm so excited. I wasn't even going for number one and it's just like an added bonus," said 26-year-old Williams, who hurled her racket high in the air and bounded up and down after crunching down a backhand winner on match point.
Andy Murray, however, was a picture of calm earlier on Sunday when he raised hopes of ending Britain's 72-year wait for a men's grand slam champion.
Murray surged past world number one Rafael Nadal 6-2 7-6 4-6 6-4 in a rain-disrupted match spread over two days to reach his first major final.
While Nadal was struck by the curse of winning the Olympic gold -- no man has ever won the Games and U.S. Open titles back-to-back -- the sixth seed set up a meeting in the final with four-times champion Roger Federer.
"He's probably the greatest player ever. To get a chance to play him in a grand slam final is an honor," said the 21-year-old Scot, who has a winning 2-1 record over the Swiss.
Federer, seeking to become the first man since 1924 to win five in a row in New York, beat Serb Novak Djokovic on Saturday.
TROPICAL STORM
A day after the remnants of Tropical Storm Hanna swept through Flushing Meadows, Murray tossed Nadal out of the tournament in a match that spanned almost 30 hours, was played on two courts and ended with the sixth seed drilling a backhand passing shot winner.
The bad weather meant it was the first time since 1974 that the women's final in New York was not played on a Saturday.
While Williams meant business on court, Jankovic seemed to think she had a starring role in a big screen comedy film.
Williams fired a missile towards her chest, Jankovic fended it off with a self defense volley and laughed. Not satisfied with entertaining the crowd, she looked up at the big screen to study a replay of the point and laughed again.
She did the splits after chasing down the ball, she laughed, she missed a backhand, she sighed - much to the amusement of the 23,000 fans packed into the arena. Continued...




