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 Sports
Brett Lee retires from international cricket
Blatter defends role in FIFA kickbacks scandal
National Women’s fbl begin today
Chelsea tops Champions League prize money list
Paes at the center of a storm ahead of Olympics
Serena wins fifth Wimbledon title
All the Bells’ to ring out start of London Olympics
It’s Federer again, and Murray for once in final
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last
 
 Main News
Govt expresses objections over EU, Limbuwan meet
 
 Editorial
Corruption And Water Resources
Reproductive Health Challenges Remain
How To Overcome Boredom
Work Out A Full-sized Budget
Rescue Of Child Workers - Commendable Work
PM On Official Media
Bad Budget Precedence
Tap Tourism Potential
 
 National
Single women break tradition
‘Change mindset to end untouchability’
School dropouts high in Banke
World Environment Day marked
Centuries old human remains found in Mustang caves
CDCs effective in Sindhuli
Remote schools get internet service
Republic Day observed
Water tanks getting dry
Diarrhea patients rising up
 
 
Sports
Maria Sharapova triumphs French Open
AP
 

Paris, June 9

Already a big name on the red carpet, Maria Sharapova is now a champion on the red clay, too.

The Russian star won the French Open on Saturday, defeating Sara Errani 6-3, 6-2 in the final at Roland Garros to complete the career Grand Slam.

Second-seeded Sharapova, who was guaranteed of moving to No. 1 in the world regardless of the result, jumped to a quick 4-0 lead against the 21st-seeded Errani, who was in her first Grand Slam final.

But Errani battled back on a cool, blustery day in Paris, turning what looked like a blowout into an 89-minute endurance contest, filled with long rallies that forced Sharapova to find another gear. Eventually, Sharapova’s bigger serve and bigger groundstrokes wore down Errani, who at 5-foot-4½ stands 9½ inches shorter than her opponent.

When Errani netted a short backhand on the third match point, Sharapova dropped gingerly to her knees and buried her head in her hands, then reached back and looked heavenward — a long, hard journey back to the top finally capped with the only major title that had eluded her.

Sharapova added this year’s French Open title to championships at Wimbledon in 2004, the U.S. Open in 2006 and the Australian Open in 2008 to become only the 10th woman to win all four major tournaments. She won on the red clay of Roland Garros about three years after dropping as low as 126th in the rankings after shoulder surgery that threatened her career. She rededicated herself to the game and made a special effort to improve on clay, where she improved to 18-1 in matches this year.

Along with hoisting the French Open trophy for the first time, she’ll be back at No. 1 on Monday for the first time since June 2008.

The lopsided score in the final wasn’t all that unexpected, given the size, experience and power advantage Sharapova brought to the first meeting between the two. But really, the score didn’t tell the whole story. Errani, who will move into the top 10 for the first time Monday, struck a victory for any athlete, who ever walked onto a court or field, looked at an opponent towering over them by nearly a foot and said, "Hey, maybe I can do this."

Despite spinning serves in at 70-80 mph, while Sharapova was topping out in the 115 mph range, Errani played Sharapova toe-to-toe for the better part of the hour and a half, especially after she overcame the jitters in the shaky opening games.

Eventually, Sharapova’s power game won out but Errani fought to the bitter end — showing the courage to hit two drop shots that won points in the final game, each of them sending Sharapova scrambling toward the net, only to arrive a split second late.

Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal set-up a history-making French Open final on Friday courtesy of devastating straight-sets, semi-final wins which confirmed their mastery of the men’s game.

World number one Djokovic crushed third seed Roger Federer 6-4, 7-5, 6-3 to reach a first Roland Garros final while six-time champion Nadal, the world number two, breezed past Spanish compatriot David Ferrer 6-2, 6-2, 6-1.

On Sunday, history will be made as a win for Djokovic will make him only the third man to hold all four Grand Slam trophies at the same time. A win for Nadal, whose record in Paris now stands at 51 wins against just one defeat, will mean he’d be the first man to win the French Open seven times, breaking a tie with Swedish legend Bjorn Borg.

Other Headlines
Brett Lee retires from international cricket AFP
Blatter defends role in FIFA kickbacks scandal AP
National Women’s fbl begin today By A Staff Reporter
Chelsea tops Champions League prize money list AP
Paes at the center of a storm ahead of Olympics AP
Serena wins fifth Wimbledon title AFP
All the Bells’ to ring out start of London Olympics AFP
It’s Federer again, and Murray for once in final AP
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last AP
True Olympic spirit found in those who come last AP
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