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Jelena 2001 Year in Review, Pt.II:
The Headlines are Finally About the Tennis
by Todd Spiker
Up until March neared its end, Jelena Dokic had been a
virtual ghost on the 2001 WTA Tour. Besides being bounced
-- with her always enticing mixture of controversy and
courageous tenacity, by the way -- in the opening round of
the Aussie Open, she hadn't played any other match that
counted since the previous November... and none at all for
over two months. If Jelena was a racehorse, she'd have been
locked in the starting gate, restless and ready to throw the
jockey at a moment's notice.
But with her 18th birthday arriving on April 12, Jelena's
time had finally come. The gate opened to enable her to
assume a full-time role on the women's circuit... and she
was bound and determined to take full advantage of that new
freedom. The remaining grand slam season covered the spring
and summer of the year and saw Dokic crisscross the Atlantic
Ocean, going from North America to Europe and back again.
During the first five months of her more hectic new
existence, she gained experience and learned hard lessons,
reaching both the highest high and sinking to the lowest low
of her young career (in back-to-back tournaments, no less)
as the process of turning her childhood dreams of becoming a
tennis champion into reality continued unabated.
As the Dokic family was concerned with the move to Florida
(and later, Belgrade), Jelena's quieter post-Australia
lifestyle seemed to have done her good. Aside from
deflecting continued questions about a potential return role
on Australia's Fed Cup team later in the year, she mostly
worked on getting fitter and attempting to fine-tune
specific aspects of her game (namely, her serve and in-match
strategy). When Dokic stepped back onto a court in a
competitive situation in Miami, there were obvious signs of
rust. Still, the results were encouraging. She showed an
ability to overcome slow starts and the determination to
immediately break back after losing her serve, as well as a
willingness to try new things (such as coming to the net
more often -- 20 times in one match!). She defeated Top 10er
Amanda Coetzer before finally succumbing to Venus Williams
when the American put together a display of nearly flawless
serving for an entire QF match. A QF finish in a Tier I
after two months of inactivity was something to be proud
of... and it set the stage for the beginning of the clay
court season and a year's worth of success in the WTA's
biggest non-grand slam events.
Then, suddenly, it happened.
Dokic had arrived as a compelling presence of the tour in
1999, then made tantalizing strides toward greater success
in 2000... but it was at this moment in time that she
officially became a force within the game.
When the 2001 clay court season had ended, she was a
different player than the one she had been when it began.
Ironically, it was on her least favorite surface that she
was able to turn the corner from a "talented young player
with potential" to one of the game's newest stars. In the
process, many of the year's goals fell like dominoes before
2001 was half gone. Even with Damir's return from a
six-month ban, the headlines were finally about the tennis.
Just the tennis.
After showing moments of combining newfound consistency with
her renowned iron will on the hardcourts of Miami, Dokic
used the clay season to escape the "little girl lost" role
some had wanted to forever cast her in since the early
public outbursts by Damir had first left her trailing behind
him in tears. It was only the media perception of her as
"helpless" or to be "pitied" that was "lost," though. In
fact, there arguably hadn't been a more mentally stable
player to grace the tour since Steffi Graf (and a
pre-stabbing Monica Seles) than Dokic, but it took the
post-Australia period to allow the focus of Jelena's game to
catch up with her inner drive, silencing her few remaining
critics and removing the spotlight from her father's
tabloid-attracting actions.
The season didn't start out with great promise, but
back-to-back losses to Coetzer at Amelia Island (Dokic blew
a 3-1 and serving 3rd set lead, losing the final five games
to spoil her 18th birthday) and Iva Majoli
on a cold and blustery day in Charleston proved to be the
kick-start that propelled Jelena's career down a path toward
new heights. She dusted Maggie Maleeva 6-1,6-1 then made a
furious comeback on red clay
against Arantxa Sanchez Vicario (from down a set and 3-5 in
a TB) to reach her first non-slam/Olympic SF in Hamburg,
then only went down to Jennifer Capriati in Berlin after
fighting her to the bitter end (losing
4-6 after being knotted at 4-4 in the 3rd set) in their
first career matchup. It was in those two tournaments that
Dokic's game matured. She was more aggressive, willing to
change her gameplan when down, able
to muster comebacks against young and veteran players alike,
and seasoned her game still further by joining up with
Conchita Martinez in doubles. The January form that won the
Hong Kong exhibition and pushed Lindsay Davenport in
Melbourne was thrillingly close to the surface.
And then came the Italian Open. Dokic transformed the
tournament into her own personal Roman holiday, as it turned
out to be the first "biggest moment" of her tennis career.
In Rome, everything came together in one brilliant week.
After doing away with Rita Kuti Kis in a match that
threatened (had she lost) to re-open the '00 Aussie Open can
of worms, Dokic ran roughshod over the competition to emerge
with her first-ever WTA singles title and made her initial
jump into the Top 20, settling in at #18. As impressive as
it was to make a Tier I event the site of her first victory
(dropping just one set in six matches), her path there and
the ease of her wins were even more stunning. She cruised
into the SF for the second time in three weeks by easily
putting away doubles partner (and clay specialist) Martinez
despite an 0-5 career record against her, but it was in the
final against Amelie Mauresmo where Dokic showed that she
had arrived. All her shots worked -- stinging groundstrokes,
drop shots, a consistent serve that produced three aces in
the 2nd set -- and she boldly displayed no signs of nerves
under the pressure of such a monumental moment.
Her confidence ablaze, Jelena shockingly dispatched
Mauresmo, the tour's hottest player heading into Rome, in
straight sets (characteristically using her grit to battle
through a tight 1st set to win a 7-3 TB before toying with
the Frenchwoman in a 6-1 2nd set) to become the youngest
singles title winner on tour in the first half of 2001 at 18
years, 1 month and 8 days. Her one wobble all day came on a
DF on her first championship point, but even that served
more as a tension-relieving moment than one of nervousness.
Even with her history of displaying an indomitable spirit
under intense conditions, never was Dokic quite like
this. Her determination, patience and calm were fantastic.
She oozed confidence from evey pore against Mauresmo, and it
was a wonderful sight to behold.
When it was all over, the crowd cheered. Jelena had heard
similar cheers before, but it's likely that the sound had
never been quite as sweet at it was that afternoon in Rome.
As she joyfully raised the silver cup above her head, giving
it a gentle kiss for good measure, and flashed the radiant
smile that would win her a cadre of new fans almost
overnight, one thing was crystal clear.
Jelena Dokic had become a champion... just like in her
dreams.
COMING UP LATER THIS WEEK:
Jelena Year in Review, Pt.III:
Hard Lessons, None Learned Easily
COMING UP NEXT WEEK:
Jelena Year in Review, Pt.IV:
Setting the Stage
*March-May '01 RESULTS*
-SINGLES-
-MARCH--
Miami - QF - def. by Venus Williams
--APRIL--
Amelia Island - 3r - def. by Coetzer
Charleston - 1r - def. by Majoli
--MAY--
Hamburg - SF - def. by Venus Williams
Berlin - 2r - def. by Capriati
Rome - WON - def. Mauresmo
-DOUBLES-
Miami w/ Nacuk -
...1r - lost to Grande/Majoli
Amelia Island w/ Dementieva -
...QF - lost to Raymond/Stubbs
Charleston w/ Morariu -
...2r - lost to Arendt/Vis
Hamburg w/ C.Martinez -
...QF - lost to Black/Likhovtseva
Berlin w/ C. Martinez -
...SF - lost to Black/Likhovtseva
Rome w/ C.Martinez -
...SF - lost to Black/Likhovtseva
*End of Month Rankings*
SINGLES
March 26 -- #28
April 30 -- #28
May 28 -- #19
DOUBLES
March 26 -- #64
April 30 -- #67
May 28 -- #39
*Monthly Prize Money Totals*
March: $0
April: $69,125
May: $225,538
...March-May total: $294,663
...2001 total to May 28: $309,093
*Awards*
WTA Player of the Month -- May 2001
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