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Saturday, January 27
Hingis considers giving up doubles play



MELBOURNE, Australia -- Beaten Australian Open finalist Martina Hingis admitted on Saturday she had nothing left to give during her chastening 6-4, 6-3 defeat at the hands of American Jennifer Capriati.

Top seed and world number one Hingis looked a shadow of the player who ousted both Serena and Venus Williams on her run to the final.

Martina Hingis
Martina Hingis let her frustrations show during her match vs. Jennifer Capriati in the Aussie Open women's final.

It was the fifth time in as many years she had contested the Australian Open final, but the second in succession Hingis had lost.

The Swiss 20-year-old has now failed to win five of the last six Grand Slam finals she has made, dating back to the U.S. Open in 1998.

The last of her five career Grand Slam triumphs was celebrated at Melbourne Park in 1999, and Hingis revealed she is likely to sacrifice her involvement in women's doubles in a bid to arrest the alarming slide in her singles fortunes.

The winner of eight Grand Slam doubles titles said: "It was one match too many.

"I could barely walk over the last three days. I was dead. My feet were stuck to the ground," Hingis said. "I am considering not playing doubles again in Grand Slams. I'm not as strong physically as the other girls and it is tough to have to play so many matches.

"I know now I need to relax and rest as much as I can, so I will probably not play doubles. In the past, there have been different reasons for me to lose a Grand Slam.

"But mostly, I thought it was things that I did wrong. This time, I don't think I did anything wrong. It was just too much."

Hingis had endured a dramatic three-set quarterfinal with Serena Williams on Wednesday that lasted 2:19.

The following day, she emphatically brushed aside Venus Williams 6-1, 6-1 in the semifinals.

It was the first time at a Grand Slam tournament that she had overcome both sisters, and many felt the result of the final would be a foregone conclusion -- in Hingis' favor.

But Hingis, who secured the Australian Open titles between 1997-99, was broken by Capriati in the first game of the match.

Capriati built a 5-1 lead before Hingis briefly threatened by coming back to trail 4-5, but Capriati held firm and the second set was a similar story.

Hingis, whose run with partner Monica Seles in the women's doubles ended at the semifinals stage, said: "Mentally, I just didn't have it any longer.

"I never thought that I had won the tournament when I beat the Williamses. But having to play the Williams sisters, the doubles, and then come out again after one day's rest was too much. When you are 5-1 down in the first set, it is almost too late to start a comeback.

"It's hard to find a solution to someone (Capriati) you have beaten five times before when suddenly they are playing so well.

"I couldn't fight when I needed to. Having to do that three, four days in a row over the limit was too much."

Hingis paid tribute to Capriati, the 12th seed.

"I've always said she's a great player," said Hingis. "I really have a lot of respect for her game. On the court, she always belongs to the top five. I wasn't surprised by the way she played. She didn't give me any chances to come back.

"It is great for her to win her first ever Grand Slam title. I remember how it felt - it was a great feeling. Just overwhelming, you get goose bumps and everything."

Hingis, who threw a tantrum when she lost the 1999 French Open final to Steffi Graf, took this defeat much better.

She also insisted she would be back to claim more Grand Slam singles glory in the future.

"I think there are worse disasters in life than what happened to me today," she said. I can still smile. I'm still healthy and I have more opportunities to come. For me life goes on, and I know I still played some great tennis here.

"I beat both the Williams sisters and no-one is more powerful than them. When you're young, some things do come easily to you, but if you have to work harder as you get older, I am prepared to do that.

"Tennis is the priority for me still. I have gained a lot of experience now and I can build on that for the future. "Hopefully I will be back to win the Australian Open and other Grand Slams again."


 




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