Thursday, January 28, 2010

Zheng philosophical after Henin thrashing

China's Zheng Jie reacts during her semi-final loss to Justine Henin of Belgium at the...

Published>Thu, Jan 28 10 03:29 PM

Zheng Jie left Melbourne Park upset at how she played her second grand slam semi-final after a brutal drubbing by her idol Justine Henin on Thursday.

"Yeah I want to forget this match," Zheng told reporters after the 6-1 6-0 loss, smiling ruefully after her quick-fire exit from the Australian Open.

"I learnt a lot of things today. Before I felt like I had dictated play to my opponents but I was the one who was dictated to today."

Zheng's 51-minute thrashing ended China's hopes of a first grand slam finalist after defending champion Serena Williams had earlier knocked out 16th-seeded Li Na 7-6 7-6.

In contrast to Li's breezy mood after her dogged effort to bring down the world number one, Zheng was crestfallen after losing 12 straight games to Henin.

"She's just such a complete player. You never know what she's going to do next," the 35th-ranked Zheng said of the Belgian, who she rates as her favourite current player.

"The way she controls the tempo during rallies, I just was not able to play the way I would have liked to.

"I think if she carries this game into the final, she has a big chance to be champion."

Zheng, who made the semi-final at Wimbledon in 2008, will return to the top 20, following her surge through the field in Melbourne.

"I thought the whole tournament my serving and aggression was a lot better than in the past," she said.

"It wasn't just that I made the last four. It's because the things I've done in training really came out here so it's been a good harvest."

Zheng and Li became their country's first two players to advance to the semis of the same grand slam. Prior to Melbourne, no two had ever made the fourth round.

"We'll have more opportunities to have a (grand slam) champion soon. As to when, I don't know.

"Compared to other countries, the attention devoted to tennis is still not that high in China.

"I hope there more people in China can watch and get involved, but of course this will require more good results."


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