|
| US
Open 1990:
A quarterfinal against Ivan Lendl had inescapable changing-of-the-guard
implications. Two years earlier, Sampras had visited Lendl's Connecticut
home for a week of practice, and Lendl had been skeptical about
Sampras' intestinal fortitude. So when the 19-year-old Sampras
severely bruised his toe during their match, Lendl believed he
would win. But as he would do throughout his career, Sampras played
through his pain. The No. 12 seed attacked skillfully all through
the final set, bringing his total aces in the match to 24. He
then struck down John McEnroe and Andre Agassi with the loss of
only one set to become the youngest man ever to win the Open.
|
|
| |
| US
Open 2002:
Sampras, who had not won a tournament since the 2000 Wimbledon,
was suffering through the longest losing streak of his career
- 33 consecutive events - and came into this event seeded only
17. Rain then forced him to play five matches across the last
seven days. Across the net in the final stood none other than
Agassi. After taking the first two sets, Sampras served into a
strong wind at 5-6 in the third, and lost his delivery. In the
fourth, Sampras served into that troublesome wind again at 1-2,
making an almost miraculous backhand half-volley at break point
down. At 3-4, from that same side, he fought off another break
point. With Agassi serving at 4-4, Sampras sealed the break that
he needed to serve for the championship. At 5-4, 30-0, he cracked
a blockbuster 119 mph second serve ace, his 33rd of the match
- a personal record for a major final. Sampras triumphed 6-3,
6-4, 5-7, 6-4 reaffirming his immense stature, redefining the
meaning of being a champion for the ages. |
|
| |
A
tearful Pete Sampras wept openly during a moving farewell ceremony
at the US Open on Monday night, as fans and a legendary trio
said a final goodbye to the 14-time Grand Slam champion. After
an emotional ceremony which left few dry eyes in Arthur Ashe
stadium, Sampras walked a final lap of honor holding infant
son, Christian, in the arms that one year earlier held the US
Open trophy.
|
| "I
never saw Don Budge, Fred Perry or Lew Hoad play, but I have
either watched or played against the greatest players of the
open era and, for me, Sampras ranks alongside my idol Rod Laver
as the greatest of that period. I am loathe to put anyone ahead
of a player who twice achieved the Grand Slam as Laver did -
not to mention one who was a fellow leftie - but Sampras, the
14-time slam winner, was at least the Australian's equal in
terms of ability. In fact, if they could have player each other
in their prime, I've no doubt Sampras would have won more often.
He had all the shots and was also a much better athlete than
people gave him credit for. If his volleying was not quite as
good as the rest of his game when he started, it was at least
as good long before the end of it. It was the same with the
mental side of his game; he knew what he had to do to develop."
-- John McEnroe, The Daily Telegraph (UK), August 25,
2003 |
|
AGASSI VS. SAMPRAS
Year
Tourney Surface Round Winner Score
Remarkable
recovery
Sampras wins first
title in more than two years
| 
Pete Sampras, seeded 17th, broke a drought of 33 tournaments
without a win.
AP |
NEW YORK (AP) -- Pete Sampras was
right all along: He did have a 14th Grand Slam title in him. And just
like the first, all those years ago, it came in a U.S. Open final
against his old rival and fellow American Andre Agassi.
His serve clicking, his volleys on
target, his forehand as fluid as ever, Sampras beat Agassi 6-3, 6-4,
5-7, 6-4 Sunday to win America's major for the fifth time. At 31,
Sampras is the Open's oldest champion since 1970, when Australia's
Ken Rosewell claimed the title aged 35.
And though he stopped short of saying
he'll quit, Sampras did sound like someone who's thinking about retiring
on a high.
"To beat a rival like Andre, in a
storybook ending, it might be nice to stop," he said. "But I still
love to compete. I'll see in a couple of months where my heart is
and my mind. My head is spinning."
Sampras' play faded in the third
and fourth sets, and it was hard to tell whether Agassi or time was
taking the bigger toll. But he managed to hold on.
Sampras hadn't won a title since
Wimbledon in July 2000, a drought of 33 tournaments, and he was seeded
just 17th at the Open. He's deflected questions about whether he'd
keep going for some time now, insisting he still could produce on
the big stage. After all, he figured, his 13 major titles were a record.
| SI's
Jon Wertheim |
Everybody
makes a big deal out of the fact that, unlike Pete Sampras,
Andre Agassi makes fitness a priority. But in the first
two sets, Sampras clearly had fresher legs.
It might have been a matter of beating Sjeng Schalken in
three sets in Saturday's first semifinal, rather than Lleyton
Hewitt in four sets in the second semifinal, but Sampras
was moving much better.
He looked nothing like he did at Wimbledon. Between Wimbledon
and the Open, Sampras apparently did a lot to get in better
shape.
Click here for more. |
| |
|
|
"This one might take the cake," Sampras
said. "The way I've been going this year, to come through this and
play the way I did today was awesome. I peaked at the right time."
When the 32-year-old Agassi put a
backhand into the net to give Sampras the last break he would need,
making it 5-4 in the fourth set, Sampras was so drained he barely
lifted a fist, slowly pumping it once as he trudged to the changeover.
He then served it out, with an ace
to match point and a volley winner to end it. And he had enough energy
to climb the stairs in the stands to kiss and hug his pregnant wife,
actress Bridgette Wilson.
Sampras played his best tennis at
the U.S. Open the past two years, making it to the championship match
before losing in straight sets to a pair of 20-year-old first-time
Grand Slam finalists: Lleyton Hewitt in 2001 and Marat Safin in 2000.
On Sunday, Sampras got to pick on
someone his own age: Agassi, winner of seven Grand Slam titles. They've
played each other since the junior ranks, before they were 10, and
now have met 34 times as pros (Sampras holds a 20-14 edge, including
4-1 in major finals).
"It was special. You can't get around
that," Agassi said.
If the match signaled the end of
an era, they produced a gorgeous goodbye.
| |
| Sampras
hints at retirement |
Having
defied the odds, age, fatigue and an army of critics to
claim an unprecedented 14th career grand slam title with
a stirring 6-3, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4 win over Andre Agassi, 31-year-old
Pete Sampras hinted on Sunday that his most unlikely victory
could well be the storybook ending to a brilliant career.
"I'm going to have to weigh it up over the next couple months
to see where I'm at," Sampras said. "I still want to play,
I love to play.
"But to beat a rival like Andre in a major tournament at
the U.S. Open ... a storybook ending, it might be a nice
way to stop."
|
|
The crowd of more than 23,000 in
Arthur Ashe Stadium split its rooting evenly, throwing more vocal
support to whichever player trailed. Yells of "Pete!" from one corner
would be echoed by "Andre!" from another.
"Pete just played a little too good
for me today," Agassi said. "It's great to hear New York cheer again.
It was beautiful being here."
What a study in contrasts. Agassi
is the baseline slugger, the greatest returner of his generation,
and a true showman. Sampras is a volleyer always looking to get to
the net, the greatest server of his generation, and almost always
staid on court.
Each played the assigned role to
perfection, Sampras smacking his serves at up to 212 kph (132 mph),
and winning the point on 69 of 105 trips to the net. Agassi ventured
to the net just 13 times, but conjured up 19 groundstroke winners
to Sampras' 16.
"I played so well today," Sampras
said. "Andre brings out the best in me every time I step out with
him."
At 4-3 in the first set, Sampras
earned the first break point of the match and converted when Agassi's
backhand flew wide. Then, serving for the set at 5-3, Sampras faced
his first break point. How did he handle it_ A second-serve ace at
175 kph (109 mph).
The second set was similar, Agassi
not quite handling the speed and movement of Sampras' serving -- he
held at love four times -- and Sampras getting a break.
| |
| Adding
to the Legacy |
|
All-time majors singles
titles
|
| Pete
Sampras |
14
|
| Roy
Emerson |
12
|
| Bjorn
Borg |
11
|
| Rod
Laver |
11
|
| Bill
Tilden |
10
|
| Jimmy
Connors |
8
|
| Ivan
Lendl |
8
|
| Fred
Perry |
8
|
| Ken
Rosewall |
8
|
| Andre
Agassi |
7
|
| Henri
Cochet |
7
|
| Rene
Lacoste |
7
|
| Bill
Larned |
7
|
| John
McEnroe |
7
|
| John
Newcombe |
7
|
| Willie
Renshaw |
7 |
| Richard
Sears |
7
|
| Mats
Wilander |
7
|
| |
|
Agassi finally was able to measure
Sampras' serve with some regularity in the third set, like a hitter
who catches up to a tiring pitcher's fastball in late innings.
"He's a good pressure-point player,"
Agassi said. "He senses the important times of the match and puts
pressure on you and elevates his game."
Based on recent play, the showdown
seemed improbable. At July's Wimbledon, both lost in the second round
to players ranked outside the top 50.
But they are in great shape. Agassi
was out under the midday sun, swatting shots on a practice court in
a black T-shirt. Sampras, headphones on, jogged in the hallway outside
the locker room shortly before taking the court.
The last time they played on the
Grand Slam stage was in last year's U.S. Open quarterfinals, a match
Sampras won in four tiebreakers, with neither player breaking serve.
It was presumed by many to be their last meeting at a major.
After, Agassi leaned over the net,
offering good luck the rest of the way in that tournament by whispering,
"Win this thing." One year
later, Sampras did. Yes, the
same Sampras who beat Agassi in the 1990 U.S. Open, setting the record
for youngest winner, 19. |