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SportsAugust 28, 2002

By Howard Fendrich ~ The Associated Press NEW YORK -- The wheelchairs were there, if needed, resting side-by-side in the corridor leading from the court to the locker room. For 4 1/2 muggy hours Tuesday at this wearying U.S. Open, 2000 champion Marat Safin and Nicolas Kiefer traded big serves and crackling strokes to the point of exhaustion. By the end, both were cramping. Kiefer barely could walk, his body contorting in pain...

By Howard Fendrich ~ The Associated Press

NEW YORK -- The wheelchairs were there, if needed, resting side-by-side in the corridor leading from the court to the locker room.

For 4 1/2 muggy hours Tuesday at this wearying U.S. Open, 2000 champion Marat Safin and Nicolas Kiefer traded big serves and crackling strokes to the point of exhaustion. By the end, both were cramping. Kiefer barely could walk, his body contorting in pain.

The second-seeded Safin, not known for his mental toughness on court, kept his head in the game when he really needed to and had just enough energy left to win the first-round thriller 6-3, 4-6, 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (4).

"How was I feeling? Dead. Completely dead," the Russian said. "I was choking so badly. I was embarrassed. I couldn't serve, I couldn't play, I couldn't move."

No. 11 Andy Roddick was treated for a blister on his right hand during the final set but pulled out a 7-6 (2), 6-3, 6-4 victory over Dutch qualifier Martin Verkerk at night. Roddick had just 10 errors to 46 for Verkerk.

Among Tuesday's victims was 1998 finalist Mark Philippoussis, who wrenched his long-troubled left knee in the fourth set against No. 24 Sjeng Schalken and had to stop four games later.

In other action, two-time defending champion Venus Williams and third-seeded Jennifer Capriati both opened with perfect victories: 6-0, 6-0. Williams overpowered Mirjana Lucic to win her 14th straight match, while Capriati beat Bethanie Mattek.

Monica Seles, who won the Open twice in the 1990s, eliminated Zsofia Gubacsi 6-3, 6-3; and 1997 winner Martina Hingis returned to Grand Slam play after ankle surgery and beat Marissa Irvin 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. Seeded winners also included No. 7 Kim Clijsters, who next faces wild-card entry Mashona Washington, the sister of 1996 Wimbledon finalist MaliVai Washington; No. 10 Amelie Mauresmo, and No. 14 Chanda Rubin.

Defending men's champion Lleyton Hewitt had a very matter-of-fact debut, beating Nicolas Coutelot of France 6-2, 6-3, 6-3. Also advancing: three-time French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten, No. 7 Juan Carlos Ferrero, No. 9 Carlos Moya, No. 18 Alex Corretja, and No. 19 Xavier Malisse.

Capriati bristled at her postmatch news conference when told by a reporter that Williams' father, Richard, criticized her in a magazine interview.

"I have nothing to say about what he says. It's just a waste of time. You can see how ignorant that sounds and how disrespectful that sounds," Capriati said. "He should just concentrate on his daughters -- and he's doing a good job. I don't need his advice."

Her match was rather uneventful, and that was just fine with Capriati.

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"It's got to be a lesson, too," she said, referring to the shutout. The 17-year-old Mattek's "got to learn. She's got to experience it out there. It will make her tougher."

The day's best theater on court came courtesy of Safin and Kiefer, who combined for 113 winners and 27 aces, not to mention countless arms-raised celebrations and guttural yells of frustration. Safin broke two rackets by spiking them.

He has an all-or-nothing history in Grand Slam tournaments, reaching the semifinals or better at three straight before bowing out in the second round at Wimbledon. He was fined $2,000 for lack of effort after losing to a qualifier in the first round of the 2000 Australian Open.

He nearly gave away Tuesday's match against Kiefer, a German once ranked in the top 10 and labeled "the next Boris Becker." Now he's 64th after starting the year 4-16.

One moment, Safin was brilliant: a perfectly angled cross-court backhand passing shot on the run. And in the very next, he looked like a weekend hacker: sending a sitter into the upper deck.

Serving for the match at 5-3 in the fifth, Safin was broken when he double-faulted. Kiefer then evened the set at 5-5, somehow mustering strength in his legs for consecutive aces to hold serve at love.

In the next game, back-to-back forehand errors by Safin gave Kiefer a break point, but the German put a slice backhand into the net. In a match already more than 4 hours old, Safin then cranked a service winner at 132 mph, and two more service winners helped make it 6-5.

At the ensuing changeover, trainers massaged and iced the legs of both players. Safin even got on his stomach and had a trainer stretch his legs.

In the tiebreaker, Kiefer hit a forehand into the net and lost his footing, sliding to the ground. Safin called for a trainer, who went out on court and stretched Kiefer's left leg, then helped him rise.

Two points later it was over, and Safin walked off under his own power, even stopping to sign dozens of autographs. Kiefer left his rackets and bag behind and was helped off by a trainer.

Kiefer, who needed intravenous fluids, wasn't all that impressed by the entertainment he and his opponent provided.

"I prefer to win," he said. "In three sets."

Notes: The longest Open match on record was the 1992 semifinal in which Stefan Edberg beat Michael Chang in 5 hours, 26 minutes. ... Philippoussis headed to Miami to see the doctor who operated on his knee in March 2001. ... Mary Pierce, twice a major champion but unseeded at this Open, lost to No. 32 Paola Suarez 7-6 (3), 6-3.

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