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Henin ousts Sharapova
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January 26, 2006 11:36 IST
Last Updated: January 26, 2006 16:48 IST

Eighth seed Justine Henin-Hardenne put injury concerns aside to overpower Russian Maria Sharapova [Images] on Thursday and reach the Australian Open final.

Paes-Damm in men's doubles final

The Belgian, who was unable to defend her 2004 Melbourne crown last year through injury, ground fourth seed Sharapova down to win 4-6, 6-1, 6-4, stretching her winning streak in Australia to an extraordinary 20 matches.

Henin-Hardenne will play third seed Amelie Mauresmo in Saturday's final after second seed Kim Clijsters [Images] was forced to retire due to an ankle injury in their semi-final.

"I think it was a great match, very intense physically and mentally," a delighted Henin-Hardenne told a news conference after her two hour, 26 minute battle on Rod Laver Arena.

"Maria, she played a great match, the best I've seen her play in a long time," she said.

The win was especially sweet for Henin-Hardenne, who has had to overcome a long battle with injuries.

She was unable to defend her 2004 title last year because of a knee injury but returned to win the French Open, only then to suffer a hamstring injury that cut short her 2005 campaign and threatened her visit to Australia.

But she shrugged off her injury woes to win the Sydney International two weeks ago, just as she did in 2004, installing herself as a firm favourite with bookmakers to win her second Australian title and her fifth grand slam.

"When I arrived here I was coming to play a couple of matches and get my confidence back," Henin-Hardenne said.

"It's been tough for me to be injured for such a long time and then coming back in my first grand slam, being in the final again, I think it's just an amazing feeling."

REVENGE

Henin-Hardenne admitted she had a score to settle after missing the tournament last year but said she first wanted to enjoy the win before starting to think about Saturday's opponent.

"I think I had maybe a little bit of revenge on my mind to come here," she said.

The Belgian had to come back from a set down for the second match in a row after she fought back to down top seed Lindsay Davenport [Images] in the quarter-finals.

Sharapova, beaten by eventual champion Serena Williams [Images] at the same stage last year, battled hard but could not match the Belgian's tenacity and killer backhand.

The Russian drew Henin-Hardenne into long rallies and used greater shot variety to wrong-foot her opponent early, claiming the first set when Henin-Hardenne sent a forehand sailing wide.

But Henin-Hardenne gradually took control and broke the frustrated Russian twice towards the end of the second set to force the decider.

Sharapova fought to the end, breaking Henin-Hardenne as the French Open champion served for the match at 5-3.

But the Belgian came back strong and sealed victory on Sharapova's serve, claiming the match with a blistering backhand winner down the line.

"I'm very proud of myself because I kept fighting during the whole match, even the points that were very long. I ran like probably I never ran in the past on the tennis court," Henin-Hardenne said.



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