September 14, 2010 8:30 AM
- Text
American Teen Capra Pulls Upset at U.S. Open
(AP)
Goodbye, Melanie Oudin. Hello, Beatrice Capra.
The day after the sensation of last year's U.S. Open departed quietly, another 18-year-old American made her way unexpectedly to the third round.
Capra, a wild-card entry ranked 371st, upset 18th-seeded Aravane Rezai of France 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 on Thursday to keep her Grand Slam debut on track.
Capra, who trains at the Evert Academy in Delray Beach, Fla., is the youngest player left in the women's field and the lowest-ranked.
She's playing in her first tour-level main draw, and knocked off 95th-ranked Karolina Sprem in the first round. Next up could be a matchup against Maria Sharapova, who was one of Oudin's victims last year when, at age 17, she made an attention-grabbing run to the quarterfinals.
Photos: 2010 U.S. Open
Victoria Azarenka Collapses at Steamy U.S. Open
Ever since last year's magical run at Flushing Meadows, Oudin has been on a more even-keeled learning curve - ranked 43rd in the world and with only one victory in the first three Grand Slam tournaments of 2010.
She came back to New York this year wondering if something about this city and this tournament might inspire another run. She left Wednesday after a disheartening 6-2, 7-5 loss to No. 29 Alona Bondarenko and the sinking realization that even in the Big Apple, encores can be hard to come by.
"I guess I'm a little tiny bit relieved now," Oudin said. "I can kind of start over from all the expectations from last year. And now I can just go out and hopefully do really well the rest of the year and keep working hard."
Other winners in early action Thursday included 19th-seeded Mardy Fish, who defeated Pablo Cuevas 7-5, 6-0, 6-2. Fish, along with No. 18 John Isner and No. 20 Sam Querrey, are America's best hopes after No. 9 Andy Roddick fell late Wednesday night to Serbia's Janko Tipsarevic.
"I've been in a lot of positions in my career, but I've never put myself in a Grand Slam sort of as a guy that people talk about to really do well here," Fish said.
Also winning Thursday was top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki, who needed only 47 minutes to put the "double bagel" - a 6-0, 6-0 win
on Chang Kai-chen of Taiwan.
On court later Thursday afternoon was No. 2 seed Roger Federer, who is trying to win his sixth U.S. Open title.
Sharapova and third-seeded Novak Djokovic headline the night sessions.
The day after the sensation of last year's U.S. Open departed quietly, another 18-year-old American made her way unexpectedly to the third round.
Capra, a wild-card entry ranked 371st, upset 18th-seeded Aravane Rezai of France 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 on Thursday to keep her Grand Slam debut on track.
Capra, who trains at the Evert Academy in Delray Beach, Fla., is the youngest player left in the women's field and the lowest-ranked.
She's playing in her first tour-level main draw, and knocked off 95th-ranked Karolina Sprem in the first round. Next up could be a matchup against Maria Sharapova, who was one of Oudin's victims last year when, at age 17, she made an attention-grabbing run to the quarterfinals.
Photos: 2010 U.S. Open
Victoria Azarenka Collapses at Steamy U.S. Open
Ever since last year's magical run at Flushing Meadows, Oudin has been on a more even-keeled learning curve - ranked 43rd in the world and with only one victory in the first three Grand Slam tournaments of 2010.
She came back to New York this year wondering if something about this city and this tournament might inspire another run. She left Wednesday after a disheartening 6-2, 7-5 loss to No. 29 Alona Bondarenko and the sinking realization that even in the Big Apple, encores can be hard to come by.
"I guess I'm a little tiny bit relieved now," Oudin said. "I can kind of start over from all the expectations from last year. And now I can just go out and hopefully do really well the rest of the year and keep working hard."
Other winners in early action Thursday included 19th-seeded Mardy Fish, who defeated Pablo Cuevas 7-5, 6-0, 6-2. Fish, along with No. 18 John Isner and No. 20 Sam Querrey, are America's best hopes after No. 9 Andy Roddick fell late Wednesday night to Serbia's Janko Tipsarevic.
"I've been in a lot of positions in my career, but I've never put myself in a Grand Slam sort of as a guy that people talk about to really do well here," Fish said.
Also winning Thursday was top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki, who needed only 47 minutes to put the "double bagel" - a 6-0, 6-0 win
on Chang Kai-chen of Taiwan.
On court later Thursday afternoon was No. 2 seed Roger Federer, who is trying to win his sixth U.S. Open title.
Sharapova and third-seeded Novak Djokovic headline the night sessions.
Popular Now in Sports
- Watch: Will Ferrell does Bulls-Hornets intros
- Forbes list: America's most disliked athletes
- Watch: 7-foot-5 teen basketball player dominates
- Jeremy Lin unlikely star for Knicks
- Is Eli Manning a Hall of Famer?
- Ricky Williams: Parcells convinced me to retire
- Ex-MLB pitcher: I did cocaine before most games
- Jeremy Lin's coach at Harvard: "He's fearless"
- NFL: The Patriots Cheated
- Dwayne Wade's Wife, Kids Suing His Girlfriend
- Porn star: MLB agent used me to recruit players
- Reggie Bush "stinks," teammate says
- Birdman: I'm betting $5 million on Super Bowl
- Luol Deng picked as NBA All-Star
- "Halftime in America"
- Reports: Youkilis engaged to Tom Brady's sister
- JaMarcus Russell: I'm not lazy, fat or a junkie
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- HBO defends TV series after 2 horse deaths
- Republic Bancorp founder Bernard Trager dies at 83
- APNewsBreak: Susan Powell case called 'murder'
- Greek premier: Default would lead to "chaos"
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Josh Powell had "incestuous" images on his home computer, authorities say
on CBS News





