Francesca Schiavone Wins French Open
Last Updated 1:41 p.m. ET
With the performance of a lifetime, Francesca Schiavone became the first Italian woman to win a Grand Slam title by beating Samantha Stosur in the final of the French Open on Saturday, 6-4, 7-6 (2).
Schiavone threw uppercuts, put her fists to her face, skipped about the court and laughed at the crowd's enthusiasm. And then, when she had won the final, she really let her emotions show.
The tour veteran rallied from a 4-1 deficit in the second set and took the clinching tiebreaker with a succession of brilliant shots.
Photos: 2010 French Open
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On winning, Schiavone fell onto her back, then rolled over and kissed the clay. She rose covered with dirt, hugged Stosur and broke into a champion's grin, then trotted over to the wall behind the baseline and climbed it for a group hug with her supporters.
"The passion came through," 18-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova said. "She wanted it. She wanted it badly. She was going to die on that court if she had to."
Mary Pierce, the 2000 champion, presented Schiavone with the Suzanne Lenglen Cup.
"You give me a great trophy," Schiavone told her. "I feel amazing."
At 29, Schiavone became the oldest woman to win her first Grand Slam title since Ann Jones won Wimbledon in 1969 at age 30. She's the first Italian Grand Slam champion since Adriano Panatta won the French Open men's title in 1976.
Schiavone was seeded 17th. The only other time the title has been won by a woman not seeded in the top 10 was in 1933.
"Everybody has the chance to be who you really want to be, and do everything in your life," Schiavone said. "This is what has happened to me."
The women's final was the best in nearly a decade at Roland Garros, and the quality of play climaxed in the tiebreaker. Schiavone reached match point by hitting four consecutive winners, the last a lunging backhand volley, and she exulted after every one.
"I was feeling much more energy, more and more and more," Schiavone said. "I couldn't stop it. I really felt that was my moment, and I took it. I didn't lose the chance."
Schiavone then hit a backhand into the corner with so much spin it deflected off Stosur's racket, and the real celebration began.
Both players were first-time Grand Slam finalists, but there were few signs of jitters. Schiavone certainly looked relaxed - during one changeover break she laughed as her fans chanted.
"They both played very good, aggressive, creative tennis," Navratilova said. "It's nice to see two creative players make it to the finals and then play a good final."
The No. 5-seeded Stosur beat four-time champion Justine Henin, top-ranked Serena Williams and former No. 1 Jelena Jankovic en route to the final.
"I'm disappointed," Stosur said, her voice breaking. "It's a big journey and a great two weeks. You want the full fairy tale, but it didn't quite happen."
The Australian's forehand lacked the bite it had in earlier matches. Much of that had to do with Schiavone, who played dogged defense and used her stylish mix of spins to keep Stosur from overpowering her.
The clay was fast on a sunny, warm afternoon, and Stosur's serves topped out at 123 mph. But Schiavone boldly launched her body into them and did damage with her returns.
"They both played not a bad match, but Sam was a little bit more introverted," said Stosur's coach, David Taylor. "Full credit to Francesca. She had nothing to lose, and she played a great tactical match and a great mental match."
Each player served well and whacked more than two dozen winners, and both sets swung on a few points.
Both held without facing a break point until the ninth game, when Stosur fell behind love-40. She saved two break points but then double-faulted for the first time, slapping her thigh in anger after the mistake that cost her the game.
Schiavone fell behind love-30 in the next game but rallied, hitting four winners to help her hold and seal the set. Stosur walked off the court screaming angrily at herself.
Stosur saved two break points and held to go ahead 2-1 in the second set, then broke for the first time en route to a 4-1 lead.
Schiavone rallied, losing only four points in the next three games and taking advantage of several Stosur errors to reach 4-all. Both players then held to reach the exciting tiebreaker.
"I don't think I played that bad," Stosur said. "She just had her day. She went for it. It takes guts to do that. Well done to her."
The title came in Schiavone's 39th Grand Slam tournament. On Monday, two weeks shy of her 30th birthday, she'll become the oldest woman in 12 years to crack the top 10 for the first time. She's expected to be ranked sixth.
Men's Doubles
Daniel Nestor of Canada and Nenad Zimonjic of Serbia have beaten defending champions Leander Paes of India and Lukas Dlouhy of the Czech Republic 7-5, 6-2 to win the men's doubles title at the French Open.
Nestor and Zimonjic, seeded No. 2, won their third Grand Slam title together Saturday, after successful runs at Wimbledon in 2008 and 2009.
They converted three of four break-point chances and never lost serve.
Zimonjic also won the mixed doubles Thursday with Katarina Srebotnik of Slovenia.
Nestor previously collected three Grand Slam doubles titles with Mark Knowles.