| ANDREAS EVAGORA - Associated Press Writer
PARIS (AP) - The French crowd roared for Amelie Mauresmo with the passion
and frenzy usually seen
at a soccer game, and hissed Martina Hingis at every chance.
And when their bitter rematch was over, Mauresmo had the biggest victory
of her career, and the
world's No. 1 player was left shaken and despondent.
In a simmering replay of their contentious Australian Open final last
month, Mauresmo avenged her loss
in Melbourne with a 2-6, 6-1, 6-3 victory Friday in the quarterfinals
of the $520,000 Gaz de France
Open.
``It was like a soccer match, it could have been France against Brazil,''
the 18-year-old Hingis said.
``They were incredible, even if they were against me. My game fell
apart.''
The match reopened wounds from the Australian Open, when Hingis described
the muscular Mauresmo,
who is gay, as ``half a man.''
Although Hingis and Mauresmo tried to play down the episode in the days
prior to Friday's match, the
exuberant crowd was in no mood to forget.
Throughout the match, the fans cheered the 19-year-old Frenchwoman,
drawing repeated requests from
the umpire for quiet. They waved banners that read, ``We love you Amelie''
and ``We're behind you
Amelie.'' They hissed Hingis during introductions and booed every time
she struck the ball during
warmups.
Hingis had beaten Mauresmo 6-2, 6-3 in the Melbourne final, and after
taking the first set in 24 minutes Friday, it appeared a
similar result awaited.
But Mauresmo seemingly gained strength from the crowd, regrouping from
her poorly hit strokes and serves of the opening set
to beat Hingis for the first time in four attempts.
``It was the best win of my career,'' Mauresmo said. ``The atmosphere
was very special.''
In the second set, putting her size advantage to good use, Mauresmo
was a different player. In the third set, she broke Hingis
while leading 4-3 and finished the match in 90 minutes.
``It is really wonderful to beat the world No. 1,'' said Mauresmo, ranked
18th in the world. ``In my other matches against
Hingis, I wasn't as strong as I am today. I have more confidence now.''
Mauresmo said she is no longer concerned with the comments by Hingis,
a woman who describes herself as one of the ``Spice
Girls'' of tennis.
``You just have to forget it,'' Mauresmo said. ``What's past is past.
It is time to look to the future.''
She advanced to Saturday's semifinals against Dominique van Roost, along
with Serena Williams and Nathalie Dechy.
Williams beat No. 7 seed Julie Halard-Decugis of France 6-2, 6-3 and
will next face another French player, Nathalie Dechy.
Dechy, unseeded, downed friend and doubles partner Amelie Cocheteux
6-1, 4-6, 6-1.
Van Roost was in excellent form in the second set in beating Russia's
Elena Likhovtseva 7-5, 6-0. Van Roost, the No. 3 seed
from Belgium, regrouped against the No. 8 seed after serving eight
double faults in the first set.
``I was a bit scared of serving too short in the first set so made a
lot of double faults,'' said van Roost, the runner-up in this
event last year. ``But my serving improved in the second set and after
it was 2-0 she didn't play well.''
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