| By PETE IACOBELLI - AP Sports Writer
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- Jennifer Capriati knew her Australian Open
victory over Martina Hingis wasn't a one-time thing. She proved it on Sunday.
``I never felt pressure that if I didn't win here it was going to be
a fluke thing,'' Capriati said after beating Hingis for the second straight
time this year, 6-0, 4-6, 6-4 in the Family Circle finals. ``I have enough
confidence in my game and I'm feeling as fit as I was in Australia.''
Capriati, the tournament's second-seeded player, needed all the energy
she could get in this one. After a surprisingly easy 19-minute first set,
the top-seeded Hingis rallied to extend the match.
``I was playing Martina Hingis. She wasn't going to let it go without
a fight,'' said Capriati, who was a 14-year-old prodigy when she lost to
Martina Navratilova in the finals here the first time, in 1990.
But Capriati, who hadn't played the world's No. 1 player since beating
Hingis to win her first Grand Slam title in Australia, broke her four times
in the final set for victory.
Hingis, a 1997 and 1999 Family Circle champion, came in with a 14-match
win streak here. Capriati's power was too much on the green clay.
``We always said if Jennifer could get her game together she would be
with me, the (Williams) sisters and Lindsay,'' said Hingis, now 2-5 against
Capriati.
Capriati, who earned $178,000, came out fast, handing Hingis her first
love set in 41 matches this year.
Hingis did not go quietly. She won 12 of the second set's first 13 points
to lead 3-0 and, after Capriati won four straight games to lead 4-3, finished
off the set by winning the next three.
``I felt like I was finally getting into my game,'' said Hingis, who
has gone four tournaments without a championship after three victories
in her first five events.
Capriati's fierce groundstrokes and powerful serves -- she twice won
points with 108-mph serves -- took the third set. But not before Hingis
came back one more time.
Capriati led 5-1 and was two points from the title in the seventh and
eighth games. However, she could not convert, conjuring memories of her
finals loss at the Ericsson Open to Venus Williams where she squandered
eight match points.
When Capriati hit a lob just past the baseline, Hingis had closed to
5-4 and was serving to tie. This time, Capriati didn't let it slip away.
``That went through my mind,'' Capriati said. ``I learned from the loss
at the Ericsson and used it here.''
Capriati caught up to a drop shot for one winner -- ``I thought, 'No
way.' I couldn't believe she got to that,'' Hingis said -- then picked
off Hingis' forehand shot from the deep left corner to set up match point.
Hingis floated a forehand that Capriati followed into the right sideline,
extending her arms to the cheers of the crowd at the newly build Tennis
Centre at Daniel Island.
Capriati ran to the stands to kiss her father, Stefano.
Even before the victory, it was known that Capriati would replace Monica
Seles at No. 4 in the world behind Hingis, Venus Williams and Lindsay Davenport
when the new rankings come out next week.
The victory also marks Capriati as a top challenger for the next Grand
Slam event, the French Open.
``This will help with that, no matter what happens'' in her remaining
clay tournaments, said Capriati, who'll next play at the German Open next
month.
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