Clijsters' swan song starts with win

Five Things We Learned
NEW YORK -- Kim Clijsters is only 29, which seems too young to be retiring, much less for the second time. But tennis is a grind made for teenagers, requiring youthful bones for relentless pounding and a tolerance for constant travel, even when enthusiasm for it wanes.
Clijsters laughs about how things have changed for her, about getting in line to see a postmatch physio and joking that the 16-year-olds had better not try to cut the line. About wanting to play like Steffi Graf, but seeing the game change as she came of age. About trying to balance her own desire to compete on the world stage against the charming pull of her toddler's smile.
"I mean, the first few years when you came on tour it's like everything is, like, amazing," Clijsters said. "It's like going to Disneyland as a 5-year-old."

Even her analogies betray her resolve. This U.S. Open will be her last tournament.
On Monday night the Belgian, a three-time champion here, stepped into the damp Queens air with tennis racket in hand as the opening act on the first night of the U.S. Open. The air above the Arthur Ashe Stadium court was still smoky from the fireworks of a gaudy opening spectacle.
Clijsters won her 22nd consecutive match on the blue Open courts with a 6-3, 6-1 win against Victoria Duval, an American wild card.
Will Clijsters really retire this time? One reporter asked if this could be another break, like the one she took after having her daughter, Jada, in 2009. Or if it's the travel, perhaps she could play in a limited capacity.
Clijsters quipped: "Are you sending me out on the senior tour already?"
Clijsters joined the WTA Tour in 1997. It was the year Martina Hingis defeated Venus Williams in straight sets for her third career Grand Slam title. But Hingis would not go on to be like Graf. Instead, serves would get faster, and power would soon dominate the cagey angles that a player like Hingis was so good at creating.
"I think I have gone through a few different generations," Clijsters said."I feel very lucky that I have been able to be a part of a big generation where Venus and Serena [Williams] kind of raised women's tennis to a completely different level. So it's been an absolute honor to be a part of that."
Clijsters won her first U.S. Open in 2005, a sunny presence who had ended her engagement to Australian player Lleyton Hewitt. She had a chilly rivalry with fellow Belgian Justine Henin, two women from a small country who never seemed to bond over what they had in common.
But her most meaningful contribution came not from these modest entanglements but from more enduring ties.
In 2008, Clijsters became a mother.
It is a milestone that traditionally heralds the end of a tennis player's career, and it certainly took Clijsters out of the game. The exit path was well-worn, but Clijsters didn't take it to its end. Instead, she announced her return to tennis in March 2009 and, in her third tournament back, won the U.S. Open.
It was a small and revolutionary act. There are women the world over who engage in the same dance and wonder whether somehow they give up being truly excellent at one thing to be pretty good at several. And there was Clijsters, who literally held her U.S. Open Trophy in victory as her beaming daughter rushed to bask in the moment with her mother.
To see her interact with Jada on Ashe that night was to see a woman who had managed to be excellent at both simultaneously.
But maybe not forever.
In 2010, Clijsters again won the U.S. Open, and in 2011, she won the Australian. For more than two years she balanced tennis and her family, and increasingly battled the injuries that affect tennis players.
It has been quite a second act, but Clijsters wants to expand her family with her husband, Brian Lynch, a former professional basketball player. Might there be a third?
"No," Clijsters said, smiling. "No."
But even as she celebrated a first-round win, her coach Carl Maes was quickly exiting the player box to go scout the two women Clijsters could play next. Both player and coach, of course, are still on the job.
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Day 15
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• Murray beats Djokovic, wins Open
• Garber: No more baggage for Andy Murray
• McManus: Djokovic runs out of steam
• Wilansky: Andy Murray gets the big trophy
• Stats & Info: A first on many fronts
• SportsNation: Best final ever?
• McManus: Serena chasing history
• Serena: Don't hold out top player
• How many more Slams for Serena?
• Tandon: Djoker-Murray the best rivalry?
• Hot Button: Who will win the final?
• Bodo: No secrets in Djokovic-Murray final
• Digital Serve: Men's final preview
• Murray wins U.S. Open title
• 5 things we learned in men's final
• Digital Serve: Murray's 1st Grand Slam
Day 14
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• Serena Williams wins 15th Slam title
• Djokovic beats Ferrer to reach final
• Errani, Vinci win U.S. Open doubles crown
• Garber: Serena's legacy -- sustained excellence
• Fagan: What a summer for Serena
• Garber: Novak Djokovic shines brightly
• Agassi joins Court of Champions
• Tandon: Separating fat from fitness
• Djokovic reaches U.S. Open final
• Digital Serve: Men's final preview
• Catching up with Capriati
• Chris Evert's take on Serena Williams
• 5 things we learned on Day 14
Day 13
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• Murray in final; Djoker postponed
• Women's final postponed
• Garber: Murray beats Berdych, adversity
• McManus: Azarenka a true test for Serena
• Hair-raising reasons for a roof
• Debate: Who will win the women's final?
• Digital Serve: Can Serena be stopped?
• Murray reaches the U.S. Open final
• Five things we learned on Day 13
Day 12
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• McManus: Azarenka making plenty of noise
• Tandon: The grandest of Slams for the Bryans
• Garber: The day Pete Sampras' fire returned
• Bryant: Djokovic toughest when it matters most
• McManus: Tennis pros lean on partners
• Reason behind Louis Armstrong Stadium
• Playbook: Bryans the best twins ever
• A look back at Sampras' final run
• Get kids in shape
• Adena Andrews has a snack
• Five things we learned
• Digital Serve: Men's semifinal preview
• Digital Serve: Women's final preview
• Williams Cruises Past Errani
• Azarenka Beats Sharapova
Day 11
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Garber: Novak Djokovic playing carefree
• McManus: Ferrer slugs his way to semis
• McManus: Day 12 Preview
• Fagan: Ball boy's goal is to inspire
• Andrews: Graffiti mecca a must-see
• Grantland: The purity of Roddick
• Grantland: How did Berdych beat Federer?
• 5 things we learned on Day 11
• Ferrer-Tipsarvic battle on
• Will we see a boycott?
• Digital Serve: Day 12 preview
• Adam Sandler lights it up
Day 10
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Garber: Roddick says goodbye for final time
• McManus: Roddick masters the media
• Ubha: Five things we'll miss about Roddick
• Bryant: Roddick, Clijsters leave void
• Andy Roddick photo gallery
• McManus: Sharapova reigns after the rain
• Garber: Light lift for men, Sharapova rolls
• Rank 'em: Top 10 U.S. tennis players
• Garber: College a good investment for pros?
• McManus: Riding Olympic wave
• Del Potro ends Roddick's run
• Roddick's emotional farewell
• Roddick calls it a career
• Roddick's legacy
• Murray escapes Cilic
• Serena crushes Ivanovic
• Sharapova comes back to beat Bartoli
• Digital Serve: Day 11 preview
• 5 things we learned on Day 10
• Federer stunned by Berdych
Day 9
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Howard: Anonymous Novak?
• Garber: Andy Roddick's fate will have to wait
• McManus: Azarenka prevails under pressure
• Tandon: Conventional is "in" for Serena
• Fagan: King honors Pat Summitt
• Playbook: American Express shows savvy
• Andrews: Harp player for your entertainment
• Azarenka wins a thriller
• Digital Serve: Day 10 preview
• U.S. Open 5 Things We Learned
• John McEnroe On Roddick
Day 8
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Garber: Andy Murray's confidence swelling
• McManus: Long drought ends for Ivanovic
• McManus: Radwanska labors, loses to Vinci
• Garber: Serena Williams' near-perfect game
• Garber: Fish pulls out of the Open
• Tandon: Gut-check for Andy Roddick
• Andrews: U.S. Open serving up technology
• Mardy Fish withdraws
• Original home of U.S. Open
• What's next for Mardy Fish?
• Digital Serve
• Digital Serve: Day 8 preview
• Serena Williams perfect in win
• 5 things we learned on Day 8

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