Maria Sharapova loses in 4th round
NEW YORK -- Grit was not going to be enough to get Maria Sharapova through this one.
Not with nine double faults, including three in a row.
Not with a total of 36 unforced errors.

And certainly not with No. 1-seeded Caroline Wozniacki of Denmark across the net Monday in the fourth round of the U.S. Open, doing "what she does best," as Sharapova herself put it: getting to nearly every ball and hammering it back, stretching points on and on and on until her opponent misses the mark.
It added up to a 6-3, 6-4 victory for 2009 U.S. Open runner-up Wozniacki over Sharapova, who has failed to make it even as far as the quarterfinals at Flushing Meadows since winning the 2006 title.
"I felt like I was playing well out there," Wozniacki said, then made sure everyone understood a key concept by adding, "I made her do those errors."
Indeed, she did. Rare is the opponent who can trade powerful baseline groundstrokes with three-time Grand Slam champion Sharapova and figure out a way to put her on the defensive, but that's exactly what Wozniacki managed to do as early evening shadows crept across the blue court in Arthur Ashe Stadium.
"When she had the opportunity to step in," the 14th-seeded Sharapova said, her voice a barely audible monotone, "she took it and went for her shots."
It's the first victory for Wozniacki in three career meetings against Sharapova, but they hadn't met since 2008. In that time, the 20-year-old Wozniacki has grown as a player and built a huge supply of confidence, thanks to her Grand Slam final debut in New York and, most recently, her 18-1 record since Wimbledon.
"I've improved a lot, not only physically, but also I believe in myself more. I believe I can do it," said Wozniacki, who is ranked No. 2 but received the top seeding at the U.S. Open because No. 1 Serena Williams withdrew. "Also, I think I can mix up my game a little bit more."
Wozniacki has lost only 10 games so far; no one has conceded fewer en route to the U.S. Open quarterfinals since 1999. But here is what might be the most remarkable statistic of all: After making only 10 unforced errors against Sharapova, Wozniacki has made 40 in four matches, and her opponents have made 123.
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"Obviously," Sharapova said, "she's at the top of her game."
Wozniacki carries a 12-match winning streak into her quarterfinal against 45th-ranked Dominika Cibulkova, who eliminated 2004 U.S. Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova 7-5, 7-6 (4).
The 5-foot-3 Cibulkova, a semifinalist at the 2009 French Open, was treated for a left leg problem between sets but still managed to scurry around, covering ground, to improve to 2-8 against top-15 players this season -- with both victories against the 11th-seeded Kuznetsova, who double-faulted 10 times Monday.
Asked to assess Wozniacki, Cibulkova said admiringly: "She's really consistent, and she can keep the level that she's playing the whole match."
The other quarterfinal on that side of the draw will be No. 31 Kaia Kanepi of Estonia against No. 7 Vera Zvonareva, who overwhelmed 38th-ranked Andrea Petkovic of Germany 6-1, 6-2 Monday night. Zvonareva, the runner-up at Wimbledon in July, reached the U.S. Open quarterfinals for the first time.

Earlier, Kanepi did the same by coming back to defeat 2009 U.S. Open semifinalist Yanina Wickmayer of Belgium 0-6, 7-6 (2), 6-1.
After getting off to a terrible start against the 15th-seeded Wickmayer, Kanepi turned the match around completely, then explained of her play down the stretch, "I was, like, in the zone or something."
Sharapova accumulated eight break points against Wozniacki, but converted only one.
"That's pretty bad, to say the least," Sharapova acknowledged.
Still, considered one of the toughest competitors on the women's tour, Sharapova rarely departs quietly, and she ratcheted up her trademark, high-octave shrieks right along with her skilled shotmaking Monday.
"I knew that she wasn't going to go away," Wozniacki said. "I knew she was going to hang in there and keep fighting 'til the end."
Sharapova saved Wozniacki's first match point with a gutsy volley winner while serving at 5-3 in the second set. That was part of some strong net play: Sharapova won 16 of 18 points when she pushed forward, but that efficiency would not suffice.
Sharapova delivered 12 of the match's first 15 winners. But she also was responsible for 12 of the first 15 unforced errors.
When Wozniacki served for the first set, Sharapova held a break point at 30-40, and they played a 24-stroke point that ended with Sharapova pushing a backhand long. Later, on Wozniacki's third set point, there came a 26-stroke exchange that concluded with -- yes, that's right -- another errant backhand from Sharapova.
"That's great tennis, when there's good rallies. I think it's good for the crowd, as well," Wozniacki said. "It just feels great when you feel like you're hitting the ball right -- it's in the middle of your racket. The ball does whatever you want it to do."
U.S. Open 2010
Women's singles:
Kim Clijsters
Men's singles:
Rafael Nadal Women's doubles:
Vania King and Yaroslava Shvedova
Men's doubles:
Bob and Mike Bryan
Mixed doubles:
Liezel Huber and Bob Bryan
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Day 15
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• Garber: U.S. Open snapshots
• Howard: Rafa and the rest
• Bodo: No end to Rafael Nadal's upside
• Nadal completes career Slam with title
• Garber: Rafa completes breathtaking journey
• Garber: Nadal's three-peat no small feat
• Ubha: Where does Nadal's season rank?
• King, Shvedova win women's doubles title
• Rafael Nadal wins the U.S. Open
• Digital Serve: U.S. Open postmortem
Day 14
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• Garber: Djokovic's prayers answered
• Rain postpones final until Monday
• Howard: This Clijsters not your friend
• Howard: Could Rafa be best ever with win?
• Bodo: Prospects for a Djokovic win dire
• Sock, Gavrilova capture junior titles
Day 13
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• Nadal, Djokovic advance to final
• Kim Clijsters wallops Vera Zvonareva
• Garber: Clijsters' victory sweet -- and sour
• Garber: Federer shrinks when it matters
• McManus: Rafa one step from career Slam
• Tandon: Five incentives for the finalists
• Bodo: Why Zvonareva will win the Open
• Hanging with LZ
• Americans face off in junior final
• Women's final preview
• Nadal beats Youzhny
• Djokovic edges Federer in five
• Digital Serve: Men's final preview
• Clijsters wins U.S. Open
Day 12
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• Clijsters, Zvonareva advance
• Garber: Hiccups don't derail Clijsters'
• Howard: Youzhny, Djokovic look to spoil
• SportsNation: Take your Grand Slam quiz
• Greg Garber chat wrap
• Clijsters, Zvonareva to meet in women's final
• Bryan brothers win men's doubles title
• Clijsters beats Venus in three
• Zvonareva takes out Wozniacki
• Digital Serve: Super Saturday preview
Day 11
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• Nadal, Youzhny to meet in semifinals
• Huber, Bryan win mixed doubles title
• Garber: Nadal and the U.S. Open in sync
• Garber: Opportunity beckons for Youzhny
• McManus: Hingis happy to surface
• Ubha: Time we appreciate Venus Williams
• Rafa rolls in straight sets
• Youzhny escapes in five sets
Day 10
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• Women | Men
• Bopanna-Qureshi to face Bryans in final
• Garber: Fed magnificent amid mayhem
• Garber: The Spanish specialists
• Ubha: Assessing the men's chances
• End of an era for U.S. Davis Cup team
• Vera Zvonareva reaches semifinals
• Djokovic beats Monfils
• Wozniacki wins
• Federer mauls Soderling
• Digital Serve: Day 11 preview
Day 9
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• Women | Men
• Garber: Venus dresses down Schiavone
• Garber: No secrets between Fed, Soderling
• McManus: So long to the U.S. men
• Wawrinka beats Querrey
• Digital Serve: Will Federer win?
• The reign of Rafa
• What's not to like about Clijsters?
• Venus Williams wins in straight sets
Day 8
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• Men | Women
• Garber: Wozniacki's game clean as a whistle
• Ubha: Djokovic brings the heat
• Garber: French finalists rediscovering game
• Wozniacki takes down Sharapova
• Patrick McEnroe resigns
• Digital Serve: Day 9 preview
Day 7
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• Men | Women
• Garber: Nadal's search for the final piece
• Ubha: Roddick heads list of Week 1 foibles
• Tandon: Offense versus defense
• Riled Up: Tennis line judges
• Nadal defeats Simon
• Venus takes down Peer
• Andy Murray upset
• Digital Serve: Day 8 preview
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