Stop and shop -- and shots
Lively Jankovic in market for title
By Bud Collins | May 20, 2007
ROME -- One year ago, she came to Rome to die. Not a bad place for it.
Did she book a location in the Catacombs? Or the lovely Protestant Cemetery, where the poets Keats and Shelley are planted?
"No,
no, no," says the effervescent Jelena "Jelly" Jankovic, seated in a
small room at Il Foro Italico. She clarifies, meaning death as a tennis
player.
"I decided I would enter here to say goodbye to the game. Rome is also the best place to go shopping."
She
was so desperate and discouraged about life on the WTA Tour that she
decided to go back to college in Belgrade. Better, at least, than doing
a Tosca -- taking a high dive from the Castel Sant'Angelo into the
River Tiber. Jankovic's ranking had taken a similar plunge, to No. 40,
as she lost match after match.
However, abruptly, instead of an
11th straight defeat, "I started my comeback," she says. "I don't know
why. I guess it was my destiny to get it together in Rome." She beat a
good Russian, Elena Likhovtseva, and was on her way to the
quarterfinals. "I lost to Venus [Williams], but I beat her a few weeks
later at Wimbledon."
Destiny is working well for Jelly, the
22-year-old Belle of Belgrade with a sweet game and personality. Today,
another Russian is in her way, 2004 US Open champ and third-ranked
Svetlana Kuznetsova, but it's at the top, the Italian Open final. If
Jankovic passes that test she'll be No. 4, and among the favorites at
the forthcoming French Open.
She beat Kuznetsova at last year's
US Open en route to the semis, and finished the year at No. 12. Quite a
resurrection in 12 months.
Jankovic got her title shot yesterday
by laboring for 69 minutes to beat Swiss lefty Patty Schnyder, 6-1,
6-3, a screwy encounter during which serves melted like gelato in the
fierce sun. There were more breaks than in the old days of Boston's
Charles Street Jail: 12 in 16 games.
Jankovic held four times, but Schnyder found serve as impossible to hold as an electric eel.
Kuznetsova got past No. 14 Daniela Hantuchova, 6-4, 6-2, with powerful forehands, and has a 2-1 lifetime edge on Jankovic.
Schnyder,
No. 17, the eliminator of Serena Williams in the quarterfinals,
couldn't duplicate that fine performance because, she says, "Every time
I thought I had an opening in a corner, Jelena was there. I had a bad
cold, some trouble breathing, but her movement was too good. She takes
the ball very early, and that's difficult to play."
Jankovic says
she had to move into her strokes quickly because her formative years
were spent on fast hard courts at Nick Bollettieri's tennis camp at
Bradenton, Fla., not her native clay in Belgrade. Her rip-roaring
double-barreled backhand is her best stroke "because I'm a natural
lefty, with a strong left arm. But when it was time to learn to write,
my parents showed me righthanded and I do everything righthanded."
Since
conversion from southpawing also happened to three Hall of Famers --
Ken Rosewall, Maureen Connolly, and Margaret Court -- it can't be too
bad.
Jankovic says, "I tried to keep the ball on Patty's
backhand. She's so terrific with spin, but she can't do as much damage
from the backhand side."
A Florida homeowner for almost a decade,
might Jankovic be a candidate for US citizenship? American tennis
forces need some help.
Laughing again, she says, "Oh, no. In
Serbia, we're doing OK, maybe better than you. Especially for such a
small country which could fit in . . . where? Maybe Nick's place in
Bradenton?
"We've got me and [No. 8] Ana Ivanovic. And for men, [No. 5] Novak Djokovic. This is all new. We don't have much tradition."
Jankovic remembers watching Monica Seles winning the Italian title seven years ago on TV.
"Monica
-- also a Serb -- is my heroine," she says. "I couldn't even dream of
winning it -- but maybe now. And little kids will be watching me.
That's thrilling."
She loves the give and take of press
conferences, a smart lady who promises to finish her college degree.
But yesterday, she was eager to leave my interview -- to go shopping.
"I have to spend some of this money," she says. "A necklace, I think."
Could
be $181,980 for winning, or a minimum of $92,410. I wished her happy
glitters. Why not? Any woman will tell you Roman shopping is to die for.