Wednesday, March 4, 2009

MONTERREY, Mexico (AP)—Sixth-seeded Iveta Benesova celebrated her career-best ranking by defeating Shahar Peer of Israel 6-4, 6-2 in the first round of the Monterrey Open on Tuesday.

Thanks to reaching the Hobart final in January and the Acapulco semifinals last week, Benesova improved her ranking to No. 31 on Monday, surpassing the No. 33 she reached in 2005.

After starting off 3-0 down to Peer, Benesova cranked up her game and didn’t give Peer another break chance, leading three more Czechs into the second round.

Barbora Zahlavova Strycova edged Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 (4), and Petra Cetkovska beat Jarmila Groth of Slovakia 6-3, 6-2.

Second-seeded Marion Bartoli of France served five aces and won 72 percent of her first service points to take had an easy 6-2, 6-4 victory over Michaella Krajicek of the Netherlands. Bartoli will next play Romania’s Edina Gallovits, who rallied to beat Magdalena Rybarikova of Slovakia 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.

Third-seeded Italian Flavia Pennetta, coming off the Acapulco final last weekend, swept past Jill Craybas of the United States 6-1, 6-0 in 56 minutes and will next meet Barbora Zahlavova Strycova of the Czech Republic in the second round.

Fifth-seeded Agnes Szavay of Hungary eliminated Pauline Parmentier of France 6-2, 6-2 and will next meet qualifier Vania King of the United States, who beat Klara Zakopalova of the Czech Republic 6-1, 6-4.

Other winners included Melinda Czink of Hungary, Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine, and Roberta Vinci of Italy.



Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Clinton to join King for tennis at Garden

NEW YORK (AP)—Billie Jean King will be joined by Bill Clinton when women’s tennis returns to Madison Square Garden.

The former president is to participate in a ceremony honoring King during the Billie Jean King Cup on Monday night. The one-night exhibition features top-ranked Serena Williams vs. Ana Ivanovic and Venus Williams vs. Jelena Jankovic in one-set semifinals. The winners will then compete in a best-of-three set final, with $1.2 million in total prize money.

The tournament is aimed at bolstering tennis among youngsters. It’s the first women’s match at the Garden since the season-ending WTA tournament in 2000.

King will join commentators John McEnroe and Mary Carillo in the booth for HBO, which will broadcast the event live.



Monday, March 2, 2009

Boris Becker gets engaged, again, on TV game show

BERLIN (Reuters) – Tennis champion Boris Becker startled viewers of a Saturday night game show when he said he would marry former girlfriend, Dutch model Lilly Kerssenberg, in June.

Some 9.7 million viewers in Germany watched the unexpected announcement on the show "You Bet ..?" in which both Becker, 41, and Kerssenberg, 32, were guests.

Later in the program, Becker had to jump through a burning heart of fire, his antics upstaging other guests, including Hollywood star Jennifer Anniston.

Becker and Kerssenberg had split up at the end of 2007 after a roughly two-year long relationship and last year Becker announced his engagement to glamorous jewelry designer Sandy Meyer-Woelden after seeing her for only a few months.

"Last summer I went a bit off track but she took me back. Now I don't want to let her go," Becker said on the show. The program's presenter, Thomas Gottschalk, looked astonished and said: "No, not again?"

German papers and society magazines lap up stories on the red-haired champion's love life, not least as many of his girlfriends, including Kerssenberg, bear a striking resemblance to his ex-wife Barbara with whom he has two sons.

"Will Boris keep his word this time?" was the headline on the front page of top-selling Sunday paper Bild am Sonntag, with a picture of the couple kissing.

The wedding is to be in exclusive resort of St. Moritz, Switzerland.

"Boom boom" Becker, who earned the nickname for the thud of his powerful serve, won over the crowd at Wimbledon's center court in 1985 when he won the tournament at 17.

He stacked up six grand slam titles but in recent years, his life has been a roller coaster. He lost much of his fortune, had a messy divorce and became the butt of jokes for his flings.

He fathered a child with a Russian model after a brief sexual encounter in the laundry cupboard of a Japanese restaurant in London after his final Wimbledon match while his wife was pregnant.

In 2002, he was found guilty of tax evasion, but not jailed.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Djokovic wins first '09 title

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Novak Djokovic won his first title of the season Saturday, beating David Ferrer of Spain 7-5, 6-3 in the final of the Dubai Tennis Championships.

The third-ranked Djokovic finished off Ferrer with an ace that was that was originally called out but challenged by the Serb.

"That was an unusual way to finish the match, and something like this has never happened to me before," Djokovic said. "But what worked for me during the match was that I mixed the pace well, which I think, David does not like at all."

Djokovic was playing in his first final this year. He won the Australian Open in 2008, and added the Masters Cup title at the end of last season. At this year's Australian Open, he retired against Andy Roddick in the quarter-finals.

The top-seeded Djokovic broke Ferrer in the sixth game of the first set, but the fourth-seeded Spaniard broke back to 4-3. The players traded breaks again, but Djokovic got the decisive break in the final game of the set.

"This was a tough match because David is a very tough opponent," Djokovic said. "He is one of the hardest working players on the tour, and he just keeps running down every ball. He makes you earn every point."

In the second set, Djokovic led 2-0 before Ferrer recovered with a break in the seventh game. But Djokovic immediately broke back to lead 5-3, and then saved a break point before winning on the challenged ace.

"Nobody is a favourite in a final," Djokovic said. "Everyone has the motivation to do well. But I was physically and emotionally really involved with this tournament and to win it is a great feeling, because Dubai has a history of having one of the strongest fields on the tour. And despite some players pulling out, it was still a tough field."

Both top-ranked Rafael Nadal and No. 2 Roger Federer pulled out with injuries. Andy Murray withdrew ahead of the quarter-finals because of a viral infection.

Ferrer was also playing in his first final of the season.

"I played a very good game and I am very happy with what I did, but he was the better player in the end," Ferrer said. "However, I really enjoyed my week and am looking forward to more such consistent weeks in the future."

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Fish bests Spadea to advance at Delray Beach

DELRAY BEACH, Fla., (AP)—Mardy Fish reached the quarterfinals of the Delray Beach International Tennis Championships with a 6-4, 6-1 win over Vince Spadea on Thursday.

“We’ve always had tough matches,” Fish said. “We’ve had three-setters most every time if not every time. I think I’ve figured out what to do.”

Fish is 4-1 against Spadea, and all their previous meetings went the full three sets. Fish, who reached the final in 2003, is hoping to become the first top seed in the 17-year history of this tournament to score the winner’s trophy.

“It’s fun to be the marked guy and everybody is gunning for you,” said Fish, who reached the final in San Jose, Calif., earlier this month.

Fish will play sixth-seeded Florent Serra, who outlasted Mischa Zverev 6-3, 4-6, 6-4.

In Thursday night’s matches, seventh-seeded Jeremy Chardy reached his third quarterfinal of the year with a 7-6 (4), 7-5 win over Andrey Golubev.

Chardy reached his first career final in Johannesburg earlier this month.

Former Australian Open finalist Marcos Baghdatis, who outlasted close childhood friend, Dudi Sela 7-6 (7), 6-3 will face Chardy in the quarterfinals.

Baghdatis led 5-0 in the first-set tiebreaker, but Sela refused to give up without a fight and held one set point in the tiebreaker.

In the second set, Baghdatis raced to a 5-0 lead but lost the next three games before closing out the match.

“He wasn’t going to give up and I’m pretty happy I won,” said Baghdatis, coming off an injury plagued 2008. “I went through a tough match today and I’m looking forward to the next match.”

Spadea, who reached at least the quarters here every year since 2004, has been fighting a virus and fever since playing his first-round match for his first tour-level victory since Los Angeles in August.

“I think there are some factors, and those factors being that he’s improved, he’s playing well and I was under-conditioned,” Spadea said. “I just didn’t have a lot of energy out there and my whole game thrives on energy and grinding and getting an extra ball back and winning ugly, really.”

Serra, who was behind 3-0 in the third set, won the match with an exquisite crosscourt drop volley from his heels.

“It’s very important for me to be in the quarterfinal,” Serra said. “I need to serve better tomorrow because he serves very good and my return is OK, but I need to focus on my own service percentage.”

The two other quarterfinal pairings were decided on Wednesday—qualifier Evgeny Korolev will face Guillermo Garcia-Lopez and 2000 Delray Beach champion Stefan Koubek faces Christophe Rochus.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Djokovic into final four at Dubai

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (Ticker)—Top seed Novak Djokovic is through to the semifinals of the Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships after a 6-3, 6-4 victory over Marin Cilic on Thursday.

Fifth seed Cilic, 20, has been in brilliant form this year, winning tournaments in Chennai and Zagreb and losing only one match prior to today.

But the world No. 19 struggled to find the required consistency and was broken once in each set by Djokovic, who saved all six break points he faced.

“I was willing and trying in the last three matches to find this exact rhythm, and that’s what I did today,” Djokovic said. “I think the key today was movement and focus. I was really trying to move well in the point, be patient and just wait for the chances.

“I needed to make kind of a combination of the game, an aggressive game and then a patient game at the same time, which I think I did well.”

The world No. 3, Djokovic is now the clear favorite to pick up his first title of the season after second seed Andy Murray pulled out of the tournament with a virus prior to his quarterfinal against Richard Gasquet.

The British No. 1 has only lost one match all year, picking up titles in Doha and Rotterdam, but he revealed he has been struggling with the illness since returning home from Australia last month.

“I’ll go back home to London and I’m hoping I’ll be okay in the next three or four days,” said Murray, the world No. 4. “I’ll then see what happens with it.”

Djokovic will face third seed Gilles Simon in the last four after he defeated fellow Frenchman Fabrice Santoro, 7-6 (7-3), 6-1.

It was a farewell appearance in Dubai for 36-year-old Santoro, who is retiring at the end of the season.

The man nicknamed ‘The Magician’ reached the final the first time the tournament was held in 1993 and won the title 10 years later when he rose from his sick bed to defeat Morocco’s Younes El Aynaoui.

Santoro was given a model of an Arabian dhow in a special presentation held on the court after the match.

“I’m just sad because he’s going to stop at the end of the year,” Simon said of his veteran compatriot. “His last tournament (at the Paris Masters), maybe I’m going to watch every match he’s going to play because you never know what one you’re going to lose.

“But I think it’s nice for him to play the last match (in Dubai) on the centre court and to receive a prize at the end.”

In the other semifinal, Gasquet will face fourth seed David Ferrer, who was a 7-5, 6-1 winner against Russian sixth seed Igor Andreev.



Thursday, February 26, 2009

Valentine Day, Birthdays, and Other

What commercial and cultural propaganda presents as beautiful is rooted in ugly paganism but most blind followers do not know.

There is a group of practices that we can consider as the twin sister of bid'ah. Like bid'ah they flourish on the twin foundations of ignorance and outside influence. Like bid'ah they entail rituals. But unlike bid'ah the rituals have not been given an Islamic face. They are followed because they are considered an acceptable cultural practice or the hottest imported "in" thing.

Most of those who indulge in them do not know what they are doing. They are just blind followers of their equally blind cultural leaders. Little do they realize that what they consider as innocent fun may in fact be rooted in paganism. That the symbols they embrace may be symbols of unbelief. That the ideas they borrow may be products of superstition. That all of these may be a negation of what Islam stands for.

Consider Valentine's Day, a day that after dying out a well deserved death in most of Europe (but surviving in Britain and United States) has suddenly started to emerge across a good swath of Muslim countries. Who was Valentine? Why is this day observed? Legends abound, as they do in all such cases, but this much is clear: Valentine's Day began as a pagan ritual started by Romans in the 4th century BCE to honor the god Lupercus. The main attraction of this ritual was a lottery held to distribute young women to young men for "entertainment and pleasure"-- until the next year's lottery. Among other equally despicable practices associated with this day was the lashing of young women by two young men, clad only in a bit of goatskin and wielding goatskin thongs, who had been smeared with blood of sacrificial goats and dogs. A lash of the "sacred" thongs by these "holy men" was believed to make them better able to bear children.

As usual, Christianity tried, without success, to stop the evil celebration of Lupercalia. It first replaced the lottery of the names of women with a lottery of the names of the saints. The idea was that during the following year the young men would emulate the life of the saint whose name they had drawn. (The idea that you can preserve the appearance of a popular evil and yet somehow turn it to serve the purpose of virtue, has survived. Look at all those people who are still trying, helplessly, to use the formats of popular television entertainments to promote good. They might learn something from this bit of history. It failed miserably) Christianity ended up doing in Rome, and elsewhere, as the Romans did.

The only success it had was in changing the name from Lupercalia to St. Valentine's Day. It was done in CE 496 by Pope Gelasius, in honor of some Saint Valentine. There are as many as 50 different Valentines in Christian legends. Two of them are more famous, although their lives and characters are also shrouded in mystery. According to one legend, and the one more in line with the true nature of this celebration, St. Valentine was a "lovers'" saint, who had himself fallen in love with his jailer's daughter.

Due to serious troubles that accompanied such lottery, French government banned the practice in 1776. In Italy, Austria, Hungry, and Germany also the ritual vanished over the years. Earlier, it had been banned in England during the 17th century when the Puritans were strong. However in 1660 Charles II revived it. From there it also reached the New World, where enterprising Yankees spotted a good means of making money. Esther A. Howland, who produced one of the first commercial American Valentine's Day cards called--- what else--- valentines, in the 1840s, sold $5,000 worth--when $5,000 was a lot of money--the first year. The valentine industry has been booming ever since.

It is the same story with Halloween, which has otherwise normal human beings dressing like ghosts and goblins in a reenactment of an ancient pagan ritual of demon worship. Five star hotels in Muslim countries arrange Halloween parties so the rich can celebrate the superstitions of a distant period of ignorance that at one time even included the shameful practice of human sacrifice. The pagan name for that event was Samhain (pronounced sow- en). Just as in case of Valentine's Day, Christianity changed its name, but not the pagan moorings.

Christmas is another story. Today Muslim shopkeepers sell and shoppers buy Christmas symbols in Islamabad or Dubai or Cairo. To engage in a known religious celebration of another religion is bad enough. What is worse is the fact that here is another pagan celebration (Saturnalia) that has been changed in name ---and in little else--- by Christianity.

Even the celebration considered most innocent might have pagan foundations. According to one account, in pagan cultures, people feared evil spirits - especially on their birthdays. It was a common belief that evil spirits were more dangerous to a person when he or she experienced a change in their daily life, such as turning a year older. So family and friends surrounded the person with laughter and joy on their birthdays in order to protect them from evil.

How can anyone in his right mind think that Islam would be indifferent to practices seeped in anti-Islamic ideas and beliefs? Islam came to destroy paganism in all its forms and it cannot tolerate any trace of it in the lives of its followers.

Further, Islam is very sensitive about maintaining its purity and the unique identity of its followers. Islamic laws and teachings go to extra lengths to ensure it. Salat is forbidden at the precise times of sunrise, transition, and sunset to eliminate the possibility of confusion with the practice of sun worship. To the voluntary recommended fast on the tenth of Muharram, Muslims are required to add another day (9th or 11th) to differentiate it from the then prevalent Jewish practice. Muslims are forbidden to emulate the appearance of non-Muslims.

A Muslim is a Muslim for life. During joys and sorrows, during celebrations and sufferings, we must follow the one straight path --- not many divergent paths. It is a great tragedy that under the constant barrage of commercial and cultural propaganda from the forces of globalization and the relentless media machine, Muslims have begun to embrace the Valentines, the Halloween ghost, and even the Santa Claus. Given our terrible and increasing surrender to paganism the only day we should be observing is a day of mourning. Better yet it should be a day of repentance that could liberate us from all these days. And all this daze.