Serena Williams not thinking about 2009
NEW YORK -- Chuckling and rolling her eyes, Serena Williams dismissed questions Monday about her tirade at a line judge over a foot-fault call at the end of her loss in the 2009 U.S. Open semifinals.
The 29-year-old American is back at the Grand Slam tournament for the first time since that infamous outburst during a match against eventual champion Kim Clijsters. Williams missed last year's U.S. Open after having surgery on her right foot.
Williams played coy at first during a pre-tournament news conference Monday when she was asked what she remembers most from the way her last U.S. Open ended and how "that controversial episode" might have affected the public's perception of her.
"You mean in the singles or doubles?" Williams asked.
Then she added: "I just remember I lost, and that was that. I got really popular. A lot of people were telling me they thought I was super cool, that they never saw me so intense. So, yeah, it was awesome."
Asked whether she learned anything from what happened in 2009, Williams replied: "I don't know. I don't think about it. Are you still thinking about it?"
She rolled her eyes as she continued: "Oh, my God. That was, like, two years ago. This is, like, two years later."
During the Sept. 12, 2009, match at Flushing Meadows, Williams was two points from losing when she was called for a foot fault -- a call rarely, if ever, made at that stage of such a significant match. It resulted in a double-fault for Williams, moving Clijsters one point from victory.
Williams paused, retrieved a ball to serve again and then stopped. She stepped toward the lineswoman, screaming, cursing and shaking the ball at her. Williams was penalized a point and, because it happened to come on match point, the semifinal ended right there; Clijsters won 6-4, 7-5.
Williams, whose 13 Grand Slam singles titles include three from the U.S. Open, drew an immediate $10,000 fine from the U.S. Tennis Association and later a record $82,500 fine from the Grand Slam administrator.
She also faced a "probationary period" at Grand Slam tournaments in 2010 and 2011, and was told she could be suspended from the U.S. Open if she had another "major offense."
Clijsters, who won the 2005, 2009 and 2010 U.S. Opens, withdrew from the tournament because of a stomach muscle injury.
"It's sad that she's not here. But, you know, when you're injured, you're injured. There's nothing you can really do about it," Williams said. "Last year, I was injured, and there was nothing I could do about it."
Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press
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Day 15
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• Djokovic beats Nadal to win U.S. Open
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• Bodo: Djokovic, Stosur did it their way
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• SportsNation: Fine fit the crime?
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• Highlight: Djokovic wins U.S. Open
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Day 14
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• Garber: Serena loses cool, then match
• Bernstein: Match of life for Stosur
• espnW: Final step in Serena's comeback
• McManus: Time is now to appreciate Serena
• Howard: The growing aura of Novak Djokovic
• Hot Button: Who will win the men's final?
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• Open Update: Djoker and Rafa at it again
• End of the Roger Federer era?
• Analysis: What happened to Serena?
• Highlight: Stosur beats Serena
• What do we make of the outburst?
Day 13
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• Recap: Djokovic beats Federer in five sets
• Garber: That Serena can pack a punch
• Garber: Federer, again, can't close the deal
• McManus: Rafa gets much-needed day off
• espnW: Don't discount Stosur
• Analysis: What happened to Federer?
• Highlight: Stunning comeback by Djoker
Day 12
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• Recap: Nadal, Murray reach semifinals
• Howard: For Djokovic, mind over matter
• Garber: Nadal foils Roddick's final four hopes
• McManus: Disappointed Izzy falls to Murray
• Timeline: Serena's Grand Slam career
• Garber: Players remember events of Sept. 11
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• espnW: The anticipated showdown
• Phillips on the problem with Djokovic
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• David Foster Wallace's classic Federer profile.
• Nadal crushes Roddick in three
• Murray thwarts Isner
• Digital Serve: Men's semifinal preview
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• Michelle Obama visits the U.S. Open
Day 11
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• Garber: Federer beats elements, then Tsonga
• Bernstein: Woz sets up showdown with Serena
• Howard: Players ace USTA over schedule shift
• McManus: Andy Roddick revisits his roots
• Bernstein: Serena raises level when it counts
• Garber: Happier days for Nadal, Murray
• Roddick-Ferrer moves to tiny Court 13
• Howard: The tangled web atop men's tennis
• Bernstein: Teenage dreams deferred
• Tandon: Why tennis and fashion mix
• Player safety debate
• Nadal, Murray on to quarters
• Serena sails into semifinals
• Roddick upset with court
• Schedule irritates Nadal
• Djokovic beats countryman
• Digital Serve: How will Rafa, Murray fare?
• Who will win Woz versus Serena?
• Johnette Howard on weather delays
• Federer beats down Tsonga
Day 10
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• Garber: Players prepare for a daunting grind
• Garber: Perilous conditions stirs controversy
• Howard: Fed deficit? Not in confidence
• Bernstein: Wozniacki stays positive
• Vote: Who has the best wet-court game?
• Kerber, Pennetta vying for spot in semis
• Roddick on unplayable conditions
• Nadal not happy with courts
• Serena tired of waiting
Day 9
Day 8
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• Recaps: Men | Women
• espnW: Wozniacki shows fight
• Garber: Thought-free Tsonga consumes Fish
• Garber: The physical hardships of Nadal
• Garber: Djokovic survives early scare
• espnW: Serena making it look too easy
• MacGregor: Fed's grace amid the volatility
• Serena takes care of Ivanovic
• Djokovic moves on to quarterfinals
• Tsonga beats Fish in five
• Digital Serve: Day 9 preview
• Open Update: Roddick versus Ferrer
• Wozniacki holds off Kuznetsova
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