Marlborough Express

Halep’s grand breakthrou­gh

-

‘‘I just tried not to repeat the same as last year,’’ Halep said. ‘‘I did everything I could.’’

And when the fourth chance arrived, Halep began slowly, unable to solve Stephens, the 10th-seeded American who won her first Grand Slam title at last year’s US Open.

When Halep ended a 14-stroke point by pushing a backhand wide, Stephens owned the first set. She broke to begin the second set, then held for a 2-0 lead. It appeared she was on her way.

And then, suddenly, everything changed. Stephens started missing. A double-fault here. A forehand into the net there. A backhand wide.

While Stephens temporaril­y halted her slide, getting to 4-all, Halep used two consecutiv­e powerful forehand winners to hold in the next game. She broke to grab the second set when Stephens sailed a backhand wide, all part of a seven-game run that made it 5-0 in third.

‘‘Not the trophy I wanted,’’ Stephens said, looking at her runnerup plate, ‘‘but it’s still beautiful’’.

When the match ended, Halep dropped her racket at the baseline and covered her face with her hands. Soon enough, she was climbing up into the stands to share a big hug with her coach, Darren Cahill.

He had threatened to stop working with her, saying Halep’s negative body language and attitude were standing in her way.

Perhaps he was correct. This much is certain: Simona Halep is a Grand Slam champion, now and forever. The New Zealand women’s sevens team reached the final of the season-ending world series event in Paris but have been pipped for the overall series title by Australia.

Needing to finish two places ahead of the Aussies in the France event, the defending series champions played their part as much as they could, with a 34-7 demolition of Canada in their semifinal yesterday.

However, when Australia then took down France with a dramatic last-gasp try for a 21-17 win in their semifinal straight afterwards, the fate was sealed. It is their second series title, after their 2015-16 success, with the Black Ferns sevens having won the first three editions.

Through pool play, New Zealand had beaten England 24-12, Wales 54-7 and Ireland 17-0, before cruising past Spain 38-0 in their quarterfin­al.

Against Canada in the semifinal, it was one-way traffic, with Tyla Nathan-wong opening the scoring after a minute with a long-range try.

Meanwhile, the men’s side, out of contention for the series title, beat Kenya 24-5 and Samoa 22-17 before losing to Fiji 26-17, to set up a quarterfin­al against USA.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand