The Commercial Appeal

Sharapova comeback complete in French

World No. 1 has career Grand Slam

- By Howard Fendrich

PARIS — Sidelined in 2008 by a right shoulder that needed surgery, Maria Sharapova decided to use the free time to study a new language, the one spoken at the only Grand Slam tournament she had yet to win.

“I found a French school close to my house,” she recalled, “and I did private lessons every single day for three months.”

Sharapova cut short those classes when it was time to begin the slow, painful rehab and get her shoulder back in shape. About 3½ years later, on Saturday at Roland Garros, Sharapova put all of that hard work to good use — and even spoke a little French during the victory speech she said she often wondered if she’d ever get a chance to deliver.

Whipping big serves with that rebuilt shoulder, putting forehands and backhands right on lines, and moving well on the red surface she once worried made her look like a “cow on ice,” Sharapova beat Sara Errani of Italy 6-3, 62 to win her first French Open and become the 10th woman with a career Grand Slam.

“It’s a wonderful moment in my career,” the 25-year- old Sharapova told the crowd in French, before switching to English to add: “I’m really speechless. It’s been such a journey for me to get to this stage.”

So much came so easily for Sharapova at the start: Wimbledon champion at age 17; No. 1 in the rankings at 18; U.S. Open champion at 19; Australian Open champion at 20. But a shoulder operation in October 2008 made everything tougher. She didn’t play singles from August 2008 until the following May, when her ranking fell to 126th.

“It wasn’t getting better as soon as everyone thought it would,” she said about her shoulder. “That was the frustratin­g thing, because it was like, ‘When is this going to end?’ ”

It took until her 10th postsurger­y Grand Slam tournament for Sharapova to get back to a major final, at Wimbledon last July, but she lost. She also reached the Australian Open final this January, but she lost again.

A global celebrity with millions upon millions of dollars in endorsemen­t deals, Sharapova put herself through the grind required to get back to the top of her sport — and to get better than ever on red clay.

She’s unbeaten in 16 matches on it this season, including titles at Stuttgart and Rome.

“I could have said, ‘I don’t need this. I have money; I have fame; I have victories; I have Grand Slams.’ But when your love for something is bigger than all those things, you continue to keep getting up in the morning when it’s freezing outside, when you know that it can be the most difficult day, when nothing is working, when you feel like the belief sometimes isn’t there from the outside world, and you seem so small,” said Sharapova, who will return to No. 1 for the first time since June 2008 in Monday’s WTA rankings. “But you can achieve great things when you don’t listen to all those things.”

Errani, for her part, shrugged off those who said that at 5-4½, she couldn’t compete against the 6-2 Sharapova.

“I started badly, and that’s what bothers me the most,” said the 21st-seeded Errani, who admitted she was overcome by nerves at the outset. “You can’t do that against players like her, because she was only going to get better once she loosened up.”

The second-seeded Sharapova raced to a 4-0 lead within 14 minutes and produced 12 of the match’s first 13 winners.

As lopsided as the result was, Errani made Sharapova earn it with winner after winner, and a 37-12 edge in that category.

“She hits very hard, very flat and very deep shots, barely over the net. She never let me do what I wanted to do. I always felt like I was being pushed around,” Errani said. “I didn’t play my best, but she also deserves credit for that.”

 ?? Michel Euler/associated Press ?? 2012 French Open champ Maria Sharapova had shoulder surgery in 2008 and slowly worked back to the top. “It’s been such a journey for me to get to this stage,” she said.
Michel Euler/associated Press 2012 French Open champ Maria Sharapova had shoulder surgery in 2008 and slowly worked back to the top. “It’s been such a journey for me to get to this stage,” she said.

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