Clijsters’s win marred by controversial finish

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – Belgian comeback queen Kim  Clijsters knocked out Serena Williams in a wildly controversial finish on Saturday to advance to the final of the U.S. Open and  become the poster girl for working mothers.

Just weeks after returning to the tour from a two-year break  to start a family, Clijsters beat the defending champion 6-4 7-5  after a day-long rain delay at Flushing Meadows

At 5-6, 15-30 down in the second set, Williams whacked her second serve but the lineswoman called her on a foot-fault that put her at match point down.

The American’s subsequent expletive-laced tirade directed at  the lineswoman resulted in a point penalty — and the end of the  match.“I swear to God I’m… going to take this… ball and shove  it down your… throat, you hear that? I swear to God,” Williams  said.

After the line-judge reported the second seed to the umpire  for verbal abuse, Williams added: “I never said I would kill  you, are you serious?”

Clijsters faced Danish teenager  Caroline Wozniacki, in yesterday’s final after Wozniacki defeated unseeded and error-prone  Belgian Yanina Wickmayer 6-3 6-3 in the other semi-final.

Earlier on Saturday, third seed Rafael Nadal needed just 34  minutes to complete a rain-delayed 7-6 7-6 6-0 victory over  Chile’s Fernando Gonzalez and gain a spot in the semi-finals.

The contentious ending of Clijsters’s match marred her  well-earned victory.
“It’s unfortunate that a match that I was playing so well at  had to end that way,” said Clijsters, the 2005 Open champion and  former world number one.

“Obviously, I still to this point am a little confused about  what happened out there, just because I was so focused. I was  trying to win that last point. Things ended a little bit  different than I expected.”

Clijsters, the first mother to reach a grand slam final  since Evonne Goolagong at Wimbledon in 1980, missed out on the  thrill of winning match point.

“When you play that last point, whether it is a winner or by  mistake from your opponent, it’s a great feeling to have,”  Clijsters told reporters. “So, yeah, the normal feelings of winning a match weren’t  quite there.”   Williams, the 2009 Wimbledon and Australian Open champion,  could not believe her misfortune.   “All year I’ve never been foot faulted, and then suddenly in  this tournament they keep calling foot faults,” Williams said.  “I said something that I guess they gave me a point penalty for.  Unfortunately it was on match point.”

In a match delayed more than seven hours because of wet  conditions, unseeded Wickmayer made 40 unforced errors, mainly  from her booming forehand, against just 14 for Wozniacki.

“I’m in the U.S. Open final, I cannot describe it with  words,” said Wozniacki, the first Danish woman to reach a grand  slam singles final. “I’m so excited. It’s a dream come true.  “I have absolutely nothing to lose.”

Nadal resumed his quarter-final leading 7-6 6-6 with  Gonzalez serving at 2-3. The Spaniard won the first four points  to clinch the second set, and Gonzalez unravelled.The Chilean committed more unforced errors in the third set  (21) than Nadal had in the entire match (13).

“I get afraid maybe in the tiebreaker,” said Gonzalez. “I  went for it. I did a good play, miss one. The next play I miss  another one, then I miss another one.
“What else can I do? I try my best.”