New parents Federer & Clijsters punish youngsters

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – Parent power ruled the U.S.  Open hard courts yesterday as champion Roger Federer and Kim  Clijsters put their young upstart opponents firmly in their  places to storm into the second round at Flushing Meadows.

Federer, seeking his third successive major following his  triumphs at the French Open and Wimbledon, and Clijsters were  both playing their first grand slam tournament following the  births of their respective children.

For Clijsters, it marked her first major since the 2007 Australian Open but it seemed difficult to believe she had been  away for more than two years as she pulverised 21-year-old  Ukrainian Viktoriya Kutuzova 6-1 6-1 in 58 minutes.

New father Federer, who celebrated the arrival of twin  daughters five weeks ago, took an 88-minute break from nappy  changing duties to down American grand slam debutant Devin  Britton 6-1 6-3 7-5.
Clijsters and Federer were just two of five U.S. Open  champions gracing the Arthur Ashe Court on a blockbuster  opening day of the hardcourt major.

Following them on to the arena was women’s champion Serena  Williams, who walloped fellow American Alexa Glatch 6-4 6-1.

Her sister and twice former winner Venus Williams and 2003  titlist Andy Roddick were set to complete the programme during  the night session.

Before the Americans took their places under the spotlight,  Sania Mirza and Somdev Devvarman sparked off celebrations in  their homeland as yesterday marked the first time a man and a  woman from India reached the second round of the same major.

“For a long time… I was the only one playing singles in  the main draw for the grand slams, and it’s great that Somdev  is playing so well. I’m really happy that we have two Indians  in the second round of a slam,” Mirza told reporters.

CHASING
DAUGHTER

While the Indian duo are likely to have modest results in  New York, Clijsters showed she could be challenging for the top  prize despite playing in only her third event this year.

Crediting part of her fitness to “chasing around after  (18-month-old daughter) Jada” she gave the hapless Kutuzova the  run around with her solid groundstrokes to set up a re-match  with Frenchwoman Marion Bartoli, whom she beat in her comeback  match at Cincinnati earlier this month.

“(I was) a little more nervous than usual,” Clijsters,  dressed for the occasion in a red, white and blue outfit, said  after returning to Flushing Meadows for the first time since  winning her only grand slam title here in 2005.

“Driving up here this morning, just seeing the court, the  memories came back. It’s a very special court to me and I  really enjoyed it.”

Those sentiments were shared by Federer, who is not only  looking to extend his record grand slam haul to 16 but is also  eager to match Bill Tilden’s 1920s feat of winning six U.S.  championships in a row.

“That’s what I’m here for, trying to equal Bill Tilden’s  record,” said Federer, who became the first tennis player to  earn more than $50 million in prize money.

“You can set different types of goals. Mine are at a very,  very high level.”

Despite being a new father, the Swiss world number one made  no allowances for a 1,370th-ranked opponent playing only his  second tour-level match at the tender age of 18.

Playing before a crowd of 23,000, the American wildcard  suffered a bad case of stage fright in the opening set as he  saw it flash by his eyes in 18 minutes.

He recovered slightly and even had the audacity to break  Federer’s serve twice in the next two sets — which he  described as “the best 10, 15 seconds of my life” — but that  was where his bragging rights ended.

“My goal was to not get crushed… I was pretty scared,”  Britton said as he summed up the match. “His forehand is just  crazy. Everything he does is unbelievable.”
Joining him at the exit was Japan’s Ai Sugiyama, whose  record 62nd consecutive appearance in a grand slam ended with a  6-4 4-6 6-4 defeat by Australian 15th seed Samantha Stosur.

Former world number one and 17th seed Amelie Mauresmo was a  6-3 6-4 winner over Germany’s Tatjana Malek.