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Associated Press 19y

Clijsters and Sharapova go to semis, Federer loses a set

NEW YORK -- Robby Ginepri, an unsung, unseeded American
toiling hard through the U.S. Open, gutted his way out of trouble
and got the gift of Guillermo Coria's 13th and 14th double-faults
on the last two points to reach a Grand Slam semifinal for the
first time.

Ginepri, a 22-year-old who had never gone beyond the third round
of the Open, won his third straight five-setter against a seeded
player, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5, 3-6, 7-5, Wednesday and guaranteed that an
American will play in the final.

Ginepri's opponent in the semis Saturday will be the winner of
the Andre Agassi-James Blake night match.

"The last three matches took so much out of me, I'm just dead
right now," Ginepri told the crowd as his family, suffering and
celebrating on alternate points, watched from the players' box. His
sister, Jenni, took photos as he spoke. "I don't know how I got
through that match.

"I don't know what's going on right now. I'm a little foggy, a
little dizzy. It's crazy. Crazy!"

Almost as crazy was top-ranked Lindsay Davenport, the 1998
champion, getting thumped in the first set by last year's finalist,
sixth-seeded Elena Dementieva, and losing a match of epic
sloppiness, 6-1, 3-6, 7-6 (6).

"It seems like a lucky place for me," said Dementieva, who
overcame 12 double-faults and had 43 unforced errors to Davenport's
56. "After last year I'm still dreaming about Saturday night every
single day, so who knows."

Dementieva will play Friday against No. 12 Mary Pierce, the 2000
French Open and 1995 Australian winner who advanced to her first
U.S. Open semifinals by beating fellow Frenchwoman Amelie Mauresmo
6-4, 6-1.

"It's amazing," said Pierce, who reached the French Open final
in June. "I'm 30, 17th year on the tour, and there's still firsts
for me. That's pretty exciting."

Down a break in the fifth set, Ginepri kept his poise to beat
the No. 8 Coria, the Argentine who was a French Open finalist last
year, in a match that took just over three hours and ended with a
dramatic series of six match points.

Ginepri's has had only a few claims to fame so far -- his second
career title at Indianapolis in July, where he beat Andy Roddick in
the quarters and Taylor Dent in the final; a semifinal finish in
Cincinnati last month, where he gave No. 1 Roger Federer a tough,
three-set match.

Oh, and then there was the time Ginepri dated actress Minnie
Driver a couple years ago.

"I hope I'm more notable for my tennis than being with her,"
he said. "Just a little fling, and that's over with. Now I think
I'm making my name with tennis."

Ginepri and Coria each wore their white caps backward and
engaged in long rallies during a match filled with momentum swings.

Coria was involved in a tempest with Chilean Nicolas Massu in
his previous match, but against Ginepri there was nothing but
respect. On one point in the fifth set, the players gave each other
a high-five at the net when they combined for a particularly
thrilling point -- a beautifully angled drop shot by Coria, a
full-court running scoop by Ginepri feathered barely over the net,
and a putaway backhand half-volley winner by Coria.

Coria, trailing 4-5 in the final set, overcame three match
points after a double-fault to love-40. Coria saved the first match
point with a backhand, the second with a brazen overhead from the
baseline that skipped off the top of the net cord, and the third
with a service winner. He held to 5-5 after one more long rally.

After serving his ninth ace at 124 mph to hold for a 6-5 lead in
the fifth set, Ginepri jumped out to his fourth match point at
30-40 on Coria's serve when the wearying Argentine slapped a
forehand just wide. Nervous, Ginepri pulled the front of his yellow
shirt up to chomp on it with his teeth, then tried to close out the
match. Instead, he saw Coria save the point with a forehand that
Ginepri stretched to reach but netted.

Three points later, Coria mishit a backhand wide to give Ginepri
a fifth match point. Coria saved that with a surprising serve and
volley. That was all Coria had left. He double-faulted to set up
the sixth match point and double-faulted again to lose.

Coria said he had been having problems with the nerve in his
right hand and wasn't able to grip the racket hard.

"I was losing feeling on the hand," Coria said in Spanish
while motioning with his right pinkie. "It has been happening for
four days.

"I had a lot of treatment ... but during the match, the more I
serve, the more it gets tight -- the forearm, the shoulder. I knew
it could happen. That's just the way it is."

Coria, who missed last year's Open because of a shoulder injury
that needed surgery, said he was worn out by his five-set victory
over Massu two days earlier -- at 4 hours, 32 minutes the longest
match of the tournament.

"It was a tough break that the match with Massu was so long,"
Coria said. "My whole body was hurting. It was hard to keep up the
same speed I had. But I gave it all -- ran, tried hard and gave it
all I could. He won because he deserved it. He's been waiting for a
moment like this for a long time."

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