NEW YORK -- We're talking mothers here. Consider it Mother's Day at the U.S. Open, because mothers are in the news here, in the buzz, in the snickering gossip, and also in the results of the women's draw.One of them, Kim Clijsters, is still in the tournament. A mother hasn't won a major championship since Evonne Goolagong won Wimbledon in 1980. Clijsters will play Serena Williams on Saturday night, weather permitting, in the semifinals. It is a de facto final.
Another mother, Yanina Wickmayer's, died of cancer 10 years ago in Belgium, and Wickmayer took up tennis back then as a means of thinking of things other than her pain. Yanina is in the semis, too, to play Caroline Wozniacki.
And Melanie Oudin lost in the quarterfinals Wednesday. But the third mother, Leslie Oudin, made the news in the most uncomfortable of ways. After Oudin had been portrayed as apple pie, from Mayberry, reports came late Wednesday night that her father had filed for divorce from her mother, claiming the mother had had an affair with Oudin's coach.
Motherhood, then, was prescription for Clijsters, inspiration for Wickmayer, potential humiliation for Oudin.
Let's start with Clijsters.
The first time around in her career, she was a choker. Yes, she got to No. 1, but in majors, she usually folded. Now, after 2 1/2 years off to freshen her mind and to have a baby, she returned. This is her first major.
And she has shown stunning guts, in contrast to so many other women in this tournament.
Clijsters drops off her daughter, Jada, at some sort of daycare, and then just keeps fighting to the end without distraction. If other mothers haven't been able to win, why has Clijsters come back seemingly stronger?
"In the past, I wanted to win a lot, sometimes maybe too much even," she said. "But I think a part of that is there's also that other life that I have that keeps me away from tennis. Whereas in the past, it was 24/7 tennis.
"When I go home after I've been training here during a day off, it doesn't matter to our daughter or my husband whether I won the day before or not. It doesn't matter to them. That's a nice feeling to have, is knowing, OK, I'm mommy, and she doesn't care too much about anything else."
U.S. Open Photos
NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Fernando Gonzalez of Chile is treated by a trainer during the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match against Rafael Nadal of Spain on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Fernando Gonzalez
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Fernando Gonzalez of Chile serves to Rafael Nadal of Spain during the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Fernando Gonzalez
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Fernando Gonzalez of Chile returns a shot to Rafael Nadal of Spain during the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Fernando Gonzalez
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Spectators wait out the rain delay during day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Jared Wickerham/Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Spectators wait out the rain delay during day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Jared Wickerham/Getty Images)
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Fernando Gonzalez of Chile serves to Rafael Nadal of Spain during the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Fernando Gonzalez
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Rafael Nadal of Spain celebrates after defeating Fernando Gonzalez of Chile in the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Rafael Nadal
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NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 12: Rafael Nadal of Spain celebrates after defeating Fernando Gonzalez of Chile in the Men's Singles Quarterfinals match on day thirteen of the 2009 U.S. Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on September 12, 2009 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Nadal defeated Gonzalez 7-6 (7), 7-6 (7), 6-0. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Rafael Nadal
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A spectator waits for play to resume during a rain delay at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York, Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
AP
Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal celebrates after winning against Chilean player Fernando Gonzalez in their quarterfinal match of the 2009 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, in New York, September 12, 2009. Nadal won 7-6, 7-6, 6-0. AFP PHOTO/Stan Honda (Photo credit should read STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
So her world doesn't spin tennis anymore. There is bigger purpose.
And that has freed Clijsters in the big moments.
But what about the physical end, getting back in shape? That was a challenge, she said, especially in trying to rebuild strength in her stomach and lower back. Playing tennis since she was 5, she said, those areas had always been strong.
"But after the pregnancy, yeah, it all goes," she said. "So you have to reteach all those muscles to contract when they're supposed to, you know, especially with each shot that you hit. I mean, everything just kind of has to get reminded of, OK this muscle has to move at that time.
"They're the most boring exercises ever, but it was something I really felt like I had to, because I went out there in January, February, hitting, and it was terrible. It was awful. Yeah, so that's not when the idea of coming back was in my mind."
They keep talking about Roger Federer trying to win a major after becoming a father, and how difficult that is. After hearing Clijsters talk about her difficulty, my thought on Federer's difficulty is this:
So what.
Wickmayer told her story on Wednesday, thanking her father passionately and at great length while he sat right in front of her.
A few days after Wickmayer's mother died, Yanina told her father to stay home from work.
She wanted to talk.
So Wickmayer, the 9-year-old, had been reading up on the Web about tennis academies in Florida, and also about how moving companies can take things from Belgium to the U.S.
Wickmayer told her father that day that she wanted to move to Florida. Within a week, they had moved. The father sold his swimming pool construction business, left his cars, house and friends behind.
They arrived in Florida without any plans or contacts, and without any English. They knocked on the door of Saddlebrook Tennis Academy and said that Yanina wanted to play tennis.
"I just decided as a little girl to get away from home and put my memories and thoughts to something else," Wickmayer said. "To focus ourselves on other things in life and try to move on."
Rather than having her mother's death ruin her life, she allowed something to grow from it.
Oudin's mother? Well, it's hard to say if that bothered Oudin, or if she even knew about it. SI.com broke the story, checking out the divorce papers from last year, a few hours after her match.
The timing was interesting, as the Web site surely didn't get those papers around midnight, when the story broke.
Oudin surely already knew about the accusation and the pending divorce. In fact, her father said that she suspected the alleged affair. To her, that was old news.
What's new is the way our thirst for celebrity might have affected her. All the attention and hype blew up too much for a 17-year-old girl no one had heard of 10 days earlier.
Suddenly, she was the great American teen, built up as the picture of perfection.
Well, so much for the Great American Story, I guess.
Part of the burden of becoming a pop culture icon is that people start digging into your personal life. Oudin said after her loss in the quarters that the attention was more than she had expected, but that it comes with playing good tennis. She'll get used to it.
But back to the celebrity culture: We see something we like, and then blow it up to ridiculous proportions.
Oudin was perfect. That's how it was painted. And inevitably we found out later that she actually bleeds, too.
So disappointment comes from failing to live up to a false picture.
I'm not sure why these celebrities have to be turned into fiction, why they have to be perfect. God knows what kind of dynamic went into Oudin sticking with her coach and saying the other day that he was like a second father to her.
Her mother denies the affair, but agreed to a court order saying she couldn't interact with Oudin's coach unless it related specifically to Melanie's tennis.
Well, maybe she really is the American story. A real story.
Mother's Day at the Open isn't all flowers and candy. It was three very distinct realities.
Email me at gregcouch09@aol.com














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
9-11-2009 @ 3:46PM
kimmy said...
Ok, even though I was rooting for Maria Sharapova, who I had been following on Prince's facebook page (www.facebook.com/official.prince.tennis), what Oudin's mom is doing is irrelevant to the game. The media can be so outrageous.
Reply
9-12-2009 @ 11:21PM
laurabelleny said...
Serena's behavior was appauling. Thank god that Kim won and the williams sisters have been ousted and will not be a william sister in the final. Go KIM. She played great and Serena should be FINED for her unsportsmanship. Shut the B*tch up.
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9-12-2009 @ 11:23PM
thomasecw said...
That was one of the worst calls I have ever seen in a tennis match (foot fault call on S. Williams by a line judge securing her 15 minutes of fame). If I was S. Williams, I would have jammed my racket down the judge's throat. It would be a huge mistake if the USTA should ever secure this judge's services again. You should be able to challenge bad calls like this!!!!!!
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9-12-2009 @ 11:37PM
Maria said...
You are just as stupid as Serena. Talk about anger. It was very unsportsman like what she did by cursing and also had a warning on racket abuse so that was the second time she did something wrong. She was losing anyway. Nice way to represent the US. Good riddance to her.
9-13-2009 @ 12:29AM
h1239 said...
Hah. My daughters, who were 8 and 10 at the time had their foot faults called ALL THE TIME - or any time it happened. Get over it
9-12-2009 @ 11:28PM
rbrtbadabing said...
The powers to be should suspend serena williams indefinitely!!!!!
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9-12-2009 @ 11:33PM
micha said...
Serena should be severely penalized for her behavior on the court...fined, jailed, whatever. I wish they had taken her off the court in a cage like she deserved. If officials let her bad behavior slide, it will taint the whole atmosphere of tennis good sportsmanship....fine her big time!! This isn't a saturday night wrestling match...
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9-13-2009 @ 1:02AM
Hi, This Walter! said...
I guess you know about cages because you must still be in yours in your cave. There is no need for you and the others LIKE you to be nasty and do all that name calling. I AM a KIM fan and was sorry when she retired, and was just as happy when she returned. Never-the-less, PLEASE, PLEASE play fairly. If you can't play to win, then you should not cheat either. I will not condone cursing and bad behavior by anyone for any reason, especially so very PUBLIC a person, but ever heard of JOHN McEnroe or JIMMY CONNORS?
For all you people with the negative attitude, the BEST PLAYER IN WOMEN'S TENNIS IS STILL A WILLIAMS; ANY WILLIAMS. So give the TV back and stay in your cave and cage.
9-12-2009 @ 11:32PM
jenks96263 said...
Serena did not want to go out by being beaten so she threw a fit to get thrown out. Poor sportsmanship!
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9-12-2009 @ 11:40PM
Mary said...
SERENA'S sucess has gone to her big butt!!!!
A VERY FOUL MOUTH, WITH NO CLASS
HERE COMES THE RACE CARD!
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9-12-2009 @ 11:46PM
John Mazurick said...
Serena's Out and Clister will probably win The U.S.Open tomorrow night. End of story.Good night.
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9-12-2009 @ 11:56PM
freebirds4ever said...
Serena has a long nose to go along with her big mouth and her diminutive attitude towards good sportsmanship.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:01AM
trace said...
Please if she won it would have been something negative said.At least she made it further then any other American.Everyone has a bad day.I thinkI would have gotten it off my chest insteaad of taking it home.She will still win the doubles .Seroiusly people white and black.This is not the worst display we have seen on tv this week.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:39AM
mzvickee said...
I have seen worse performances from John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors and others who just threw out and out tantrums. Serena getting angry over that bad call is nothing in comparison to some of of the past behaviour I have seen on the court. So if they were never kicked out of tennis why should she be.
9-13-2009 @ 12:04AM
Sherry--Hottie! said...
1. Oudin's Mom had nothing to do with the way she should be viewed
2. Serena seemed to be happy to not be defeated the right way.... so she swore
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9-13-2009 @ 12:04AM
dotcleaning09 said...
My question is why are they not showing the foot fault replay. All three. And the Head Judge should have gave Williams a money fine instead of given the match to clijsters, was they afarid William would make a come back on Clijster now we will never know, will we. Take it up will the Judge.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:08AM
snooksjazz22 said...
That was a terrible call on Serena by the line official. Why did the umpire not take charge and review the call or over rule the call. What's she there for? Also let this be the time for a replay of calls by the line officials.........I don't approve Serena's conduct......
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9-13-2009 @ 7:19AM
Duane said...
Very poor sportsmanship. This is an exeample of when ghetto mentality gets the best of you. Guess we witnessed tonight, her true violent nature. This was anger personified. Now, soon, we'll hear the race card being played. It happens every time. Good luck Kim. Hope you win it all. You are a lady.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:32AM
h1239 said...
Serena is obviously still under the influence of steroids. It is common knowledge in the tennis industry that Serena uses steroids. Thus, her big body and bigger temper.
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9-13-2009 @ 12:33AM
h1239 said...
And hello, anybody look at Nadal lately? Still winning, but dang he aint using steroids anymore.
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