Henman beats Kuerten in Cincinnati

Terry Kinney,Ohio
Saturday 12 August 2000 00:00 BST
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Tim Henman followed up his upset of the Wimbledon winner by defeating the French Open champion.

Tim Henman followed up his upset of the Wimbledon winner by defeating the French Open champion.

Henman, who beat Pete Sampras earlier in the week, advanced to the final of the Tennis Master Series-Cincinnati with a 6-7 (11), 6-4, 7-6 (0) victory over Brazil's Gustavo Kuerten today.

"I knew coming into the match that I was playing well," the Briton said, "but I knew that I had a tough opponent."

The match lasted 2 hours, 36 minutes - two minutes shorter than Kuerten's quarterfinal match when, as on Saturday, he called for a trainer to apply a Band-Aid to a blister on his right ring finger.

"Maybe I should not have played today," the fourth-seeded Kuerten said.

"I thought I could not play when I went to hit (before the match). But they put on some anesthetic and it felt better."

Henman was told Kuerten might withdraw.

"I heard that about 15 seconds before we went on, but when I saw him, I said, 'He looks pretty healthy to me,"' Henman said.

In Sunday's final, Henman will play seventh-seeded Thomas Enqvist of Sweden, who beat unseeded Arnaud Clement of France. Heading into their match, Clement had been the only player not to lose a set this week - but he surrendered in straight sets, 6-2 6-2, without troubling his opponent's serve.

The 13th-seeded Henman sensed he was playing the best tennis of his career when he beat defending champion Sampras here. Henman, the first British player to reach the semifinals of this tournament in 23 years, had been 0-6 for his career against Sampras.

Henman and Kuerten had met only once before, in the quarterfinals at Key Biscayne, Florida, two years ago, and Henman won there, too.

"Serving was the key, although my second serve was not great," Henman said. "When it's this hot, the balls bounce high and are hard to control."

Henman might have ended the match much sooner if he had not double-faulted three times in the first-set tiebreaker. One double-fault cost him a set point when he was up 6-5. The other, at 11-12, gave the Brazilian the set.

Henman won the second set thanks to a single break of serve in the fifth game. After that game, Kuerten called for medical attention to his finger.

"I had a lot of big points and couldn't convert anything," said Kuerten, who despite the loss will still be atop the ATP Championship Race next week.

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