NEW YORKâItâs always exciting when a star is born. In tennis, the moment is that much more electric when it comes at the expense of an older, fading idol. Here is that veteran, suddenly face to face with the mortality of her career. The youngster across the net seems to have boundless energy and wonât be denied. The crowd, to which the aging champion has given so much pleasure over the years, has thrown her overboard with nary a how-dee-do.
Tennis can be a cruel sport, as ninth-seeded Jelena Jankovic learned Sunday night when she was beaten in Arthur Ashe Stadium by a recklessly good and relentlessly aggressive 17-year-old from Switzerland, Belinda Bencic. The score in the 2:02 clash was 7-6 (6), 6-3, and Bencic had but one word for her transformation from a beaten quarterfinalist in the girlsâ junior event last year to a main-draw quarterfinalist this year: âInsane.â
It seems like just yesterday that Jankovic, now 29 and seemingly resurgent, was racing around on the same court dressed in a daffodil-yellow dress, fighting what would be a losing battle in the championship match against Serena Williams. Despite failing in that 2008 final, Jankovic would finish the year holding the coveted year-end No. 1 ranking, even though she did not win a Grand Slam event. No matter, many thought. She had all the time in the world, and Serena was unlikely to stand in her path forever.
But the years passed. Williams did not vanish into the Hollywood ether, and Jankovic kept finding ways to waste opportunities and fritter away a reputation she had spent years building. Things happened along the way, but things always happen, to everyone. They just happened more frequently to Jankovic, leading many to a new conclusion that she had a appetite for self-destruction, or at the very least a coy relationship with success.