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  1. Azarenka brings new mindset to French Open

    PARIS—Victoria Azarenka used to create the impression on court she was contending with more than an opponent. There seemed to be demons at play as well.

    Consider her fourth-round meltdown against Nadia Petrova at Wimbledon in 2009. She began mimicking her own movements before sarcastically shaking a linesperson's hand and telling the chair umpire, "You guys have so much power to ruin the whole match."

    She is now a more focused two-time Grand Slam tournament winner and awaiting the clay courts at Roland Garros, where last year she lost her No. 1 ranking to eventual champion Maria Sharapova.

    "The main goal for me is the French Open," she told The Associated Press.

    Azarenka is the first to acknowledge she can still cause herself problems — like losing her temper, especially when her serve is off.

    She says her turnaround began at the 2011 Australia Open. Azarenka, seeded eighth, lost to eventual finalist Li Na in the fourth round. The great promise Azarenka had shown by winning 24 of her first 26 matches in 2009 seemed to be fizzling. She was distraught and flew home to speak with her grandmother.

    "I decided I didn't want to play anymore and I had to re-evaluate a lot of things," she said. Her grandmother advised Vika — the name she is affectionately known by — that the solution was to find a way to be happy.

    The words had a big impact on the 23-year-old Azarenka, who had begun playing tennis at age 7 at a club in Minsk, where her mother had a job.

    "Home will always be Belarus for me," she said, recalling how she used to hit balls against the club's wall, honing skills that would later characterize a game marked by quickness and bursts of speed.

    Her grandmother made her realize her deep feelings for tennis. But she also knew she had to find a sense of calm and satisfaction on and off the court.

    "I understood how much I loved tennis, and that every time I step out on the court I want to have fun and enjoy playing," she said.

    Azarenka felt she needed to be in the company of those who understood her and could help overcome disappointments and focus on how to win. Her coach, Frenchman Sam Sumyk, has been a cornerstone of Azarenka's new approach.

    "My team is very, very important to me," she said, adding it had taken a long time to find the right coach and advisers.

    While on tour, she stays within a tight circle. She has sought people with "different characters," who can help her communicate and understand what was going on around her.

    "Sharing the same goal, we all work like a watch," she said. "I'm happy to know that I have people I can trust."

    She was ranked No. 58 when she visited her grandmother. When Azarenka returned to the Australian Open, her new style — a feisty mix of athleticism and boxerlike concentration — enabled her to beat defending champion Kim Clijsters and finalist Sharapova. She captured her first Grand Slam singles title and ascended to the No. 1 ranking.

    At the start of this year, all eyes were on Azarenka to see if she could retain the Australian title. She did, defeating Li 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. Her climb through the rankings, however, has been halted by an injury that prevented her from playing at Indian Wells, Calif., and at the Miami Open.

    "I started the year very well and I was feeling I was in a good condition," she said. "But the injury was not letting me do what I wanted to do, so I had to take time off. It was a hard decision."

    Part of her routine now is to take the court wrapped in what she calls her cocoon. Before a match, she tries to do what makes her feel good.

    "I've had a lot of ups and downs, personal ups and downs in my career," she said. "When I go out there, I play with my heart. You can see it by my emotions, by the way I play. I express it very deeply. So this emotional and mental space is very important to me."

    Her preparation includes dance, which she said helps her get "into that mental stage, into that bubble when you walk onto the court."

    At 6-feet tall Azarenka does not believe she is anywhere near her physical potential.

    "That's really exciting," she said. "I haven't even stopped growing yet."

    She said she has been told by doctors that she might keep growing until she reaches 25. She also has a "new angle in nutrition," learning the importance of balance.

    Women's tennis has become more physical every season, she said, a process that can lead to more injuries. So she and her team are doing everything they can to keep her injury free or shorten her recovery when injuries do happen.

    "So long as you can stay in that good, healthy body, then the better the chances you have for a good career," she said.

    Learning to relax off the court is another strategy.

    "I love music, it's my second favorite thing," she said. "I love listening to live music. I played piano when I was a kid." She regretted that there isn't enough time on the tennis circuit to learn other instruments, but she promises to do so when she gets a chance.

    One thing that doesn't change is her thoughts of home. She says she is always thinking of Belarus and loves going back there.

    "I mentor two young girls," she said. "I always tell them to ask as many questions as they can. It's good to understand."
     

  2. Nadal, Djokovic in same half of Roland Garros draw
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    PARIS -- Seven-time champion Rafael Nadal could face top-seeded Novak Djokovic in the French Open semifinals a year after they met to decide the title.

    Friday's draw for the clay-court Grand Slam tournament placed Nadal and Djokovic on the same half of the field, while Roger Federer could face David Ferrer in the other semifinal.

    Federer, the owner of a record 17 major titles including the 2009 French Open, will face a qualifier in the first round -- and if he wins that, he'll play a qualifier in the second round, too. Djokovic faces a far more intriguing start: The reigning Australian Open champion's first-round opponent is David Goffin, a 22-year-old Belgian who took a set off Federer in the fourth round in Paris last year after making it that far as a lucky loser.

    No man has won the title at Roland Garros as many times as Nadal, who broke a tie with six-time champion Bjorn Borg by defeating Djokovic in last year's final and is 52-1 for his French Open career. Nadal also has reached the finals of all eight tournaments he's played in 2013.

    But because the Spaniard missed about seven months with a left knee injury, his ranking slipped to No. 4, and the French Open decided not to bump him to a higher seeding.

    If the tournament had placed Nadal at No. 2, he and No. 1 Djokovic only could have met in the final; instead, a Nadal-Djokovic rematch for the championship can't happen in 2013.

    "I am very happy that I am back and I am healthy to play here another time," said Nadal, who has lost eight of his last 11 matches against Djokovic, including on clay at Monte Carlo last month.

    Nadal is seeded No. 3 because second-ranked Andy Murray, the reigning U.S. Open champion, withdrew from the French Open with a back injury.

    The possible men's quarterfinals are: Djokovic against No. 8 Janko Tipsarevic, his Davis Cup teammate for Serbia; Nadal against No. 7 Richard Gasquet of France; No. 2 Federer against Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France; and No. 4 Ferrer against No. 5 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic.

    Berdych was drawn to face Gael Monfils of France in the first round, drawing groans from some members of the audience.

    The last man from France to win the French Open was Yannick Noah in 1983, a 30-year gap mentioned more than once at Friday's ceremony.

    Serena Williams wants to end her own, shorter drought in Paris -- her lone French Open title came in 2002 -- and her bid for a second championship will begin against 83rd-ranked Anna Tatishvili in the first round.

    A year ago in Paris, Williams lost her opening match to 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano, the American's only first-round loss in 50 career Grand Slam tournaments.

    Williams is seeded No. 1 this year and is on a 24-match winning streak, the longest of her career.

    Tatishvili, from the former Soviet republic of Georgia, is only 2-10 this season. She's also 0-2 at Roland Garros and 6-8 overall at Grand Slam tournaments. Williams, in contrast, has won 15 major titles.

    The possible women's quarterfinals are: Williams against No. 8 Angelique Kerber, defending champion Maria Sharapova against No. 7 Petra Kvitova, No. 3 Victoria Azarenka against 2011 champion Li Na, and No. 4 Agnieszka Radwanska against 2012 runner-up Sara Errani.

    "It's very meaningful to come back as a defending champion. It means you have done something pretty good, and you're coming back into that position and you're trying to defend it," said Sharapova, who completed a career Grand Slam by winning last year's French Open. "I think it's one of the best honors you can have as a tennis player."

    One noteworthy first-round matchup is No. 10 Caroline Wozniacki, who used to be No. 1, against 35th-ranked Laura Robson, a British teenager who reached the fourth round at last year's U.S. Open.

    The French Open begins Sunday.

  3. Serena to face Tatishvili in first round of French Open
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    PARIS -- Serena Williams will begin her bid for a second French Open championship and 16th Grand Slam title overall by facing 83rd-ranked Anna Tatishvili in the first round.

    A year ago in Paris, Williams lost her opening match to 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano, the American's only first-round loss in 50 career Grand Slam tournaments.

    Williams is seeded No. 1 this year and is on a career-best 24-match winning streak. Tatishvili is 0-2 at Roland Garros.

    Friday's draw for the clay-court major tournament set up these possible women's quarterfinals: Williams against No. 8 Angelique Kerber, defending champion Maria Sharapova against No. 7 Petra Kvitova, No. 3 Victoria Azarenka against 2011 champion Li Na, and No. 4 Agnieszka Radwanska against 2012 runner-up Sara Errani.

    The tournament begins Sunday.

  4. Serena: Rafa is chasing my comeback
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    World No. 1 Serena Williams jokes that Rafael Nadal, who has won six of the eight tournaments he played this year and reached two other finals, is competing with her comeback success.

    “I think he's performed great,” she told reporters. “I think he's been doing a great job."

    She then added with a smile: “I think he's trying to compete with me with like his comeback, so...Yeah, I'm going to have a talk with him about that."

  5. Montanes to play Monfils in Nice Open final

    NICE, France—France's Gael Monfils beat Spain's Pablo Andujar 7-5, 6-4 in the Nice Open on Friday to advance to the final.

    Monfils will face Spain's Albert Montanes, a 6-4, 4-6, 6-0 winner over French wild-card entry Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the first semifinal in the clay-court, warm-up tournament for the French Open.

    A former top 10 player, Monfils was hampered last year by a right knee injury and has dropped to 109th in the rankings.

    Monfils hit 17 winners to eight for Andujar to take the first set, when the Spaniard netted a backhand volley. The Frenchman then rallied from a 4-2 deficit in the second.

    The French Open starts Sunday.