Sunday, June 10, 2012

Maria Sharapova Wins French Open (Roland Garros) 2012

Maria Sharapova became the sixth player in the Open era Era (starting from RG 1968) achieved the career slam, along with Margaret Court, Chris Evert, Martina Navratilova, Steffi Graf and Serena Williams, is the 10th player of all time, achieved on the third week-next week would be in the reign of 18 Sharapova WTA (2005-7-week 17 weeks in 2007 and 2008 3 weeks)-Sharapova had the most successful season on clay in his career when unbeaten at traditional clay-red clay season this year, in only one battle against Tai Championship of Madrid-Serena(this award took place at the clay blue). Maria Sharapova the new name in the history of tennis. 
Maria Sharapova is the 10th player in history to win four Grand slam tournaments, after his victories at Wimbledon in 2004, the US Open in 2006 and the Australia Open in 2008 and now his victory at Roland Garros 2012! The Russian star won the French Open on Saturday, defeating her tiny Italian opponent, Sara Errani, 6-3, 6-2 in the final at Roland Garros to complete the career Grand Slam. ''I believe in my game,'' Sharapova said. ''I think that's one of the reasons I'm sitting here with my fourth one and winning Roland Garros, because I always believed I could be a better player.''"I proved that no matter how many punches I took in my career, I've always gotten back up," she said. "I never made excuses for me, not to myself, not to people. I always relied on my own talent, on the help of my team. 
At the end of the day, that's really what gets me through and gets me up. I have a tremendous amount of belief and pride in what I do. I love my work. I've always said this: I love playing tennis. I had so many outs in my career. I could have said, I don't need this. I have money; I have fame; I have victories; I have Grand Slams. But when your love for something is bigger than all those things, you continue to keep getting up in the morning when it's freezing outside, when you know that it can be the most difficult day, when nothing is working, when you feel like the belief sometimes isn't there from the outside world, and you seem so small. But you can achieve great things when you don't listen to all those things." History called, and Maria Sharapova answered in a voice loud and clear. Punctuating her savage groundstrokes with her familiar war cry, she belted her way into the history books with a beautifully if brutally executed win over underdog Sara Errani in the French Open final—a win that completed a coveted career Grand Slam. The scores she'll never forget were 6-3, 6-2.


































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