Maria Sharapova wins US Open title
Maria Sharapova wins US Open title
Third-seeded Maria Sharapova beat No 2 Justine Henin-Hardenne 6-4, 6-4 to win the US Open final.

New York: Russian Maria Sharapova came of age at the US Open on Saturday as she produced a stunning performance to outgun Justine Henin-Hardenne 6-4 6-4 to win her second grand slam title.

The 19-year-old battered the Belgian into submission from the baseline, hammering 20 winners to clinch victory, falling to her knees and putting her head in her hands in disbelief after Henin-Hardenne dumped a forehand into the net.

After taking the congratulations of the Belgian, the Russian roared in delight before running into the crowd to embrace her father Yuri.

"This is an amazing honour," Sharapova said. "I figured that I lost the last four times I played Justine so everything I did in those four matches I had to flip 360 and do totally differently. That is what I did today."

Since winning Wimbledon in 2004 as a 17-year-old, Sharapova has been criticised for her lack of progress.

Her model physique and off-court commitments have captured as much attention as her exploits on the tennis court and many have questioned her dedication to the game.

But against Henin-Hardenne, the 2003 champion, she played near flawless tennis to take the title, serving out the match seemingly without nerves.

Dropped lid

As a disappointed Henin-Hardenne looked on, a jubilant Sharapova even dropped the lid of the champion's trophy in her rush to hold it over her head in celebration.

In front of a packed Arthur Ashe Court, Sharapova began nervously as Henin-Hardenne broke in the second game for a 2-0 lead.

Henin-Hardenne was appearing in her fourth grand-slam final of the year -- the first woman to do so since Martina Hingis in 1997 -- and would have regained the world No 1 ranking had she won the tournament for a second time.

But from the moment Sharapova broke back in the next game with the help of a deft half-volley, the Russian always had the upper hand.

Her groundstrokes were heavier, her serve more piercing and her movement more assured.

After the early trading of breaks, the Russian grabbed the vital break in the ninth game before serving out for the first set.

As the winner of five grand slam titles, including this year's French Open, Henin-Hardenne was not about to go away but the quality of Sharapova's serving kept her continually on the defensive.

Whatever Henin-Hardenne tried to throw at her, the Russian had an answer for.

In the end the pressure had to tell on the Belgian as a missed forehand handed Sharapova the break in the seventh game of the second set.

The Belgian hung in on her own serve but Sharapova held her nerve under pressure to serve out to 15, wrapping up victory thanks to a forehand error from Henin-Hardenne.

"The best player won tonight," Henin-Hardenne said. "She has been a real fighter tonight. She's played great tennis these last two weeks and deserves her victory. I hope I have another chance in the future."

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