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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Martina Hingis and
Amélie Mauresmo shook hands frostily at
the end of their Australian Open final, barely
looking at each other and skipping the traditional
peck on each cheek. The tension between them had
nothing to do with the way Hingis won her third
straight Australian title Friday night, 6-2, 6-3,
or the way Mauresmo fought back at the end before
yielding on the seventh match point.
Rather, it was about a comment Hingis was reported
to have made _ and which she denied _ about the
19-year-old Mauresmo's openly lesbian relationship
over the past year with another Frenchwoman. Mauresmo
is the first player on the women's tour since
Martina Navratilova to talk publicly about being
a lesbian. She said she moved to Saint Tropez
last year to live with girlfriend Sylvie Bourdon,
31, who cheered her from the players' box at the
Australian Open this week.
``At last, I'm clear in my head, clear in my
mind, clear in my life, and it shows in my tennis,''
Mauresmo said in speaking of her decision to be
open about her life with Bourdon. Bourdon said
it was ``absolutely natural'' for them to be open,
rather than hide anything.
``We both said, `Let's go,' and I think it's
much better that way,'' Bourdon said. ``It makes
life simpler. Acknowledging this relationship
makes her stronger in her own life and on the
court.'' And Mauresmo had to be strong to deal
with what happened in the two days leading up
to the final.
Hingis was asked after the semifinals about
the difference between Mauresmo now and when they
played last year in a Federation Cup match. ``She's
here with her girlfriend. She's half a man,''
Hingis was reported to have said in German.
On the same day, Lindsay Davenport said she
thought at times she was playing against a man
in her loss to Mauresmo. The remarks by Hingis
and Davenport were widely reported in the press
and on television.
While Hingis denied the ``half a man'' comment,
Davenport angrily insisted the next day that she
was referring only to Mauresmo's muscular play,
especially the way she slugged one-handed topspin
backhands unlike other women. After the final,
Hingis said she had ``nothing to apologize for,''
and refused to talk about the issue.
Mauresmo sought to brush aside the situation,
saying that ``all that has been happening these
past days is a little stupid. Both of them apologized,
so I don't want to talk about it anymore.'' But
Mauresmo's coach, Christophe Fournerie, insisted
there was much more to it than that.
``I'd like to make a distinction between Davenport,
who not only apologized but also wrote a personal
note to Amélie, and Hingis' behaviour,
which was disappointing,'' Fournerie said. ``And
I can tell you that Amélie told her that
on the court today.'' Davenport was disappointed
because she felt what she said had been taken
out of context, Fournerie said. That wasn't the
case with Hingis, he said.
``In fact, she said that Amélie was half
a man because she lived with a woman, and that's
not acceptable,'' Fournerie said. ``It would be
better if she reflected a little before speaking.
Maybe it's because she's still very young but,
after all, she's got certain responsibilities
given the position she holds in the world of tennis.''
Fournerie said Davenport sent ``a very heartfelt
note,'' saying how sad she was, and ``Amélie
was delighted with it.''
``But there was nothing from Hingis,'' he said.
``Even this morning, nothing. ... Maybe it got
Amélie up a little more for the match.
It hurt her, but it motivated her as well. It
would hurt anybody, and it's just unacceptable
to make that kind of statement.'' Bourdon, who
runs a restaurant in Saint Tropez, on the French
Riviera, said she met Mauresmo last year through
a mutual friend, former French player Isabelle
Demongeot.
``Things happened very quickly,'' Bourdon said.
``It was like lightning striking, love at first
sight. Our relationship arrived at a key moment
in her life. ``A balanced love life obviously
brings positive things into anybody's life. A
champion isn't two people, she's one. When you're
confident in your private life, that confidence
spills over onto the court.''
The relationship, Mauresmo said, has strained
her relationship with her family. ``I'm not close
to my parents,'' she said.
Former player Pam Shriver, now a television
commentator, said Mauresmo has been uninhibited
in embracing Bourdon around the tournament. ``Martina
Navratilova and Billie Jean King would probably
have liked to have been so open,'' Shriver said.
``Times have moved on since Martina, and it's
a pretty liberal world now, although there are
still some conservative people around.''
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