THOUGH Maria Sharapova is rightly installed as number-one seed at the glittering apex of the women's draw for the Australian Open, you can bet a local dollar or two the good citizens of Melbourne, belonging as they do to that branch of sports fanaticism which embraces sentimentality, will reserve a large segment of their support for someone whose success at this, the first grand slam of the season, is long overdue.
Kim Clijsters, welcome proof that all that glistens in the women's game is not Sharapova, is entitled to a break that for once has nothing to do with bones in her final year on the tour.
Rather like Tommy Cooper, there's nobody who doesn't like Kim, who doesn't wish her well, who doesn't hope she can add another grand slam or two to the single one - the 2005 US Open - she bears alongside her name before settling to marriage and a family.
Talented and dependable, Clijsters is the sort who would get you back from the new year sales in one piece and with money still in your wallet. In her chosen profession, however, she is the nearly girl, three times runner-up and five times semi-finalist in her last 11 grand slams during a four-season sequence severely disrupted by injury.
Three of her four grand-slam final defeats were at the hands of her fellow Belgian Justine Henin-Hardenne, including the 2004 Australian Open, so the absence of the world number-one because of reported marital problems can do Kim's ambitions no damage.
Clijsters kick-started her farewell season in fine fashion last week by winning the Sydney title, the 23-year-old's 34th singles success in a dollar-laden career notable only for its paucity of grand slams.
Now would be a good time to set about remedying that and the manner of her Sydney victory indicates she's well aware of this.
Six previous tilts at the Australian title have provided Kim with 24 wins, more than in any of the other grand slams. Another seven would do just fine, and why not? The holder, Amelie Mauresmo, to whom she lost because of an ankle sprain in last year's semi-final, is short of form and pessimistic about her chances of a repeat and, as fourth seed, Clijsters has been allocated an undemanding draw until what should be the match of the women's tournament, a semi-final against Sharapova.
Having just beaten the Russian, albeit in exhibition play, at their first 2007 event in Hong Kong, she will not be daunted, especially since she holds a 4-2 lead in their headto-head records on the regular tour.
Progress to that semi-final for Sharapova seems serene until a possible fourth round against Ana Ivanovic, one of the best of the new talents developing in Serbia. Another of the Serbs, Jelena Jankovic, has been the star of the new season, her string of nine victories ended only by Clijsters in last Friday's Sydney final. Jankovic is in the weakest side of the draw and having already beaten Mauresmo in the early stages at Sydney could well emerge from as the finalist to challenge the Clijsters/Sharapova victor.
Joining Henin in the missing list is Venus Williams, whose fortunes have nosedived since her victory at Wimbledon in 2005. Ongoing wrist problems are cited as the reason for her absence, though sister Serena has declared herself fit and interested enough to come. The Williams sisters contested the 2003 Aussie final, Serena winning in three sets, and she also claimed the title for a second time two years ago by downing fellow American Lindsay Davenport, who is absent from this year's lineup because of impending motherhood.
Serena, down at 94 in the rankings, is fortunate to find herself in that third, undemanding quarter of the draw, though she must beware her opening match, against the 27th-seeded Mara Santangelo. At Wimbledon two years ago - her last appearance at the championships - she needed three sets to get past the 25-year-old Italian.
It is bad luck on another Melbourne favourite, Martina Hingis, that she finds herself in the same, testing half of the draw as Sharapova and Clijsters. Having come back to the game so impressively last year that she zoomed up from having no ranking at all following her retirement in 2002 to end up in the top 10, Hingis owes her popularity to having reached the final six years in a row, winning from 1997-99 and then losing to Davenport and twice to Jennifer Capriati.
In the early weeks of her comeback last year, Hingis got as far as the quarter-finals before being ousted by Clijsters. They are due to meet at the same stage again, and the potentially bad news for Martina is that Kim, with posterity to play for, will be going for broke.
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