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Updated: 2004-09-13 09:54
 Spanish stars hope for recovery at China Open

中国网球公开赛开战在即,本界比赛的各路高手已悉数抵京。作为本次比赛第一和第二号男单种子选手的西班牙人费雷罗和莫亚,都希望能通过这次比赛为今年的低迷画上句号。

 

Juan Carlos Ferrero goes through the customs after arriving in Beijing for China Open on September 11, 2004. (Agencies)

Spanish tennis stars Carlos Moya and Juan Carlos Ferrero head into the 500,000-dollar China Open this week hoping to stage late-season recoveries after disappointing showings at the US Open.

The former Roland Garros champions head the 32-man field at the inaugural edition of the tournament, with Moya taking the top seeding followed by Ferrero, who is trying to shake off yet another injury problem.

Moya reached the third round last week in New York at the season's final Grand Slam before being surprised by Belgian pocket rocket Olivier Rochus over five sets.

Ferrero tumbled out in the second round at Flushing Meadows after a four-hour, second-set battle with Austrian Stefan Koubek.

The Spaniard's fragile fitness -- he began this season exhausted after losing the 2003 Davis Cup final and then missed a month with chicken pox -- began to tell in New York.

Ferrero has dropped out of the ranking top 10 as a result and admitted he is troubled again by physical problems in his left leg and groin.

The Spaniard will have benefited from a few days' rest prior to flying to China, where the tournament will launch after being postponed in 2003 due to the SARS outbreak.

Ferrero admits his 2004 has been a disaster: "I'm not happy with my year. But it's almost finished and I just want to forget it."

Second seed Moya can be more optimistic, with three titles this season and a 54-14 match record. He opens play in Beijing against a qualifier. He and Ferrero met for the title in 2002 in Hong Kong, with Ferrero earning the win.

Argentine third seed David Nalbandian is also hoping to improve his late season after taking only one win at the Open. He will get his chance in China against Dane Kristian Pless in the first round.

Fourth seed Rainer Schuettler, number five Russian Marat Safin and Thai crowd favourite Paradorn Srichaphan could also use a kick-start as the autumn run of Asian tournaments begins.

Schuettler, who finished last season in the top 10, has faded in 2004, now down to 12th after reaching the eight-man season final last November.

Safin, this year's Australian open finalist, put in a weak New York performance, never getting out of the blocks in an opening loss to Swede Thomas Enqvist.

The volatile Russian opens play against Russian-American Alex Bogomolov.

Paradorn will need to be at his best this month, with Beijing, a Davis Cup in Moscow and his home Thailand Open all looming over the next three weeks.

(Agencies)

Vocabulary:
 

shake off: shake oneself free [loose] from(抖落, 摆脱)

chicken pox: (水痘)

groin: the crease or hollow at the junction of the inner part of each thigh with the trunk, together with the adjacent region and often including the external genitals(腹股沟)

volatile: tending to vary often or widely, as in price(不稳定的)






 
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