31. Both she and Grande struggled with their serves, trading breaks for seven consecutive games in the opening set before Capriati finally closed it out. 32. Both players got off to a good start, trading a break in the first set. 33. The pair traded five breaks of serve in the final set, with the Spaniard firing over a cross-court forehand winner to end the match. 34. The rivals traded breaks throughout the fourth set forcing a tiebreak, which the more accurate Kafelnikov won. 35. They traded breaks in the next two games to reach the tie-breaker. 36. They again traded breaks in the second and third games of the second set. 37. They traded breaks in the next two games before Graf held and broke again for the set. 38. They traded opening breaks again, but Graf then broke Hingis in game three, winning when a Hingis forehand went wide. 39. They traded two breaks each by the fifth game at which stage the left-handed Slovenian had to summon a trainer to have her thigh massaged. 40. They traded breaks before Seles leveled the match with a love game. |