
PARIS — One victory Thursday finished Maria Sharapova’s climb back to the top of the tennis rankings. With one more Saturday, she’ll be the French Open champion and complete a career Grand Slam.
Not a bad way to spend springtime in Paris.
Sharapova defeated Petra Kvitova 6-3, 6-3 in the windblown semifinals at Roland Garros. The second-seeded Russian needs a victory over 21st-seeded Sara Errani, a 7-5, 1-6, 6-3 winner over No. 6 Samantha Stosur, to become the 10th woman to win all four major tournaments.
“I always dreamed of being on the final stage here and I finally have that opportunity,” Sharapova said. “And I’m more than excited.”
When she won match point on a second-serve ace, Sharapova raised her palms to the sky, looked up and smiled — one of the sport’s biggest stars letting the fans and photographers share a special moment.
Sharapova has long been the headliner at almost any tournament she enters, though this latest win will officially put her on the top line of the women’s rankings when the new list comes out Monday.
It’s a perch that may have felt unreachable three years ago, when the Russian was recovering from shoulder surgery and dropped as low as 126th.
But from that point, she has made a steady climb back to being No. 1, the spot she first captured in 2005 and held for 17 nonconsecutive weeks, the last on June 8, 2008.
“It’s pretty special,” Sharapova said. “A few years ago after my shoulder surgery, I don’t know if I had a ranking, but it was over 100. And I thought ‘Well, I did it one time. So maybe again, I can try to do it.’ “
Next up is Errani, who played a terrible second set against Stosur but took advantage when the U.S. Open champion got a case of the nerves and started hitting balls five and 10 feet out in the final set.
“It’s a semifinal of a slam,” Stosur said. “Of course you’re going to be nervous.” The Associated Press
The men’s semifinals have history in the making
Novak Djokovic will be seeking a 27th consecutive major match victory, which would leave him one shy of becoming the first man in 43 years to win four Grand Slam titles in a row, when he faces 16-time major champion Roger Federer today.
In the other semifinal, David Ferrer stands in the way of Rafael Nadal’s pursuit of a record seventh French Open trophy, which would break a tie with Bjorn Borg.



