“I mean, in a way I know I sound like and I feel like a little kid, like this is the first time ever happening. I don’t know, I love the feeling. I’m really happy.”
NEW YORK—Mirjana Lucic-Baroni had waited a long time for this moment. The 32-year-old made her debut here in 1997 at age 15, and reached the Wimbledon semifinals two years later. The sky appeared to be the limit for the talented young Croat. But that was before she fled from her father and coach, Marinko, whom she said had beaten her, for the United States. Before she vanished from the tour for the better part of seven years due to financial struggles. Before injury after injury kept her from ever making a proper comeback.
Finally, today, she could let all of the emotion, all of the elation she was meant to feel during those years, come pouring out. Looking nothing like her teenage self, Lucic-Baroni upset No. 2 seed Simon Halep, 7-6 (6), 6-2.
“I’m sorry, I’m goofy,” she said on court after the match, unable to stop the tears.
As for Halep, her reaction to the situation couldn't have been more different.
“Good mood I didn’t have,” she said of her mindset after she had squandered a 5-2 lead in the second set. She chalked the defeat to the ups and downs of the sport and the tour.
“She was better than me today,” Halep said, “so I just have to keep working hard every day and look forward to the next one...Everyone can beat you. I accept this situation. I have to go forward, because I had many good matches, many good results this year. So is not big, you know, problem that I lost today. It happened.”
Halep started well, but Lucic Baroni, who at 5’11” is five inches taller than the Romanian, is the more naturally powerful player. Once she broke back, got her teeth into the match, and started to believe she could play with the No. 2 seed, she never backed off. After the first set, the result was hardly in doubt.