Agassi backhands Mirnyi in semifinals
By Jeff Agase
DAILY BRUIN STAFF
jagase@media.ucla.edu
The speakers at Los Angeles Tennis Center blared Metallica's "Enter Sandman" prior to the Mercedes Benz-Cup semifinal between Andre Agassi and Max Mirnyi Saturday night. Oh, the irony. Fans who quickly shuffled out of Stadium Court 61 minutes later might have been looking for pillows after Agassi's 6-4, 6-2 dismantling of Mirnyi. "Andre just played much better tennis than me today," Mirnyi said. "That's the bottom line." Wherever the bottom line was, Mirnyi's game was below it by match end. After breaking Agassi to tie the first set at 1-1, the eighth-seeded Mirnyi fell apart. His much-vaunted serve became a punching bag for Agassi, and he was broken at love twice in a row in the second set. "When I broke him at the end of the first and then right away in the second, he was behind and felt the pressure of having to really get into the points on my serve," Agassi said. Agassi's pinpointed, laser returns negated Mirnyi's 125 mile per hour rockets. One stretch in the second set saw Mirnyi win just one point of 19. "He took shots at my serve and the ball was coming back faster than it had gone off my racket," Mirnyi said. "He's the best player in tennis to exploit weaknesses, and he showed me what I need to work on." It was as though the wise old Agassi was giving a private tennis lesson. Mirnyi did everything but jump the net to shake Agassi's hand and thoroughly thank him for dealing him such a lopsided loss. "I lost to the best player ever to play the game," Mirnyi said. After coming into the week with a laundry list of questions for himself and his game, Agassi was visibly satisfied. "I'm happy less about winning and being in the finals and more about how I've done it," Agassi said. "I've gotten a nice variety of opponents that have tested many aspects of my game. A lot has come together this weekend." The Mirnyi win was the culmination of a series of brilliant Agassi performances this week. The tournament's second seed and world's No. 7 player won five of six games in the second set at love. He will face Jan-Michael Gambill, an upset winner over fourth seed Andy Roddick, at 1 p.m. Sunday.

