ANDY RODDICK, TENNIS PRO TO RETIRE AFTER US OPEN

Tennis pro Andy Roddick will retire after the U.S. Open tournament, a spokesman for the International Tennis Federation said Thursday.

Roddick, who turned 30 years old on Thursday, will compete in the tourney and is the last American man to win the U.S. Open, in 2003.

“I just feel like it’s time,” Roddick told reporters after making his announcement.

“I don’t know that I’m healthy enough or committed enough to go another year. I’ve always wanted to, in a perfect world, finish at this event — I have a lot of family and friends here,” Roddick said, according to a recording of his news conference posted on the U.S. Open’s web site.

“I’ve thought all year that I would know when I got to this tournament. When I was playing my first round, I knew.”

“Andy has been an outstanding ambassador for our sport and our country, always carrying himself with the character and class that define a champion,” said U.S. Tennis Association board chairman Jon Vegosen. “In addition to representing the U.S. on the world stage, he was a Davis Cup stalwart and standout.”

Roddick exits early at French Open

The 2003 U.S. Open victory was his only grand slam win, and he reached No. 1 in the world, according to the ATP, the governing body of the men’s professional tennis circuits.

This year’s U.S. Open will conclude September 9.

In 2003, he was the youngest American and the second youngest overall to finish No. 1 in the history of the ATP rankings since 1973.

In 2004, he won four titles and led the U.S. to the first Davis Cup final since 1997 by going 6-2 in singles, and he recorded the world’s fastest serve at 155 m.p.h. in the Davis Cup on September 24, the ATP said.

Last year he captured his 30th career title on the ATP World Tour in Memphis to increase his title streak to 11 consecutive years, the ATP said.

Speaking to reporters Thursday, Roddick explained his decision.

“I’ve always, for whatever my faults have been, felt like I’ve never done anything halfway,” he said. “It’s probably the first time in my career that I can sit here and say I’m not sure that I can put everything into it physically and emotionally.

“I don’t know that I want to disrespect the game by coasting home.”

TIGER WOODS SHOWS TOUGHNESS, TIED FOR THE US OPEN LEAD

Tiger Woods wore black on Friday. That was the appropriate color for this U.S. Open’s second round, which took on a funereal feel as Olympic Club continued to beat down, beat back and beat up the world’s finest golfers.

It was no surprise that the tough conditions left Woods (70) tied for the lead at one under with David Toms (70), a straight-hitting veteran, and Jim Furyk (69), a lunch-pail golfer originally from Western Pennsylvania. Only seven players broke par on Friday. Hunter Hamrick, who plays college golf at Alabama, shot 67. Steve Stricker shot 68, and five others shot 69.

Feels like old times, doesn’t it? Tiger has the lead in a major championship. Your sense of been-there-done-that is justified. Woods has led or been tied for the lead after 36 holes in nine previous major championships. He won eight of them.

In the old days of Tiger’s reign, we’d already be handing him this trophy, but this Open isn’t his to lose just yet. He’s got two former major champions right there with him. Furyk won the 2003 U.S. Open at Olympia Fields, and Toms famously edged Phil Mickelson in the 2001 PGA Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club. And don’t forget 2010 U.S. Open winner Graeme McDowell, who’s a mere two shots back with John Peterson, Michael Thompson and Nicholas Colsaerts. Tiger’s competitors are top shelf.

This could be a pretty good weekend.

“It’s a wonderful place to be, with a chance to win your nation’s Open,” Woods said. “I think I’m in a good spot. I’m looking forward to it.”

Woods was impressive in his Memorial win two weeks ago and his Bay Hill win in March, and he’s been impressive here. He’s played six straight competitive rounds looking like the consummate shotmaker of old. If you don’t think he’s back, you haven’t been paying attention. How well his putter performs is still to be determined, but this new incarnation of Woods looks awfully formidable.

A lot of observers won’t consider him all the way back until he wins a major championship. (His last was the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.) Woods knows that, and he knows people have been wondering what’s taken him so long to get his game shaped up with coach Sean Foley.

“It was a tough year last year, battling those injuries,” Woods said. “It’s hard to get repetition and get momentum when I can’t practice. This year, I’ve played well in spurts, and I finally put it together at Bay Hill, lost it there for a little bit, and then put it together at Memorial.

“It’s better than what I had at Bay Hill. I’m able to shape the ball better with better trajectory control than Bay Hill. And that’s one reason I was so excited how I played at Memorial.”

He continued to impress Friday, grabbing the spotlight early. He bounced an 8-iron shot to five feet for a birdie at the third hole, which gave him the solo lead at that point because first-round leader Michael Thompson had already posted a bogey and a double bogey in his first four holes.

Then came the kind of adversity that Opens always bring. Woods missed a four-foot par save after a good bunker shot at the fifth. His approach stuck in thick rough just above the greenside bunker at the sixth, where Woods had to take a stance in the sand and choke way up on his wedge. He carefully popped the ball up in the air, but it ran 20 feet past the pin. He made a second straight bogey.

At the seventh, Woods made the kind of blunder he doesn’t usually make. He drove it into the greenside bunker at the short par 4, a good play, and hit a decent shot to about eight feet. It was a quick putt, however, and his attempt powered off the lip and raced six feet past. He lipped out the par putt, too, for a third straight bogey.

Woods regrouped on the back nine. He earned one of the day’s loudest roars when he rolled in a 30-foot birdie putt at the 10th, raising his putter in the air even before the ball dropped into the cup. He stiffed a 7-iron shot to five feet at the par-3 13th and made birdie to get back to even par for the day and into a share of the lead with Furyk at one under.

Woods actually had a chance to separate himself from the field at the end. He settled for par when he didn’t get up and down from a greenside bunker at the 610-yard par-5 16th. At the par-5 17, his second shot rolled over the back of the green and ran 40 yards down a slope. He made a great chip to give himself a birdie chance but couldn’t convert the putt. At 18, despite having a short iron in his hands, he dumped his second shot into the front bunker and saved par after a nice sand shot.

“My two best swings I made all week, I ended up in terrible spots,” Woods said. “I flagged it at 6 today. It was a beautiful little soft 4-iron from about 230 yards. I took something off it and held it up against the wind. It was right at the flag, then it hops left. If it goes in the bunker, it’s an easy up-and-down. All of a sudden, I’ve got no lie, and I struggled to make bogey.

“Then I hit another beautiful soft 4-iron up in the air on 17. I thought I threw it high enough to land soft, and evidently, I didn’t.”

From Golf .com

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AN IDIOT PLANE PASSENGER TRIES TO OPEN PLANE DOOR DURING FLIGHT

Authorities detained a man who tried to open the door of a commercial jet midair on Thursday, officials said.

US Airways Flight 3801 made an unscheduled landing at Boston’s Logan Airport, where Massachusetts State Police boarded the plane and took the unruly passenger into custody, State Trooper Thomas Murphy said.

The flight, operated by Air Wisconsin, was flying from Portland, Maine, to Philadelphia when the incident occurred. There were 50 passengers and three crew members onboard, the airline said.

The passenger “seemed to be disoriented” when he tried to open a cabin door on the CRJ-200 aircraft, Air Wisconsin spokeswoman Annette Daly said in a statement.

Daly said a flight attendant subdued the passenger, but Phil Orlandella, a spokesman for Massport, said other passengers restrained him.

Opening the doors of most commercial jets while in flight is nearly impossible due to the air pressure and design of the doors.

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FIRST SERENA, NOW BIG SISTER VENUS WILLIAMS OUT AT THE FRENCH OPEN

Nooooooo!!! First, it was Serena who lost a few days ago in the first round of the French Open Tennis tournament, now, big sister Venus is out as well. This sucks…for me anyway.

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Venus out of Paris, into London: With Venus Williams’ 6-2, 6-3 second-round loss to Agnieszka Radwanska on Wednesday and her sister Serena’s historic first-round losson Tuesday, the 2012 French Open marks the earliest exit by the Williams sisters at a Grand Slam tournament. If Serena’s defeat was bathed in drama and struggle, Venus’ exit was a remarkably quiet one. Radwanska, who was on her game, hit a mere six unforced errors and moved exceptionally well. This was one-way traffic from the start and an impressive statement from Radwanska, who has a tough but makeable draw to the semifinals. I’ve never been convinced of her clay bona fides, but if she makes it deep into the second week, consider me convinced.

The good news for Venus is that her first-round win virtually assures her a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. She should be ranked within the top 50 when the rankings cut-off kicks in after the French Open, which is more than enough to earn her place. She’s made it clear that the only reason she came back so early from her autoimmune disorder was to try to qualify for the London Olympics.

Stephens continues her rise: Sloane Stephens was the only American to win on Wednesday. Yes, that’s a bit misleading — she defeated Bethanie Mattek-Sands, so obviously there was going to be a U.S. victor either way. But Stephens is into the third round of a major for the second time in her young career. The 19-year-old has a great opportunity to do even better — and, with a little help, perhaps make the Olympic team, too. Stephens next faces Mathilde Johansson, a Frenchwoman ranked No. 93, which is a very winnable match for her.

SERENA WILLIAMS, LOSES IN FIRST ROUND OF FRENCH OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT

DAMN IT!!! Say it ain’t so Serena!!! My favorite tennis player and one of my favorite athletes ever, Serena Williams, loses in the first round of the French Open. In over a decade, this has never happened. Who am I going to watch now? I was going to tune in, but now, what’s the point? Read more below:

PARIS -  (AP) — For more than a decade, whatever the state of her health or her game, no matter the opponent or arena, Serena Williams always won first-round matches at Grand Slam tournaments.

Always.

Until Tuesday at the French Open. Until Williams came within two points of victory nine times, yet remarkably failed to close the deal against unheralded and 111th-ranked Virginie Razzano of France.

Until a theatrical, 23-minute final game filled with 30 points, more than enough for an entire set, featuring ebbs and flows, high-pressure shotmaking and nerves — and even thunderous protests from the crowd when the chair umpire docked Razzano a point. That look-away-and-you-miss-something game included five wasted break points for Williams, and seven match points that she saved, until Razzano finally converted her eighth, 3 hours and 3 minutes after they began playing.

All told, until Tuesday, Williams was 46 for 46 in openers at tennis’ top venues, and those encounters tended to be routine and drama-free, befitting a woman so good that the goal — and 13 times, the end result — was a major championship.

Not this time. Now Williams’ first-round Grand Slam record is 46-1 after as stunning a denouement as could be in a 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3 loss to Razzano on the red clay at Roland Garros.

The fifth-seeded Williams, considered by many a pre-tournament favorite, led 5-1 in the second-set tiebreaker, before dropping the next 13 points in a row. Suddenly, her shots didn’t always carry their usual oomph; her court coverage was ordinary.

“I’ve been through so much in my life, and … I’m not happy, by no means,” said Williams, her eyes welling with tears. “I just always think things can be worse.”

The 30-year-old American returned to action last year after missing about 10 months because of a series of health scares, including two foot operations and blood clots, a scary stretch she says altered her worldview.

The rowdy spectators in Court Philippe Chatrier would have been pulling for Razzano anyway, of course, because of her citizenship. But their support was particularly strong because of her recent heartbreak, well-known in France: Razzano’s fiance — Stephane Vidal, also her longtime coach — died at age 32 of a brain tumor in May 2011, a little more than a week before her first-round match at last year’s French Open.

He had encouraged her to go ahead and enter the tournament, so she did, honoring his memory by stepping on court to play, a black ribbon pinned to her shirt. When she walked out of the locker room for what turned out to be a straight-set loss, she wore a gold chain that Vidal had given her as a Valentine’s Day gift a few years earlier.

“Honestly, the past is the past,” Razzano said Tuesday, when she dealt with leg cramps starting in the second set. “I think now I did my mourning. I feel good today. It took time.”

Said Williams: “I know of her story and her husband. We all have stories. I mean, I almost died, and Venus is struggling herself. So, you know, it’s life. You know, it just depends on how you deal with it. She obviously is dealing with it really well.”

Williams’ exit was by far the most newsworthy development on Day 3 at Roland Garros, where Maria Sharapova won 6-0, 6-0, and Rafael Nadal began his bid for a record seventh French Open championship with a straight-set victory.

Williams entered Tuesday having won her previous 17 matches, all on clay. She withdrew before what would have been her most recent match, a semifinal at the Italian Open on May 19, citing a bad lower back, but said on Friday she was better, then refused to place blame on that injury after being beaten by Razzano.

“No, no, no. I didn’t feel anything abnormal,” said Williams, who counts the 2002 French Open among her 13 Grand Slam singles trophies. “I was 100 percent healthy.”

Occasionally after losing points, Williams would bend forward and lean on her racket frame, as though perhaps stretching her lower back. She also clutched at that spot and whacked her racket there after miscues.

And there were plenty of those, 47 in all, 11 more than her foe. That’s where Williams put the emphasis when trying to fathom how she let her big lead slip away. From 5-1 in the tiebreaker, she lost the next six points to end that set, then the first seven points of the third.

“I tried. I kept going for my shots, which always works for me,” Williams said. “It didn’t work out today.”

It sure seemed she’d be OK when up 5-4 in the second set and at 15-30 on Razzano’s serve. The match was about 1½ hours old — only halfway through, it would turn out — and Williams was two points from ending it. Razzano responded with an ace. At 6-5 in that set, Razzano showed real jitters, double-faulting twice in a row to again make it 15-30. Again, Williams was two points away. And again, Razzano held serve to extend the match.

Then came the tiebreaker, with Williams apparently in control. At 5-2, Razzano hit a shot near the baseline that Williams let go, thinking it was out. But the chair umpire, Eva Asderaki, ruled the ball was in. Asderaki overruled a call on the next point, too, helping Razzano.

Asderaki would play a key role, first warning Razzano for hindrance, then twice awarding a point to Williams because the Frenchwoman grunted loudly while exerting herself during extended exchanges. Williams found the whole thing sort of bemusing: Asderaki was the chair umpire who immediately — with no warning — took a point away from Williams during her loss to Sam Stosur in September’s U.S. Open final.

“Well, you know, she’s not a favorite amongst the tour,” Williams said. “I just really had a flashback there.”

A surging Razzano led 5-0 in the third set, but Williams — as gritty a competitor as there is in her sport — didn’t go quietly. She got within 5-3, and that’s when the epic game came, as much a test of will as anything.

Razzano, looking gassed, grabbed at her legs between points and double-faulted to make it 30-all. A 13-stroke point followed, and Asderaki interrupted play to make it 30-40 because of hindrance. The partisan fans jeered, whistled and banged their palms against the stadium’s plastic green seats (they booed Asderaki when she walked off at match’s end).

That set up Williams’ first break point, but she sent a return wide. Moments later, Razzano had her first match point but — gulp! — double-faulted. That established a pattern.

Eventually, on the 12th deuce of the game, Williams dropped a forehand into the net. And on match point No. 8, she sailed a backhand long.

That was it. Razzano skipped to the net for a handshake, thrilled to have beaten Williams — and to have avoided what would have been her 21st first-round departure in 47 major tournaments.

Williams’ shoulders slumped. For the first time in a Grand Slam career that began at the 1998 Australian Open, when she was 16, Williams heads home after only one match.

And this was one she had in her grasp.

“I never really feel anything slipping away or anything,” Williams said. “I just felt I couldn’t get a ball in play.”