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Clijsters looks to other Slams

Published:Tuesday | September 14, 2010 | 12:00 AM

NEW YORK (AP):

After winning her second consecutive US Open title and third overall, Kim Clijsters is looking to finally make her breakthrough at the other Grand Slams.

All of the Belgian's three major championships have come at the US Open, so there is still plenty to accomplish.

"They all motivate you in a different way," Clijsters said of the other Grand Slams, after winning again at Flushing Meadows on Saturday night, beating Russia's Vera Zvonareva in straight sets - 6-2, 6-1 in a match that lasted 59 minutes and lacked any drama.

The Australian Open, played on hard courts like the US Open, is somewhere she believes she can do better. She feels a connection to Wimbledon because her late father always enjoyed his time there. And the French Open seems like home because so many Belgians attend.

Clay is her least favourite surface. She has twice reached the final at Roland Garros.

"Maybe I should embrace it a little bit more and have that confidence that I have whenever I step on a hard court," Clijsters said.

Stay healthy

If she stays healthy, Clijsters will have at least two more chances to win at those other Grand Slams. She has said repeatedly she wants to play in the Olympics in London in 2012, but she does not envision herself staying around much longer than that.

Clijsters had never successfully defended a major title - until now.

Clijsters recalled that she watched the 2006 US Open from home with a cast on her wrist. She had won her first Grand Slam championship at Flushing Meadows the previous year, but could not defend the title because of injuries. Frustration with an inability to stay healthy was part of why she soon retired from tennis.

She also wanted a family and since her comeback to the sport just over a year ago Clijsters has proved you can have both. She limits her playing schedule to ensure she spends enough time with her 2 1/2-year-old daughter, Jada.

Clijsters and her husband, Brian Lynch, wants more children and talk about it sometimes. But for now they are in no rush - even if Jada is good at putting on the pressure.

"She's like, 'I want a sister. I want a brother.' And she says it and I'm like, 'Oh, I'm so sorry'," Clijsters said with a laugh. "But she's fine. And I know that when she's a little bit older, she'll be very much helping out, and that's something that she looks forward to as well.

"We have dogs for now," she added, "so she still has other siblings."