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DOHA : Venus Williams wilted in Qatar's desert heat on Tuesday as feisty Russian Elena Dementieva staged a remarkable WTA Championships comeback to defeat the title-holder 6-3, 6-7 (6/8), 6-2.
Williams had led 6-3, 3-1 before Dementieva recovered to record only her third win in 12 meetings with the great American, and first since 2004.
Dementieva, playing in her ninth season-ender, stunned the seven-time major winner, clinging on even as Williams served for the match at 6-5 in the second set.
The 28-year-old Russian levelled the match when Williams double-faulted on a fourth set point in the tie-breaker, before sprinting into a commanding 4-0 lead in the decider.
She secured the win with a running, crosscourt backhand after a 2hr 41min marathon in testing, humid conditions.
"It's such a long time since I have beaten her, so I'm really happy about it," said Dementieva after racking up eight of the last 10 games of the contest.
"I just fought for every point. It was very emotional."
Dementieva's shock win now adds extra spice to Williams' second group game against sister Serena on Wednesday where she will have to win to stay alive in this eight-woman, 4.55 million dollar event.
Serena was due on court later Tuesday to take on French Open winner Svetlana Kuznetsova as she began her campaign to reclaim the world number one spot from Dinara Safina.
Williams, the holder of 11 Grand Slam titles, was knocked off top spot by Safina on Monday, but she will reclaim the end-of-year top spot if she out-performs the Russian this week.
"It would be awesome, really cool," said Williams.
Safina, who lost all three matches she played on her debut here in 2008, opens her campaign on Wednesday against Jelena Jankovic, the Serbian eight seed.
The eight players are split into two round-robin groups here with the top two in each making Saturday's semi-finals with a 1.5 million-dollar cheque awaiting Sunday's winner.
Earlier, Belarussian sixth seed Victoria Azarenka marked her tournament debut with a 6-2, 6-3 win over Jankovic.
Jankovic held the world number one ranking for the first four weeks of the year, but only squeezed into this tournament as the eighth and last qualifier, boosted by a run to the Tokyo final.
Azarenka, 20, had lost three of her four career meetings with Jankovic, but she was in control from the outset with the Serbian's ugly collection of 33 unforced errors reflecting her miserable evening.
"I basically gave her everything. I beat myself," said 24-year-old Jankovic, a semi-finalist in 2008. "I was just a shadow of myself."
Azarenka, who had lost her last three meetings with the Serbian, preferred to concentrate on her own strengths.
"I'm glad she gave me the match and that she wasn't in the mood," smiled the 20-year-old.
"It worked out pretty well. I'm just happy with the way I started. I felt pretty good out there."
- AFP /ls
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