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Li, Azarenka ‘hungry’ for Australian title

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MELBOURNE, Australia – Victoria Azarenka will have 48 hours to calm her nerves, rest her body and move past a center-court controversy before she returns to defend her Australian Open title.

Her opponent is an emotionally and physically fresher Li Na, the 2011 French Open champion.

Both women used the word “hungry” to describe how much they want to win their second Grand Slam title. Both say their goal is to keep cool and not let their emotions get the best of them on the big day.

In that respect, the sixth-seeded Li enters the final with an advantage.

The 30-year-old Li is in top physical form and making a Grand Slam comeback. After becoming the first Chinese tennis player to win at a major in 2011, she hit a slump. But she hired Justine Henin’s former coach six months ago and the partnership has produced rapid results.

Li charged into the semifinals at the Australian Open without dropping a set. As a result, she will return to the top five after beating No. 4-ranked Agnieszka Radwanska in the quarterfinals.

She needed just 93 minutes Wednesday (Thursday in Australia) to power past No. 2 Maria Sharapova, 6-2, 6-2. She then charmed an adoring crowd by cracking jokes during an on-court interview. She kidded about her husband’s snoring, her attempts to lose weight and the tough training by coach Carlos Rodriguez – before turning to the stands to thank him.

“You don’t need to push me anymore. I will push myself,” she told Rodriguez, who helped Henin win seven majors and seems to have a knack for guiding players past their nerves.

“I don’t know what happened today,” Li said later. “I just came to the court feeling like, ‘OK, just do it!”

A similar slogan carried over into Azarenka’s semifinal, where her rap star friend Redfoo sat in the stands cheering her on in a T-shirt that read: “Let’s Do It.”

The confident and big-hitting Azarenka also advanced in straight sets, beating American teenager Sloane Stephens, 6-1, 6-4. But the victory was packed with drama and ended with the top-ranked player defending herself against accusations of gamesmanship by leaving the court for a medical timeout.

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