Women to watch at the U.S. Open, which begins Monday:SERENA WILLIAMSSeeded: 1Age: 34Country: United States2016 Match Record: 33-52016 Singles Titles: 2Career Singles Titles: 71Major Titles: 22 -- U.S. Open (99, `02, `08, `12, `13, `14), Wimbledon (02, `03, `09, `10, `12, `15, `16), Australian Open (03, `05, `07, `09, `10, `15), French Open (02, `13, `15)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-Lost in Semifinals, `14-Won Championship, `13-W, `12-W, `11-Lost in FinalTopspin: A year ago, came within two victories of first calendar-year Grand Slam since Steffi Grafs in 1988, but lost to Roberta Vinci in U.S. Open semifinals. ... Part of Williams years wait for her 22nd major singles title, which she got at Wimbledon last month, equaling Grafs Open-era record. Now seeks No. 23 at Flushing Meadows. ... Can become first woman with seven U.S. Open titles in professional era. ... Will tie Grafs record of 186 consecutive weeks at No. 1 in WTA rankings, but could drop from top spot after U.S. Open.---ANGELIQUE KERBERSeeded: 2Age: 28Country: Germany2016 Match Record: 47-142016 Singles Titles: 2Career Singles Titles: 9Major Titles: 1 -- Australian Open (16)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-3rd, `14-3rd, `13-4th, `12-4th, `11-SFTopspin: Could have overtaken Serena Williams at No. 1 in the rankings by winning title on hard courts in Cincinnati this month, but lost in the final. Has another chance to move up to No. 1 for first time, depending on U.S. Open results. ... Very first Grand Slam semifinal appearance came at Flushing Meadows five years ago. ... Beat Williams in Australian Open final in January, then lost to her in Wimbledon final in July. ... Won silver medal at Rio Olympics.---GARBINE MUGURUZASeeded: 3Age: 22Country: Spain2016 Match Record: 28-132016 Singles Titles: 1Career Singles Titles: 3Major Titles: 1 -- French Open (16)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-2nd, `14-1st, `13-Did Not Play, `12-1st, `11-DNPTopspin: Won first Grand Slam title at Roland Garros in June, beating Serena Williams in the final. ... One of three players who could take over from Williams at No. 1 after the U.S. Open. ... Has a 1/3 career record in New York, but her flat strokes and fearless style should work on the Flushing Meadows hard courts.---VENUS WILLIAMSSeeded: 6Age: 36Country: United States2016 Match Record: 21-112016 Singles Titles: 1Career Singles Titles: 49Major Titles: 7 -- U.S. Open (00, `01), Wimbledon (00, `01, `05, `07, `08)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-QF, `14-3rd, `13-2nd, `12-2nd, `11-2ndTopspin: Bowed out of Rio Olympics in first round of singles and doubles, but stuck around for mixed doubles and wound up earning a silver medal with Rajeev Ram. ... Experienced something of a renaissance at Wimbledon, making it to the semifinals at a Grand Slam tournament for the first time since the 2010 U.S. Open. ... Last year at Flushing Meadows, made it to the quarterfinals before losing to her younger sister Serena.---MADISON KEYSSeeded: 8Age: 21Country: United States2016 Match Record: 34-112016 Singles Titles: 1Career Singles Titles: 2Major Titles: 0 -- Best: SF, Australian Open (15)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-4th, `14-2nd, `13-1st, `12-DNP, `11-2ndTopspin: Coming off a semifinal run at the Rio Olympics and now settled into the top 10. ... Her power-based game, built around a big serve and forehand, would seem to be better suited to the U.S. Opens hard courts than her results have shown. ... Pulled out of the Connecticut Open tuneup tournament the week before Flushing Meadows with a bad neck.---PETRA KVITOVASeeded: 14Age: 26Country: Czech Republic2016 Match Record: 25-17 (playing in Connecticut Open)2016 Singles Titles: 0Career Singles Titles: 17Major Titles: 2 -- Wimbledon (11, `14)Last 5 U.S. Opens: `15-QF, `14-3rd, `13-3rd, `12-4th, `11-1stTopspin: The U.S. Open is the only Grand Slam tournament where she hasnt reached the semifinals. ... Won a bronze medal in singles at the Rio Olympics, looking quite comfortable on a slow hard court.---Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrichRandall Cobb Womens Jersey . -- Hunter Smith scored the winner with just 12 seconds remaining in the third period as the Oshawa Generals edged the host Sarnia Sting 5-4 on Friday in Ontario Hockey League action. Robert Newhouse Womens Jersey . Dusautoir, the former World Player of the Year, sustained a torn bicep playing for Toulouse in the Heineken Cup on Saturday. 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Stories abound of how petulance almost ended her career in her native Jamaica before it started.Still, she did come to Rio with the fastest time in the world this year. But now her most urgent problem as she tore down the track in Saturdays 100-meter final was her veteran countrywoman Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce running to her far right, determinedly chasing the sort of history even Usain Bolt hasnt captured just yet. And Tori Bowie, the American running right beside her, who has the speed to run her down, as well.Yet, as they strained the last couple of meters to the finish line, the growing daylight between Thompson and Bowie was emblematic of how much Olympic sprinting has changed.Jamaica is once again the home to the fastest woman in the world, extending Americas drought in this Olympic event it once owned to 20 years, and counting.This time it was Thompson, a comparative newcomer to the event, who reasserted Jamaicas place atop the sprinting world as she powered to victory in 10.71 seconds, finishing a good two feet ahead of Bowie (10.83) and the highly respected Fraser-Pryce (10.86), who ran a season best but missed becoming the first sprinter to win the gold medal in three consecutive Olympics, a distinction Bolt will try to complete on the same track on Sunday night.It was my time in 2008, and its Elaines time now, Fraser-Pryce said.The U.S. still hasnt won gold in the 100 since Gail Devers captured it at the 1996 Atlanta Games. (Though Marion Jones won in 2000, she was later stripped of her medal after confessing to doping violations.) The sight of Florence Griffith-Joyners name flashing up on the Olympic Stadium scoreboard because her astonishing 1988 world record of 10.49 in the 100 still stands was another reminder of just how much things have changed.For Bowie, her silver medal was a nice rebound from her finish at the U.S. Olympic Trials last month behind English Gardner (who blamed physical issues for her seventh-place finish in Saturdays final in 10.93). Much like Thompson, Bowie hasnt run the 100 for very long, and she didnt have the easiest path getting here. As a child, Bowie spent some time in foster care before she was raised by her maternal grandmother, Bobbie Smith, in rural Mississippi. And she has talked a lot about the sacrifices her grandmother -- who chose not to travel to Rio -- made to keep her expanded family together.Oh yeah, shes watching -- and shes probably crying right now, Bowie said with a smile.Bowie is also a former long jumper who didnt decide to concentrate on the 100 and 200 until just two years ago. Sometimes, she feels her inexperience shows.I came here for one thing -- I came determined to leave with a gold medal, and I didnt do that today, said Bowie, who has another chance in the 200 and the relays. Im excited ... [but] I feel like next time [the Olympics arrive], Ill be a real professional at it.Thompson had a lot to learn about being a world-class pro, too. Shes a late-blooming talent who didnt even run her senior year of high school because she was kicked off the team for disciplinary reasons. The victory continued an upward career arc that she credits to a tough-love talk from renowned Jamaican club coach Stephen Francis last year. Francis did most of the talking. Thompson did most of the listening. Francis, wwhose brother Paul coached Thompson as a collegian, told her she had talent, but it wasnt enough.dddddddddddd She had to get serious about the sport. And she finally listened.She is still saucy but getting there, Paul later told the Jamaican press. Sometimes she is misunderstood because she has a very sharp tongue.That talk changed my life, Thompson admitted Saturday night.The other thing that helped Thompson was training day after day with Fraser-Pryce, an accomplished woman who is as professional and serious-minded as Thompson was raw and petulant.A lot of people have tried to explain how Jamaica is able to reliably kick out great sprinters. The tiny island nation has just 2.8 million people; it seems like only 2.799 million of them are sprinters. In recent years, thanks to a tradition first established by the likes of Merlene Ottey and continued by Bolt and Fraser-Pryce, Jamaica has dominated the world-best time lists and medal podiums through four Olympics.Some people credit the countrys grassroots love of the sport and point to examples like the 30,000 or so people that jam in each year to watch the eagerly awaited Champs, the islands high school championships. Others say that seeing so many of their Jamaican countrymen and women excel in sprinting makes up-and-coming kids believe they can, too. A frequent saying in Jamaica now is its the only nation in the world where track is the national sport.Thompson was one such kid. She was only 16 when Fraser-Pryce starting minting her legend with her first gold in the 100 at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.She watched as Fraser-Pryce went on to match Bolts feat of winning gold medals in the 100, 200 and 4x100 relay at the 2012 London Games. She has seen how since then, in addition to staying at the top of her sprinting game, the 29-year-old Fraser-Pryce somehow finished a degree in child and adolescent development and shes going to start work toward a masters degree next month. She runs a hair salon, which will be believable to anyone who saw the gradient yellow-to-green hairstyle she was rocking Saturday night. (There should be a warning label on her bib: Do not try this at home.)Shes also so deeply respected that the entire Jamaican Olympic team voted to have her carry the flag last weekend in Rios opening ceremony.If not for the painful left toe injury that hampered Fraser-Pryce all year, she almost certainly wouldve given Thompson an even sterner test in the final. Even Thompson suggested that afterward. Asked some weeks ago to describe the pain, Fraser-Pryce called it an 8 on a scale of 1-10. The foot still hurts her so much, she burst into tears right after winning her semifinal heat earlier Saturday night.I cried because [the pain] was unbearable, Fraser-Pryce said. But I knew I had just one race to go tonight. And I just wanted the chance to defend my championships. I hate talking about pain, hate talking about my toe; I hate all of that because its part of athletics. And I would never want to take someones shine. But to be able to stand on the podium with Elaine is a wonderful feeling.The bronze medal was Fraser-Pryces lowest 100-meter finish in three Olympics. Yet again and again she said, Im happy, because of all shed been through.Im really happy for her. Im happy Jamaica gets the gold medal. Im happy we get to keep the gold medal, Fraser-Pryce explained.Thompson could keep it that way for a while. ' ' '