MELBOURNE, Australia -- Mark Philippoussis was fined $750 for angrily smashing his racket during his fourth-round loss to Andre Agassi.
The 16th-seeded Australian wrecked his racket Sunday after losing the second set even though he had been 4-1 up in the tiebreak. Top-seeded Agassi won 6-4, 7-6 (4), 5-7, 6-3.Bill Gilmore, a Grand Slam supervisor, announced the fine late Sunday night.
"I had to let some frustration out otherwise I was going to kill someone; better the racket," Philippoussis said after the match.
Said Agassi: "The guy can make a racket look like a toothpick, you know. I was just thinking, 'I'm glad I'm not the racket."'
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NEW LOOKS: Lleyton Hewitt's dad shaved his head and his coach hasn't shaved in weeks because of his success.
Glyn Hewitt promised to shave his scalp if his 18-year-old son, the last Australian player in the men's singles, won a tournament earlier this month in Adelaide.
Long-haired Lleyton won that, then another tournament in Sydney and now faces No. 12 seeded Magnus Norman in the fourth round of the Australian Open.
The 13-match winning streak has gotten the better of coach Darren Cahill, though he's not complaining. Cahill promised before Adelaide that he wouldn't shave until Hewitt's loses.
However, the scruffy Cahill is getting married in two weeks.
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CLOSE TIES: Players and their coaches are closely aligned among the women contesting the fourth round in the top half of the draw.
Top-seeded Martina Hingis is in Australia with coach Melanie Molitor, who also is her mom. No. 12 Sandrine Testud, who will face Hingis, is coached by her husband, Vittorio Magnelli
Third-seeded Serena Williams is coached by parents Richard and Oracene Williams, her mom traveling to Australia with her. Williams takes on Elena Likhovtseva, although the Russian isn't related to her coach Tomas Malik.
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HARD AND SMART: When asked which of the top women was the most difficult to play against, Anna Kournikova said it was impossible to decide.
The Russian, yet to win a title on tour and who was ousted in the fourth round by No. 2 Lindsay Davenport, said of No. 1 Martina Hingis, Davenport and Serena and Venus Williams, "they have different games."
"Martina plays smart, Lindsay plays hard and smart, and Venus and Serena, they hit also very hard," Kournikova said.