By Steven Wine
LONDON (AP) _ When a match ends, genial Kim Clijsters greets her opponent at the net with a smile and a kiss on each cheek, win or lose. She puts friendships ahead of championships.
``To me, results don't matter at all,'' the Belgian said. ``I like to make friends on the tour, knowing that if I stop, I can still call girls and still hang out with girls and meet up and catch up. That to me is more important, and that's something that I prefer to take away.
``Trophies don't talk to you when you retire. When you are at home and sitting on a couch, you can look at your trophy room, but that's not going to talk to you.''
Clijsters will be bidding for her first berth in a Wimbledon final when she plays Justine Henin-Hardenne in an all-Belgian semifinal Thursday.
Clijsters lost her first four Grand Slam finals before she claimed the U.S. Open title last year, disproving the theory that she was too nice to win a major. However, the theory persists that she's too nice to win a big match in her rivalry with Henin-Hardenne, whose grit ranks among her greatest attributes.
They've played 19 times since 2001, with Clijsters winning 10. But Henin-Hardenne has won their past four meetings in majors, including three times in finals and in the semifinals last month at the French Open, which she went on to win.
The result: Henin-Hardenne has five Grand Slam championships and Clijsters one.
``It will be a tough match,'' Henin-Hardenne said. ``The best will win.''
There are doubts about Amelie Mauresmo's big-match mettle, too. The native of France won her first major title at the Australian Open in January, but her path was eased when opponents Clijsters and Henin-Hardenne retired because of ailments in the final two rounds.
With semifinal losses in her past three appearances at Wimbledon, the No. 1-seeded Mauresmo will try again against No. 4 Maria Sharapova of Russia.
``I don't think I have anything to prove to myself, or to anybody,'' Mauresmo said. ``I just want more.
``I want to be able to have some more great matches with great emotions and try to get some titles.''
For the fifth time in the past 25 years, the semifinals feature the four top-seeded women. Each has been No. 1, and the quartet includes the winners of the past three Grand Slam events.
But only Sharapova has won Wimbledon _ in 2004. She'll try to improve on a 20-2 career record at the All England Club when she faces Mauresmo.
``Amelie is No. 1 in the world,'' Sharapova said. ``She's playing great tennis.
``I love that challenge of going out there and competing against the best in the world.''
Missing from the semifinals are any Americans, in particular the Williams sisters, who won Wimbledon five of the past six years. Serena is sidelined with a chronic knee injury, and defending champion Venus lost in the third round.
Henin-Hardenne reached her first Grand Slam final at Wimbledon in 2001 before losing to Venus Williams. She has since won the French Open three times and the U.S. Open and Australian Open once each.
Now, Clijsters blocks Henin-Hardenne's path to the only major title she has yet to win.
``As a kid, I wasn't dreaming about Wimbledon,'' said Henin-Hardenne, who grew up in a French-speaking part of Belgium. ``I was dreaming of the French Open.
``Now things are probably different because Wimbledon's a great challenge for me. So it starts to be something very important.''
Through five rounds, Henin-Hardenne has won every set. So has Clijsters. Both have developed a fondness for grass, and their well-travelled rivalry will be waged at Wimbledon for the first time.
It began when both were in elementary school, long before Henin-Hardenne's picturesque backhand and Clijsters' acrobatic splits became familiar to fans around the world. They faced each other eight times in 2003 alone, and the tension resulting from so many showdowns created a temporary rift in the relationship.
They're on friendly terms again, and Fed Cup teammates.
``We came back together in Fed Cup,'' Henin-Hardenne said. ``We've been very professional adults about that.
``There's a lot of respect between each other.''
``My feeling toward her has never changed,'' Clijsters said. ``I've always been nice to her.''
Whatever the outcome Thursday, count on kisses after the match.