Monday, June 30, 2008

Hobbled Jankovic out at Wimbledon

Hobbled Jankovic out at Wimbledon
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON -- Second-seeded Elena Jankovic and No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetsova were ousted in the fourth round Monday, leaving Wimbledon without any of the top four women in the quarter-finals for the first time.

A hobbled Jankovic fell 6-3, 6-2 to Tamarine Tanasugarn, while 2004 U.S. Open champion Kuznetsova lost 6-4, 1-6, 7-5 to 19-year-old Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland.

With top-seeded Ana Ivanovic and No. 3 Maria Sharapova eliminated last week, none of the top four women reached the quarter-finals -- the first time that's happened at Wimbledon and also the first time at any Grand Slam tournament in the 40-year history of the Open era.

The highest seeded player left is No. 5 Elena Dementieva, who cruised to a 6-2, 6-1 win over Shahar Peer.

Canadians also fared well Monday.

Toronto's Daniel Nestor and Serbian partner Nenad Zimonjic, the second seeds, won their third-round men's double match over Max Mirnyi of Belarus and Britain's Jamie Murray, the 14th seeds, in three sets. And Milos Raonic of Thornhill, Ont., beat James Chaudry of Britain, 6-4, 7-6 (5) in their first-round boys singles match.

The Williams sisters, meanwhile, moved closer to another Wimbledon final with back-to-back victories on Court 2 -- nicknamed the "Graveyard of Champions" for its history of upsets. They questioned why they weren't put on Centre Court or Court 1.

Defending champion Venus Williams beat Russian teenager Alisa Kleybanova 6-3, 6-4, while two-time winner Serena downed Bethanie Mattek 6-3, 6-3.

"It wasn't what I would have liked to see," Serena Williams said of the Court 2 scheduling. "Initially, I thought, 'Is this the right schedule?' I thought maybe there was a mistake. But I can't dwell on that. I just have to focus on doing the best that I can whether I'm on Court 2 or Court 20."

In men's play, five-time champion Roger Federer swept Lleyton Hewitt -- the last man to win the title before him -- 7-6 (7), 6-2, 6-4 on Centre Court to extend his winning streak on grass to 63 matches and 38 in a row at the All England Club. Federer, who served 21 aces, has now beaten his Australian rival in 12 consecutive matches.

Federer will next face the last player to beat him on grass and at Wimbledon -- Croatian Mario Ancic, who won in the first round in 2002. Ancic rallied from two sets down Monday to beat Fernando Verdasco 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 13-11. The final set alone lasted one hour 35 minutes.

"I completely underestimated him back in 2002," Federer said. "I was a little shellshocked and didn't know what happened to me.

"What it taught me was not to underestimate any opponent."

No. 2-ranked Rafael Nadal, runner-up to Federer the last two years, overcame an injury scare in the second game of the match and beat Mikhail Youzhny 6-3, 6-3, 6-1.

Nadal slipped on the worn turf behind the baseline on Court 1 while stretching to hit a forehand, with his right leg bending awkwardly. After losing the point, he took a medical timeout, and a trainer wrapped his leg below the knee. The Spaniard lost the next point and the game, but showed no sign of trouble and dominated the rest of the way.

"I feel something behind the knee, but it seems better," the four-time French Open champion said. "I'm going to get it checked for a precaution but I hope that I'm fine."

Playing with her left knee heavily strapped, Jankovic was never in serious contention against the 60th-ranked Tanasugarn. The 31-year-old Thai, playing in her 12th consecutive Wimbledon, also was treated for a lower back problem during changeovers in the second set.

After converting on match point to reach the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam for the first time, Tanasugarn covered her face with her hands and broke into tears.

"Wow, wow, wow," Tanasugarn said. "Being in the fourth round so many years, making it to the quarter-finals is really a good feeling."

Jankovic, who complained about being scheduled out on Court 18, said she played with a tear in her knee sustained during her third-round win Friday over Caroline Wozniacki.

"I was always a step behind," said the Serb, who committed 19 unforced errors. "It was very hard for me.

"I tried the best I could and she was quite solid and didn't make any mistakes. I wasn't moving the way I usually move. I just couldn't play at my best."

Venus Williams, a four-time Wimbledon winner, nearly squandered a 5-1 lead in the second set against the 18-year-old Kleybanova. She lost nine points in a row from her third match point in the eighth game and saved three break points at 5-4 before finally closing it with a backhand volley winner.

Serena Williams wobbled slightly after going up 3-0 in the second set as Mattek raised her game by playing serve-and-volley. Williams received a warning for an audible obscenity in the fifth game, but that didn't stop her as she won the next five points. She finished the match with a backhand drop volley into the open court.

Venus Williams, who will face Tanasugarn in the quarters, was clearly not happy with the court scheduling.

"There's not too much I'm going to say about that in the press," she said. "I think that no matter where we play we realize we have to play well.

"That's pretty much all I have to say."

Her father, Richard Williams, didn't hold back.

"Venus is a four-time champion, defending champion," he said. "They're not putting Roger Federer out there (on Court 2). If they're not putting Roger Federer out there, they shouldn't put Venus out there.

"I think it's ridiculous. I think it's a damn shame."

All England Club spokesman Johnny Perkins said the tournament referee had to schedule 16 matches on the same day, and noted that Courts 2 and 18 are show courts.

"Spectators on Court 2 have paid for their tickets" and should get to see top players, he said.

Between them, Venus and Serena have won six of the last eight women's singles titles at Wimbledon. They're in opposite halves of the draw and could meet in the final Saturday. The Williams sisters faced each other in the 2002 and '03 finals, with Serena winning both.

Federer, who hasn't lost a set while chasing his sixth straight title, was in complete command against Hewitt after scraping through the first-set tiebreaker. At 7-7, Federer mis-hit a backhand and the ball was ruled wide, but a replay showed it hit the sideline and the point was replayed. Federer then hit a backhand winner for 8-7, and an ace gave him the set.

Hewitt, the 2002 Wimbledon champion whose career has been slowed by a chronic hip injury, went 0-8 on break points.

"I saw Lleyton struggling with his hip a little bit," Federer said. "That first set tiebreaker really put me on the winning streak and after that I played consistently well."

Hewitt, who said he's not sure if he'll play in the Beijing Olympics or U.S. Open because of his hip troubles, praised Federer's serve.

"He hit every line out there today," the Australian said. "That's why he's the best player around, especially on this surface.

"Serve is so important. He hit the target every time."

Also advancing was Chinese wild-card entry Zheng Jie, who followed up her upset of Ivanovic last week to beat 19-year-old Hungarian Agnes Szavay 6-3, 6-4. Zheng was down 4-1 in the second set and then won five games in a row before securing her first Grand Slam quarter-final berth.

Other women's winners were Nicole Vaidisova, who downed No. 8 Anna Chakvetadze 4-6, 7-6 (0), 6-3; and Nadia Petrova, a 6-1, 6-4 victor over Alla Kudryavtseva, who had beaten Sharapova in the second round.





  • Wimbledon draws up brackets
  • Rosberg aiming to beat BMW in Monaco
  • Wozniak loses 2nd match at Wimbledon

    Wozniak loses 2nd match at Wimbledon
    THE CANADIAN PRESS LONDON -- Canada's Aleksandra Wozniak dropped a 6-1, 6-1 decision to Denmark's Caroline Wozniacki in second-round play at Wimbledon on Thursday. Wozniacki, the 2006 junior Wimbledon champion, took the opening set in just 18 minutes. Wozniak, who made it to the third round of the French Open earlier this year, went down an early break in the second set and could not get on track, bowing out in 45 minutes. The Blainville, Que., native won their only previous meeting in a third-round match at the Australian Open junior tournament three years ago. Wozniacki holds the No. 30 position in the WTA rankings, 64 spots higher than Wozniak.



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  • Sunday, June 29, 2008

    Nadal beats Kiefer and beats clock

    Nadal beats Kiefer and beats clock
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- With the sun setting behind Centre Court, Rafael Nadal was racing to get done so he could concentrate on another important match.

    The four-time French Open champion chalked one up for Spain over Germany at 9:12 p.m. Saturday local time, with his 7-6 (3), 6-2, 6-3 win over Nicolas Kiefer in the third round at Wimbledon.

    But that wasn't the Spain vs. Germany victory that was foremost in his mind immediately after the match -- that could come Sunday when the Spaniards take on the Germans at the European Championship final in Vienna, Austria.

    The middle Sunday a rest day at Wimbledon, and the last thing Nadal wanted was his third-round contest with Kiefer to be being carried over until Monday if it got too dark to keep playing.

    "I was a little bit nervous, because for me it was important to finish the match," said Nadal, stifling a yawn.

    It was in the corresponding stage last year when his third-round match with Robin Soderling spanned four days because of rain.

    Nadal went on to lose in the final to Roger Federer for the second straight year.

    So after a first set that lasted 67 minutes and went to a tiebreaker on Saturday, it was getting close to 8 p.m. and he instinctively lifted a gear.

    He raced through the second set in 33 minutes, hitting winners off both wings, and was serving for the match at 5-1 at 9:03 p.m. in the third set.

    Then he lost his focus for a bit. Kiefer broke him, for the first time in the match, and then held serve for 5-3.

    With the stairwell lights in the Royal Box, the occasional camera flash and the scoreboard glow the only artificial lights adding illumination in the shadowy court, Nadal made no mistake next time.

    He held at love to finish in 2 hours, 22 minutes, then he punched the air, took off both wrist bands and threw them into the crowd.

    "I had an unbelievable mistake with the volley, the forehand volley at 5-1, and later he has a very good serve," he said. "Lucky for me, later I played a good game."

    Rafa loves his football and has a bit of pedigree.

    His uncle, Miguel Angel Nadal a.k.a. "The Beast of Barcelona," played for Spain in three World Cup campaigns in 1994, '98 and 2002.

    So on Sunday evening, he planned to be kicking back with some of the other Spanish tennis players at his place in Wimbledon Village watching the coverage from Ernst Happel Stadium. Spain will be trying to win its first piece of major football silverware since its 2-1 win over the Soviet Union in the 1964 European Championship final.

    Asked if his win was the first of two for the weekend for Spain, Nadal was confident.

    "Tomorrow is another history, no? Happy for my win, but tomorrow is very important," he said. "If we are not confident right now with this team we're never going to be confident."

    Not that he thought the Spanish team would be using his win over Kiefer as motivation.

    "I don't think I'm going to help nothing, but for sure tomorrow I'm going to be supporting the Spanish team 100 per cent," he said.

    After that, the 22-year-old Nadal can re-set his focus on becoming the first man since Bjorn Borg in 1980 to win back-to-back French Open and Wimbledon titles. The likely roadblock is Federer, who has won the last five Wimbledon titles and is on a 61-match grass-court streak.





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  • Wimbledon: Venus into fourth round

    Wimbledon: Venus into fourth round
    RelatedWimbledon:Men's scoresWomen's scores THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- One swing from completing her week's work, Venus Williams toed the baseline, dribbled the ball, gave it a toss and delivered yet another thunderclap serve at sun-kissed Wimbledon.

    The ace bounced off the Court 1 backstop as Williams trotted to the net to bid another foe farewell.

    The scoreboard said 127 m.p.h., the fastest women's serve ever recorded at Wimbledon. The scoreboard also had Williams winning 6-1, 7-5 Saturday over qualifier Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez.

    It was an upset-filled first week at Wimbledon and a rough one for American tennis, but the nonconformist Williams sisters ignored both trends. Four-time champion Venus and two-time champion Serena won three matches each without dropping a set.

    Both advanced to Monday's round of 16, as did No. 2-ranked Rafael Nadal on the men's side.

    With No. 1-ranked Ana Ivanovic and No. 2 Maria Sharapova eliminated, and with No. 3 Jelena Jankovic limping to victory Saturday, prospects look good for an all-Williams final next weekend.

    "The chances were wonderful from the beginning, from round one," Venus said. "That's how we see it. The more we progress, obviously the closer it gets."

    It would be their first meeting in a Grand Slam final since Serena beat Venus for the 2003 Wimbledon title.

    Potential pitfalls remain, Jankovic foremost among them. But she hurt her left knee in the first set against 17-year-old Caroline Wozniacki.

    Jankovic won 2-6, 6-4, 6-2, finishing the match with her leg heavily wrapped. She planned to have an MRI exam before facing Tamarine Tanasugarn on Monday.

    "I don't think it's that bad," Jankovic said. "I hope for the best so that I will be able to play my next match."

    Unable to overcome injury was French Open runner-up Dinara Safina, who finished in tears as she lost to Shahar Peer 7-5, 6-7 (4), 8-6. Safina, who required treatment of her thighs during at least two changeovers, cried between points and hit half-speed serves in the final game, then double-faulted on match point.

    Alla Kudryavtseva had a successful encore to her upset of Sharapova, reaching the fourth round at a major event for the first time by beating Peng Shuai 6-3, 1-6, 6-4.

    Toronto's Daniel Nestor and Serbian partner Nenad Zimonjic advanced to the third round of men's doubles. The second seeds dispatched Americans Rajeev Ram and Bobby Reynolds 6-1, 7-6 (6), 2-6, 7-6 (1).

    But Vancouver's Rebecca Marino lost her first-round girls singles match 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 to Lesley Kerkhove of the Netherlands.

    With a late start on Centre Court, Nadal barely beat darkness but easily defeated Nicolas Kiefer 7-6 (3), 6-2, 6-3. Runner-up to Roger Federer the past two years, Nadal is trying to become the first man to consecutively win the French Open and Wimbledon since Bjorn Borg in 1980.

    On Monday he'll play No. 17-seeded Mikhail Youzhny.

    In the wake of the worst showing by American men at Wimbledon since 1926, with no one reaching the second week in singles, top-seeded Bob and Mike Bryan advanced to the doubles quarterfinals.

    But the U.S. curse extended to Russian Dmitry Tursunov, who lives in California, and German Tommy Haas, who lives in Florida. Both lost.

    Tursunov was beaten by Janko Tipsarevic, who upset Andy Roddick in the second round. Haas was defeated by Andy Murray, seeking to become the first British man to win Wimbledon since Fred Perry in 1936.

    The marquee men's match Monday will be five-time defending champion Federer against 2002 winner Lleyton Hewitt.

    Defending women's champion Venus Williams is to play Alisa Kleybanova, and Serena Williams faces unseeded Bethanie Mattek, the only other remaining American. Those matches are back to back on Court 2 -- the "Graveyard of Champions" -- but the sisters will nonetheless be heavily favoured, as usual at Wimbledon, where they've won six of the past eight titles.

    Venus and Serena have settled into a groove on grass after enduring third-round upsets at the French Open -- only the second time both lost on the same day at a major event. Serena cleared Wimbledon's third-round hurdle Friday, and Venus was in a hurry to follow.

    Her opponent was a Spanish left-hander with a lifetime record of 4-7 in Grand Slam matches. Predictably, Martinez Sanchez had no chance in baseline rallies, and the first set was a tennis clinic of sorts, with Williams whacking winners all over the court.

    Her serve was especially impressive -- she finished with 11 aces and won 33 of 38 points on her first serve. Even Martinez Sanchez's supporters could appreciate the overpowering performance.

    "Vamos, Venus," someone shouted.

    But in the second set Martinez Sanchez changed strategy and began to play serve and volley. It was a curious tactic to counter Williams' booming groundstrokes, like diving into the barrel of a howitzer, but for a while it worked.

    Martinez Sanchez won three games in a row for a 5-4 lead. Then Williams began to treat her like slow traffic on the British motorway, passing her on the left, then on the right, then on the left again.

    "I was pretty happy, because she started putting some pressure on, and I had some good answers," Williams said.

    Williams won 12 of the final 14 points, the last with the record serve. At 127 m.p.h., it topped the previous Wimbledon high of 126 achieved by both Venus and Serena. Venus holds the women's tour record with a 129 m.p.h. serve at last year's U.S. Open.

    "The power that I have ... it's a real blessing," she said. "I'm actually never really trying to serve that hard, if that makes any sense. It just comes big. It's just how I serve. It's just me."

    Williams celebrated the victory with her customary pirouette and wave, and as she left the stadium, she spotted a friend in the stands. She put her thumb to her ear and her little finger to her lips and mouthed the words "Call me."

    Time to start making dinner plans for the second week.





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  • Saturday, June 28, 2008

    Gimelstob sorry for Kournikova jab

    Gimelstob sorry for Kournikova jab
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Justin Gimelstob's disparaging comments about Anna Kournikova have created a stir at Wimbledon, where World Team Tennis teammate Serena Williams denounced the remarks as unprofessional.

    Gimelstob retired from the men's tour last year and is on the board of the ATP, which runs men's tennis. He made sexual remarks about Kournikova and other female players on a Washington radio program "The Junkies" last week, before heading to Wimbledon.

    The comments were widely published in Britain on Friday, after Gimelstob was suspended one match without pay by WTT for a violation of the player conduct code.

    Gimelstob called Kournikova the "b-word" and made sexually-charged remarks about her and his brother. Gimelstob apologized on the WTT Web site Wednesday, the day of his suspension.

    Serena Williams, who is on the Washington Kastles team with Gimelstob, said the comments were "totally uncalled for."

    "Being pro women's rights, I just think we've come farther than to be referred to ... you know, I don't cuss," she said Friday, during her post-match press conference. "Anna is a great girl. For anyone to say that about her is kind of ... what can I say? It's not professional."

    Gimelstob also made a suggestive comment about Czech player Nicole Vaidisova during the program. Vaidisova downplayed the remarks.

    "I know Justin. He's a very nice guy. I heard he apologized for it," Vaidisova said. "I think it's just you say something and you don't really mean it. It happens."
    "Definitely not. I have no attraction to her because she's such a douche. I really have no interest in her ... I wouldn't mind having my younger brother, who's a kind of a stud, nail her and then reap the benefits of that. She has a great body but her face is a five (out of ten)."

    Gimelstob on his attraction to Kournikova.
    In his apology, Gimelstob said there was "no excuse" for his comments.

    "I am extremely disappointed in myself," Gimelstob said in the statement. "I take full responsibility for all the words that came out of my mouth ... Anna Kournikova, World Team Tennis and many others deserve my deepest apologies.

    "I recognize that my access to communicate to the public should be used in a positive way, and this was clearly not the case last week."

    Billie Jean King, the co-founder of WTT, met with Gimelstob and was "confident both he and WTT will move beyond this unfortunate incident," she said in a statement on the WTT Web site.

    Gimelstob, a commentator at Wimbledon for Tennis Channel, writes a regular column for Sports Illustrated's Web site.

    Kournikova made the Wimbledon semifinals in her debut in 1997. She never won a singles title, but won two Australian Open doubles titles.

    Kournikova had little to say about Gimelstob's remarks.

    To read the complete story, click here
    "I really don't want to get into any of the off-court stuff," she said Thursday during a conference call previewing the WTT season. "I'm just going to take the high road and not get into this discussion.

    "WTT is not about those sorts of things, it's about keeping it fun and positive. ... I don't want to give it any more significance than it has already received."

    The ATP did not sanction Gimelstob.
    "That's because they're all Russian chicks. And there's some other cute ones out there. There's some talent out there."

    Gimelstob on why there are fewer lesbians on the current women's tour than 15 years ago.
    "The ATP cannot condone any form of intolerance and Justin Gimelstob's comments last week were unacceptable," the ATP said. "However, Justin has done the right thing in taking full responsibility for his comments by apologizing publicly to Anna for what he has rightly described as his disappointing and disrespectful comments."

    The women's WTA Tour welcomed Gimelstob's suspension.

    "We're disappointed at Justin's remarks, which are inappropriate and contrary to what our sport should stand for," the WTA said. "We believe that he has learned from this experience and will not be repeating his behavior."







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  • Troubles in homeland worry tennis vet

    Troubles in homeland worry tennis vet
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Cara Black is safe now in the traditions and serenity of Wimbledon. Back home, in Zimbabwe, it is far different and far more troubling.

    "It's all over the news so I think everybody is aware what's going on and players do ask me," she told The Associated Press. "But every Zimbabwean is in the same situation so it's frustrating, but you've just got to get on with things and hope things will be fine."

    Black has been around tennis a long time. She is 29 and a six-time Grand Slam doubles champion. Four titles have come at Wimbledon, including three in women's doubles and one in mixed.

    Players approach her at the All England Club and offer sympathies. Black fears the consequences of speaking out about Zimbabwe, where counting continued in a widely denounced presidential runoff. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai withdrew, blaming intimidation and physical danger.

    Black is reticent to discuss her encounters with longtime leader Robert Mugabe, who for nearly three decades has presided over Zimbabwe, its economy now in ruins.

    "It's not safe for me," Black said.

    But she is relieved the international community has finally begun an effort to unseat Mugabe and ease the burden of her compatriots.

    "It's disturbing for every Zimbabwean. It's just hopefully not for much longer and things will be fine," Black said. "You've just got to keep waiting.

    "It's getting better. It's on the way forward now. We've just got to bide a little more time. The world seems to be caring more."

    Black is a tennis globe-trotter based in London and gets to her home in the capital of Harare twice a year. In her latest visit, in April, she saw how dire things were.

    "You notice the food shortages, you've got to look around for your shopping," she said. "Everybody struggles and is effected by it. Things are tough, nothing's simple.

    "You can't just go to the shop and buy some bread or go to the petrol station and get some fuel, but they learn to deal with it. They do deal with it well and they are strong, tough people and survivors."

    Black hopes her performances at Wimbledon and the Beijing Olympics in August will provide some relief for a troubled country.

    Black and American partner Liezel Huber are the top-seeded pair in the women's doubles, and they advanced to the fourth round Saturday by beating Vania King and Alla Kudryavtseva 6-1, 6-3. Black is also entered in the mixed doubles with Paul Hanley.

    "Sport's always a good thing -- it's healthy and it takes your mind off other things," Black said. "It definitely gives everyone a good boost."

    Zimbabwe tennis is struggling, but Black accepts that there are more pressing issues.

    "There's not enough money involved in the sports and things like that, but a little more interest in equipment and funding could really change that around," she said. "Sport isn't the priority at the moment. ... I think food would be."

    Black believes there should be a clear division between sports and politics and has urged the International Cricket Council not to expel Zimbabwe next week at a meeting in Dubai.

    "It's not fair that the athletes suffer, but what you can do? It's happened a lot now," she said. "They've just got to wait and I'm sure things will pan out OK."





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  • Friday, June 27, 2008

    Serena, Venus named to Olympic team

    Serena, Venus named to Olympic team

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Former gold medallists Venus and Serena Williams are expected to play both singles and doubles for the Olympic team announced Wednesday by the U.S. Tennis Association.

    The nine-member team also includes Lindsay Davenport, who won a gold medal in singles at the 1996 Games. She'll play singles and has been nominated for doubles with Liezel Huber, ranked No. 1 in the world in doubles.

    First-time Olympians James Blake, Sam Querrey and Robby Ginepri were named to the men's team in singles. Bob and Mike Bryan, the No. 1 doubles team, and Blake and Querrey have been nominated as the U.S. men's doubles teams.

    The International Tennis Federation is still filling roster spots, and the USTA anticipates another place will be available on the women's team. It's expected to go to Jill Craybas, who would be a first-time Olympian at age 34.

    Zina Garrison will coach the women's team.

    "With three former gold medallists on our team and the No. 1 doubles player in the world, we are certainly capable of earning medals at this Olympics," Garrison said.

    Rodney Harmon will coach the men's team for the first time.

    "With all of our singles players making their Olympic debuts and the Bryans searching for one of the few prizes they have still to earn in their accomplished careers, our goal is to be on the podium when all is said and done," Harmon said.

    The Canadian team is expected to be named early next month.

    At the 2000 Games, the Williams sisters became the first siblings to combine for an Olympic gold medal in doubles. Venus also won the gold in singles. The only other woman to sweep both titles was Helen Wills in 1924.

    Tennis will be played Aug. 10-17 in Beijing.





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  • Roddick makes earliest exit at Wimbledon

    Roddick makes earliest exit at Wimbledon

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Andy Roddick could sense himself losing it. First he blinked, then he choked.

    Janko Tipsarevic saw it happening, and he tightened his grip.

    Sixth-seeded Roddick, who lost the 2004 and '05 Wimbledon finals to Roger Federer and was touted by none other than the great Rod Laver to make the 2008 final, instead made his earliest exit ever at the All England Club on Thursday, a 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (4) second-round loss to No. 40-ranked Tipsarevic.

    "Any chance I got I pretty much just choked it," Roddick, the 2003 U.S. Open champion said. "It's like you want something so bad you almost squeeze too tight."

    Roddick had eight break-point chances, including three set points that could have evened the match at two-sets all, but failed on every one.

    His worst -- on the second set point and facing a second serve -- he limply netted an awkward-looking forehand return.

    Roddick can be his own harshest critic. Here's his assessment:

    "The guy hit average serves in the middle of the box at about 90 miles an hour. There's no excuse," he said. "If I consider myself a top player or whatever, you make those. You make those in your sleep.

    "I just didn't make anything happen out there tonight. Zero, zero, zero."

    As in zero-for-8.

    "Today I could see that he was tight, and this is one of the reasons why, especially in the important moments, I made him play," Tipsarevic said. "I didn't try to hit great shots like impossible, down-the-line shots.

    "Professional tennis players feel the intensity and see when the other guy is choking. If you can read that, that's a great benefit for you."

    Tipsarevic, meanwhile, had a 100 per cent conversation rate on break points at 2-for-2.

    He set up two match points but only needed one, falling to his hands and knees on Centre Court when he finished it off in just over three hours.

    "This means the world to me," Tipsarevic said. He has made the fourth-round at a Grand Slam event -- here last year -- but rated the win over Roddick as one of the most significant of his career.

    The 24-year-old Tipsarevic was not the Serbian pundits picked to be in the third round of the men's draw. But No. 3-ranked Novak Djokovic, the reigning Australian Open champion, lost to Marat Safin in the second round.

    Now Tipsarevic wants to take up the challenge for Serbia, which has produced its first men's and women's Grand Slam titles this year. He explains his lack of consistency of the past by saying he saves his best for the big players.

    That's what happened against Roddick.

    "I just looked at the statistics, and it's really simple: Today I won because I used my chances and he didn't," Tipsarevic said.

    Roddick knows it, too. He's been close to a winning a second major, but so often undone by one or two missed opportunities.

    The 25-year-old American has been ranked No. 1 and remains determined to claw his way back -- even with Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal so dominant. He equates his spotty recent success with having your view blocked at a concert.

    "When you've seen the Rolling Stones from the front row, and then all of a sudden you're like seven or eight rows back and there's a really tall guy in front of you waving his hands and screaming, you can't see much, it's not going to be as good as the other shows," he said. "That's kind of what you're going to remember."

    He said it would take "maybe some baby steps to get back there."

    Roddick doesn't see himself being as far away from the top players as he felt in 2006, when he lost in the third round at Wimbledon and fell out of the top 10 for the first time in four years.

    "It's not the same as '06 where I couldn't have hit the ball into an ocean from the beach," he said. "I want to win another Slam."





  • Monaco Sunday quotes: Honda
  • Dancevic stuns Nalbandian at Wimbledon
  • Hewitt breezes into 2nd round in London
  • Roddick bows out of French Open
  • Predators trade Niskala to Philly
  • Thursday, June 26, 2008

    Davydenko inadvertently sparked probe

    Davydenko inadvertently sparked probe
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Nikolay Davydenko thinks he may have inadvertently become implicated in the sport's betting scandal by speaking too loudly to his wife in Russian during a small tournament in Poland last year.

    The fourth-seeded Davydenko spoke at length about the ongoing match-fixing investigation after his 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 loss to Benjamin Becker on Tuesday -- the fifth time in seven years he has lost in the first round at Wimbledon.

    Davydenko said he had done nothing wrong in Poland and was confident he would be cleared in the ATP investigation.

    Betfair, an online bookmaker, voided all bets on a match between Davydenko and Argentina's Martin Vassallo Arguello in Sopot on Aug. 2 after the Russian player retired, citing a foot injury in the third set.

    The betting agency said it received about 3.4 million pounds (C$6.8 million) in wagers on the match, 10 times the usual amount for a similar-level match. Most of the money was on the 87th-ranked Arguello, even after he lost the first set.

    Asked for a possible explanation Tuesday, Davydenko said it was small tournament, with lots of Russian spectators and that some of them might have overheard him talking to his entourage in the stands.

    "Everything was going on. I spoke in the centre court with my wife ... (in) Russian," he said. "Maybe it's possible, if I can say something, 'I don't want to play or I can retire.' ... some people can understand.

    "It may be my mistake because I need to be quiet, I need to be concentrating, I need to do only my job. Not to do something, talking with anyone or something like this in the stadium."

    That sort of inside information could have sparked the flood of telephone or internet betting.

    But the 27-year-old Russian shrugged off concerns for the outcome of the investigation, saying he'd been denying any involvement in illegal betting for a year, the investigators had no proof of any wrongdoing and "what's happening is happening."

    "I try to defend me how possible," he said. "I don't know how long I can defend me more. Maybe (until) the end of my career."

    Davydenko insisted he had given investigators appointed by the ATP all the information they had asked for, including his and his wife's phone records, except for some of his brother's phone records that were not available.

    He said he was comfortable about continuing to play, despite the investigation, but it had been a "bad dream."

    "But not one day, (a) few months," he said.

    Davydenko said he does not believe there is a match-fixing problem in the sport. He said he supports bans up to three years for anyone found guilty of serious corruption.

    Leading betting agencies last year presented world tennis authorities with a dossier of matches involving irregular gambling patterns over the last five years. Of those, 45 are under investigation, including eight at Wimbledon.

    The Association of Tennis Professionals, which runs men's tennis, this week formally approved a list of 15 recommendations from an independent review panel announced last month to combat potential for corruption.

    The All England Club, which runs Wimbledon, is already implementing tougher restrictions on access to player locker rooms -- allowing only the player and a coach to enter -- during the tournament.

    Five of the eight players who lost those Wimbledon matches were in this year's draw, which contains 18 players involved in the 45 matches under investigation.

    Among the 15 recommendations of the review, players will be required to report any suspicious contact from gambling syndicates within 48 hours of being approached. Sanctions range up to life bans for players found guilty of match fixing.

    Players and their families and entourages could also be banned from betting on matches.

    Five players, all Italians, have been fined and suspended for betting on tennis.





  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Kovalchuk suspension shouldn’t change classic Russia-Finland matchup
  • Unusual betting found in tennis matches
  • Dancevic, Djokovic ousted at Wimbledon

    Dancevic, Djokovic ousted at Wimbledon
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Novak Djokovic of Serbia was upset in straight sets by Marat Safin in the second round Wednesday, ending the Serb's chances of testing his theory about Roger Federer's vulnerability at Wimbledon.

    The 75th-ranked Russian won 6-4, 7-6 (3), 6-2 on Centre Court. It was a stunning loss for the third-ranked Djokovic, who came to the All England Club confident after beating Federer in the semifinals at this year's Australian Open en route to his first Grand Slam tournament title.

    Federer only had a minor hiccup -- dropping serve once, the first time since Roland Garros -- before getting past Robin Soderling of Sweden 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (3) to extend his streak on grass to 61. The top-ranked Swiss looked anything but vulnerable as he continued his bid for a sixth straight Wimbledon title.

    Meantime, Canadian Frank Dancevic is also out. The Niagara Falls, Ont., native, who needed treatment on an apparent abdominal injury during the match, lost 4-6, 7-6 (10), 6-4, 6-4 to American Bobby Reynolds.

    Women's No. 1 Ana Ivanovic of Serbia struggled but won. The French Open champion saved two match points -- including one that bounced off the net cord for a winner -- in the second set before overcoming 29-year-old Frenchwoman Nathalie Dechy 6-7 (2), 7-6 (3), 10-8.

    Two-time champion Serena Williams of the U.S. had less trouble, advancing 6-4, 6-4 over Urszula Radwanska of Poland on Court 2, called the "graveyard of champions" for its history of upsets.

    Djokovic came up against one of the toughest second-round opponents he could have drawn.

    Former No. 1 Safin has won two Grand Slam titles. One came when he upset Federer in an Australian Open semifinal en route to the 2005 title. Safin beat Djokovic in the first round of that tournament -- their only previous meeting.

    "It was certainly a very bad day for me," the 21-year-old Djokovic said. "I didn't do anything that I was supposed to -- he was very solid in all segments."

    Djokovic had said Federer was vulnerable after his recent lopsided French Open loss to No. 2-ranked Rafael Nadal.

    The hype surrounding those comments set up the possibility of an enticing semifinal here. Now, it will be Safin who will try to go down that path.

    But not before offering some thoughts on what led to his victory over Djokovic.

    "He didn't impress me with his game today. I could read his serve. I could return," the 28-year-old Russian said. "I could stay with him from the baseline, and that's it."

    .Safin said he came in under the radar, and that Djokovic had all the pressure.

    "He's the one who has to win matches. For me, nobody expects anything," said Safin, admitting that he had not dared look beyond the second round. "The guy won the Australian Open, semifinals of French Open, winning tournaments left and right. You play against him, and the last time I won two matches in a row was I don't remember when. So what do you expect?

    "Now, I'll have to check -- the way I'm playing now, I could go far."

    Djokovic was far from convincing, playing on a surface he is not entirely comfortable on and struggling with his serve in a blustery breeze. After saving three match points, he served a double-fault to give his Russian opponent a fourth, then double-faulted for the 10th time to concede.

    "I was serving a lot of double-faults, which is unusual," said Djokovic, who was broken twice in each of the first and third sets and only broke Safin's serve once. "I was just not finding my momentum."

    .Ivanovic was erratic against 97th-ranked Dechy, who saved two match points on her own serve in the 12th game of the third set.

    Ivanovic set up three more match points at 0-40 six games later and, after Dechy saved one, the 20-year-old Serb squealed with delight and kissed the net after hitting a forehand winner to end it in three hours 24 minutes.

    "It was an amazing match ... one of my longest ever," said Ivanovic, who dropped her service five times but had twice as many winners (72) as unforced errors (36). "In the second set I saved some match points and from that point on I just thought it's my second chance."

    Ivanovic next plays China's Zheng Jie, a 6-2, 7-5 winner over Britain's Elena Baltacha.

    In other women's matches, 2006 champion Amelie Mauresmo of France recovered for a 4-6, 6-1, 6-1 win over Virginia Ruano Pascual of Spain and 2007 finalist Marion Bartoli of France beat Tatiana Perebiynis of Ukraine 6-2, 7-5.

    Also advancing were No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetsova, No. 8 Anna Chakvetadze, both of Russia, and No. 18 Nicole Vaidisova of the Czech Republic, a quarter-finalist last season.

    Australia's Lleyton Hewitt, the only other Wimbledon champion in the men's draw, survived Court 2 with a 7-6 (4), 6-0, 6-2 win over Albert Montanes of Spain.

    Also advancing were No. 10 Marcos Baghdatis of Cyprus and No. 13 Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland. Former world No. 1 Juan Carlos Ferrero of Spain had to retire with a leg injury in the third set when he trailing Mischa Zverev of Germany..

    After his loss, Djokovic shook his head as he walked forward, and hugged Safin across the net. Djokovic said he might have had too much respect for Safin's obvious but often erratic talent.

    "I had opportunities, but I just made some unforced errors, which were really uncharacteristic," Djokovic said. "Safin has his ups and downs, and is known for his mental instability in some ways, but he's still a great player. (Today) he was mentally there."

    Djokovic reached the semifinals last year but had to retire against Nadal with blisters. He was hoping to meet Nadal in the final this time.

    "A lot of expectations from my side and all the people that are following my career," he said. "I just have to take the best things out of it and use it for the future -- certainly I expected to go far."

    Grass is not Safin's favourite surface, either. Wimbledon is the only major where he has not advanced beyond the quarter-finals. But he is a dangerous opponent now.

    .Safin next plays 29th-seeded Andreas Seppi of Italy, who beat Florent Serra of France 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-7 (5), 6-4.







  • Dancevic stuns Nalbandian at Wimbledon
  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Eager K.C. eyes Open Cup berth
  • Tuesday, June 24, 2008

    Wozniak joins fellow Cdn in second round

    Wozniak joins fellow Cdn in second round
    RelatedMore Canadian news:Dancevic stuns No. 7 seedWimbledon results
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- With Wimbledon devolving into a fashion contest, former champion Lindsay Davenport's retro getup may have trumped all other outfits.

    Her sleeveless white top and pleated skirt were very 1980s, and the wrap on her right leg -- with bandages extending from mid-thigh to mid-calf -- looked like something out of the British Museum.

    Playing her first match at Wimbledon since 2005, Davenport whacked enough winners to compensate for a sore knee Tuesday, and she hobbled past Renata Voracova 6-3, 5-7, 6-3.

    And for the second straight day, a Canada advanced to the second round of singles.

    Aleksandra Wozniak of Blainville, Que., defeated Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine 7-5, 6-4 on Tuesday. Her win comes a day after Frank Dancevic of Niagara Falls, Ont., upset David Nalbandian of Argentina in the first round of the men's draw.

    Moving more comfortably into the second round were Maria Sharapova and her new all-white, tuxedo-style outfit, which prompted 13 fashion-related questions at her post-match news conference. Other winners in straight sets included defending champion Venus Williams, Rafael Nadal and Andy Roddick on a second successive mild, dry day at the All England Club.

    While photographers focused on Sharapova's ensemble, and Roddick poked fun at Roger Federer's opening-day sweater, Davenport resorted to tactics that had her winning ugly. Back on the women's tour after a hiatus to have her first child, the 1999 Wimbledon champion showed she still possesses the grass-court game to beat anyone -- even on one leg.

    "I wouldn't come here if I didn't think I would do really well," Davenport said.

    Idle for two months after sitting out the clay-court season, Davenport feared rust would be a problem in the opening round. But she was troubled more by a sore knee that has bothered her in recent weeks.

    Playing on Court 2 -- the "Graveyard of Champions" -- Davenport held a match point in the 10th game of the second set but failed to convert it. Before the final set began, she required treatment from a trainer, who probed and stretched her knee, then sprayed and wrapped her right thigh. During a changeover three games later, more tape was applied to the knee.

    "Some days it feels OK, and other days it is a problem," Davenport said. "In the latter stages of the second set, I definitely felt like it was getting worse. I didn't feel great in the third."

    Limited mobility wasn't really a problem, however, because Davenport has compensated for that her whole career. She went for a big shot at every opportunity, eager to end points quickly, and often did by swatting a winner.

    "I actually felt like I started hitting the ball a little bit better because I felt like I needed to do more with it," Davenport said.

    She had help: Voracova double-faulted to fall behind 5-3 in the final set. Davenport lost the first point of the next game, then ripped an ace, a service winner, another ace and another service winner for the victory. She looked to the sky in relief and limped off the court, but an hour later she sounded optimistic about her chance of moving deep into the draw.

    Seeded only 25th, Davenport proudly noted she hasn't lost before the quarter-finals at Wimbledon since 1997.

    "I've had some of my greatest memories here," she said. "What started off as a Grand Slam that I probably liked the least definitely turned into one I liked the most in the latter part of my career."

    She's still a youngster compared to 36-year-old Jonas Bjorkman, whose 15th Wimbledon ended with a four-set defeat against Arnaud Clement. Bjorkman plans to retire in October.

    Another veteran, No. 4-seeded Nikolay Davydenko, lost to Benjamin Becker 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, but it was hardly an upset. The opening-round defeat was Davydenko's fifth at Wimbledon in seven years.

    Nadal began his bid to end Federer's five-year reign by beating qualifier Andreas Beck 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (0). Nadal, runner-up to Federer the past two years, is coming off his fourth consecutive French Open championship and a win at Queen's for his first grass-court title.

    Roddick never faced a break point and defeated Eduardo Schwank 7-5, 6-4, 7-6 (0). He then weighed in on this week's fashion buzz, which started with the cardigan Federer wore Monday onto Centre Court.

    "I personally don't care," Roddick said. "But any attention drawn to tennis for whatever reason is good.

    "If that means wearing the Mr. Rogers sweater, whatever else you got, then so be it. I don't know if it would be a good look for me or any of my friends. Or relatives."

    Sharapova wore a belted tuxedo warmup jacket on to Court 1, along with a sheer bib-style blouse and -- for the first time at a Grand Slam event -- shorts. Of secondary interest: She beat qualifier Stephanie Foretz 6-1, 6-4.

    "To be able to perform in that, with it being so thin, so mobile, it's really cool," Sharapova said.

    The day's most exciting tennis may have occurred in the first set played on Centre Court. The normally serene atmosphere became lively when four-time champion Williams fell behind 2-0 and 3-1 against Naomi Cavaday, an Englishwoman who needed a wild card to make the draw.

    Sensing a possible upset, the partisan crowd began cheering shots by the Brit even before points ended. The applause proved premature as Williams rallied to win 7-6 (5), 6-1.

    Along with avoiding an embarrassing loss, Williams managed to dodge a bee that bothered her in the opening game.

    "I was about to serve. I felt something on my leg. I looked down. It was a bee, a big old bumblebee," Williams said. "I was trying to get it off without getting stung.

    "You know how they usually fly back at you. Then I ended up losing that service game, so I guess the bumblebee got me off to a bad start."







  • Crew’s Hernandez nearly set to return
  • Davenport withdraws from French Open
  • Williams test ’shark-fin’ engine cover
  • Davenport back at Wimbledon
  • Brazilian Iaconelli joins BCN
  • Federer, Serena advance at Wimbledon

    Federer, Serena advance at Wimbledon
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Wimbledon began with a few surprises Monday. There was lots of sunshine, Serena Williams wore a raincoat anyway, and Roger Federer's changeover routine was interrupted by a friendly visit from his opponent.

    The tennis went mostly as expected. Federer, Williams and new women's No. 1 Ana Ivanovic won in straight sets. Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic also eased into the second round.

    The highest-seeded player to lose was No. 7 David Nalbandian, eliminated by Frank Dancevic of Niagara Falls, Ont., 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. Lleyton Hewitt, who beat Nalbandian in the 2002 final, fist-pumped his way to a five-set victory over Robin Haase. Two-time Grand Slam champion Marat Safin also won.

    Stephanie Dubois of Laval, Que., put up quite a run in her first appearance at Wimbledon, dropping a 2-6, 6-1, 8-6 decision to eighth-seeded Anna Chakvetadze of Russia.

    The top-ranked Federer began his bid for a sixth consecutive Wimbledon title by winning the first match on Centre Court. Sporting a classy cardigan, he stepped onto the fresh grass promptly at 1 p.m. and looked eager to dispel the notion he's in decline, winning the first 11 points and beating former doubles partner Dominik Hrbaty 6-3, 6-2, 6-2.

    During a changeover one game from the finish, the 30-year-old Hrbaty broke with protocol by wandering over to the seated Federer.

    "I looked over and there he was," Federer said. "He asked if he could sit next to me. I said, `Sure. There's no problem. There's an extra seat.' We go way back. ... He said it might be his last Wimbledon, so it was almost a little bit emotional."

    Said Hrbaty: "If it had been someone else, I wouldn't have done it. ... We've had a lot of good times together. I just wanted to tell him he's a great friend of mine, and I appreciate that."

    Federer extended his grass-court winning streak to 60 matches, including 35 at the All England Club, and yet his continuing domination is in doubt because he struggled the first half of the year.

    That might help explain his pre-match jitters.

    "I did feel all of a sudden a little pressure about two minutes before I went on court," Federer said. "I felt like, `Wow, OK, here we go. Let's try to get off to a good start.' I did."

    He looked as regal as ever in his warmup outfit, highlighted by a beige, four-button sweater with gold trim and a stylized F on the left breast.

    But judging from post-match interviews, Federer was upstaged on the fashion front -- perhaps a further sign he's in decline. His apparel inspired only one question, while Williams fielded five queries about the stylish white trenchcoat she wore onto court before beating Kaia Kanepi 7-5, 6-3.

    A sample:

    Q: Was that an effort to keep the rain away this year?

    Williams: "I just love coats. I'm always buying Burberry coats. And I don't know why, because I live in Florida, so it doesn't really add up. Now I have a wonderful white coat I can wear on the court."

    Q: It looked almost Carnaby Street-inspired. Was it a '60s retro look?

    Williams: "It's definitely kind of retro-inspired -- buckles on the wrist, the waistband tie. You can tie it or button it."

    Q: It's not necessarily a piece of athletic attire. Did you have to get any special permission from the club to wear it?

    Williams: "It's definitely not athletic attire. But it's ladylike, and I'm very ladylike. It goes perfect with my personality. ... It's just delectable."

    There were only three questions about Williams' match, even though it provided a bit of drama when she faced a break point serving at 5-all in the first set.

    Kanepi, an Estonian who reached the French Open quarter-finals, takes lusty swings that often put two-time champion Williams on the defensive. But Williams endured the onslaught and took charge after Kanepi double-faulted to end the first set.

    "Today definitely was not an easy match," Williams said. "She was playing unbelievable. I felt like she wasn't making any errors. I just felt like I just had to hang in there and stay positive."

    The match was the first for the Williams sisters since they lost on the same day in the third round at the French Open. They flew from France to Florida and prepared for grass by hitting on hard-courts.

    The unorthodox preparation for Wimbledon is standard for the sisters and not to be questioned -- they've won the title six of the past eight years.

    "We just go home and practice in the hot sun," said Serena, who is seeded sixth. "We're so ready to leave Florida. We're like, `We're going to do anything we can to stay at the tournament as long as we can so we don't have to go back in that heat."'

    Defending champion Venus Williams begins her bid for a fifth Wimbledon title Tuesday when she faces wild card Naomi Cavaday of Britain.

    Ivanovic played her first match as the No. 1 woman and French Open champion, and the 20-year-old Serb seemed comfortable in the new role, beating Rossana de Los Rios 6-1, 6-2.

    "Becoming No. 1 takes more pressure, but also you have to see pressure for what it is," Ivanovic said. "It's a reflection of your own ambition. If you see it as a positive thing, it means that you put yourself in a position to do something memorable. So if you look at it that way, it can be very motivating."

    Fellow Serb Djokovic bounced back from a bad set to beat Michael Berrer 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 6-0.





  • Eager K.C. eyes Open Cup berth
  • Wimbledon draws up brackets
  • Federer advances to Halle semi-finals
  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Monday, June 23, 2008

    Surging Serbs headline Wimbledon

    Surging Serbs headline Wimbledon
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Ana Ivanovic. Jelena Jankovic. Novak Djokovic.

    While much was being made of the emerging talent from Serbia coming into Wimbledon 12 months ago, they all were still just the names of up-and-comers from a country with little tennis tradition and no Grand Slam champions.

    Twelve months and two Grand Slam titles later, they're arriving with the No. 1 and No. 2 rankings in women's tennis and the No. 3 position in the men's -- which is really the best of the rest considering the long dominance of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

    "For such a small country, having two Grand Slam champions in half a year is an incredible achievement," the 21-year-old Djokovic said Saturday. "Every time our country name is written on a scoreboard wherever we show up, this is a big positive commercial for Serbia. So (the Serbian people) really respect it and they appreciate it.

    "The (players') receptions were just amazing. Tennis is No. 1 sport in our country in the moment."

    Djokovic started the surge, upsetting Federer in the Australian Open semifinals before going on to win the final and claim the first major title for Serbia. That ended a stretch of 11 Grand Slam tournaments won by either Federer or Nadal.

    After losing finals at the Australian Open and Roland Garros, Ivanovic became the first Serbian woman to win a major with her run at the French Open last month, spontaneously climbing into the bleachers to celebrate with her family.

    Now they're all trying to outdo each other to get the third major title. The competition between the women is obvious: Ivanovic is 6-1 in head-to-heads against Jankovic, who is 0-4 in Grand Slam semifinals. But the competition doesn't stop there for Ivanovic. She also wants to beat longtime friend Djokovic to win Serbia's next Grand Slam title.

    "Obviously we motivate each other. It's just a natural rivalry," Ivanovic said. "You want to be better than the other. Now he did a great job in Australian Open this year.

    "When I was going onto the court for the final in Paris, I thought, Novak won a Grand Slam, I can do it, too."

    Ivanovic came to Wimbledon last year after losing the French Open final to Justine Henin. She reached the semifinals at the All England Club for the first time, before losing in straight sets to eventual champion Venus Williams.

    She's more confident this time around.

    "This is the best time for my confidence so far. I do feel very excited to be back on grass and to start competing again," Ivanovic said Saturday. "Last few weeks gave me a lot of confidence, so I'm very, very excited about the new challenges."

    The 20-year-old Ivanovic assumed the No. 1 ranking by winning the French but Jankovic, whom she beat in the semifinals, and 2004 Wimbledon champion Maria Sharapova are so close that maintaining the positions rely on performance at every tournament.

    So she made sure she took the time to savour both achievements, and enjoy the unprecedented celebrations in Serbia.

    "Being able to go home for a couple of days, celebrate with people I know for a long time, friends, family, being welcomed by so many Serbian people in a square. Then also the president received my family. It was a very nice moment," Ivanovic said.

    "Obviously many times in the past the people would come on a square to welcome sports people, volleyball, basketball players. But it was always like a team sport.

    "After Novak won in Australia, now me coming back from Paris, it was the first time for a single person that they organized this. It was very thrilling to see how many people actually came there."

    Jankovic is the odd one out of the trio, not only because she hasn't yet won a major.

    She went to hone her tennis in the United States as a junior while the other two stayed closer to home in Europe. She admits she likes to party in her down time, while the other two say they're more subdued.

    But Jankovic desperately wants what they've got, including a bit of the adoration.

    "The people over there are so happy for us and very supportive. What we have achieved for such a small countries like Serbia, it's really amazing," Jankovic said. "We didn't have a tradition in tennis. We didn't have anybody to look up to.

    "But now we have made it and we have No. 1 in the world, No. 2 and No. 3. It's something that we dreamed of. Hopefully we will motivate the younger kids and inspire them. Hopefully we'll have better facilities to help younger generations develop their games so they don't have to go to other countries to train."

    Jankovic, 23, said Serbia's sudden burst of tennis success came despite the infrastructure, not because of it.

    "We all did it in different ways: I went to America. Ana went to Switzerland. Djokovic went to Germany. So we all did it in different ways, but at the end we made it," she said. "A lot of sacrifice, a lot of hard work.

    "But I think in general, as a nation, we are very hungry, very motivated. We want to be the best that we can be. We are very, very talented. It's just a matter of getting some help and getting so that you can do your job in the best way without having some troubles."

    Jankovic can avoid playing Ivanovic until the final, but has a difficult path to the championship with defending champion Venus Williams and third-ranked Sharapova in her half. She faces Ukraine's Olga Savchuk in the first round.

    Ivanovic is against Rossana De Los Rios in the first round.

    After saying five-time Wimbledon champion Federer was vulnerable following a lopsided French Open final loss to Nadal, Djokovic ended up in the Swiss star's side of the draw.

    He opens against Michael Berrer of Germany and could meet Federer in the semifinals.







  • Teams consider BTCC package move
  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Wimbledon draws up brackets
  • Ivanovic to take over No. 1 ranking
  • Dancevic stuns Nalbandian at Wimbledon

    Dancevic stuns Nalbandian at Wimbledon
    RelatedWimbledon:Federer, Serena advanceFull Men's resultsFull Women's results THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- A nagging wrist injury couldn't stop Canadian Frank Dancevic from pulling off one of the biggest wins of his career.

    The 23-year-old from Niagara Falls, Ont., upset No. 7 seed David Nalbandian of Argentina 6-4, 6-2, 6-4 in the first round at Wimbledon on Monday.

    Just two weeks ago, Dancevic wasn't sure he'd even be able to play in the tournament after his ailing wrist forced him to withdraw from a tune-up event at Queen's Club.

    "With my wrist and having to pull from Queen's this is just great," said Dancevic. "Honestly, I was happy just to be able to play here. This is a really big win for me and I'm so excited."

    Dancevic, ranked 95th in the world, will play 106th-ranked American Bobby Reynolds in the second round.

    It's been a disappointing season so far for Dancevic who was sidelined from January to May with a back injury.

    Heading into Monday's match, he was 1-5 on the ATP tour in 2008, his only win coming against Italian Simone Bolelli on New Year's Day in Adelaide.

    At Queen's two weeks ago, Dancevic retired from his first-round match versus Bolelli because of his bad wrist.

    The win over Nalbandian, a Wimbledon finalist in 2002, was especially satisfying for Dancevic after he lost to the Argentine in the second round a year ago.

    "When I lost to him here in 2007, he really outplayed me, but I changed that this time," said Dancevic. "He looked a bit shaky from the beginning and I just tried to play strong. This is just a huge win for me."

    Dancevic also made headlines last July when he beat American star Andy Roddick in the semifinals at Indianapolis. But he has never advanced past the second round in a Grand Slam.

    Nalbandian, on the other hand, had never lost in the first or second round in five previous trips to Wimbledon.

    He claimed he was injured, but would not elaborate during a terse news conference after the loss.

    "I can't tell you," he said.

    "There's no reason to talk. I didn't play well," he added. "I never thought it was going to be like this. You have that kind of day sometimes. I tried.

    "I couldn't turn it around. I expected better than this for sure."

    Nalbandian said he would not be playing at the Beijing Olympics, with the U.S. hard court season now his focus.

    Dancevic had a chance to serve for the match at 5-2 in the third, but Nalbandian broke and then held his own serve.

    Dancevic earned triple match point with a drop volley in his next service game and closed with an ace, making the second round for only the third time at a major.

    "My level today was great," said Dancevic. "I think I played one of the best matches in my career, if not the best. I felt I played flawless.

    "I didn't really make any stupid mistakes during the match. I kept the pressure on him the whole time. I just kept the lead the whole match."

    -- With files from The Associated Press





  • Battaglia scores in OT as Marlies stave off elimination with win over Crunch
  • Federer storms past Nalbandian
  • Sunday, June 22, 2008

    Federer no longer the top dog?

    Federer no longer the top dog?
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Bjorn Borg and Novak Djokovic say Roger Federer's reign at Wimbledon is in jeopardy. Pete Sampras and Rafael Nadal say Federer remains the man to beat on grass.

    "It's maybe a time where some people talk a little bit too much," Federer said Sunday, 24 hours before playing the first Centre Court match as he begins his pursuit of a sixth consecutive Wimbledon title.

    That would equal the record established by William Renshaw, the champion in 1881-86. Since the early 1900s, Federer and Borg (1976-80) are the only men to win Wimbledon five times in a row. Federer's 59-match winning streak on grass is the longest in the 40-year Open era.

    Yet there has been plenty of debate the past two weeks regarding whether Federer is this year's favourite. It seems everyone but old Willie Renshaw has weighed in on the subject.

    Nobody disputes the 26-year-old Federer has struggled in recent months. For only the second time since early 2003, he has been beaten at two consecutive major tournaments. He has lost eight matches this year, only one less than in all of 2007. And he endured his most lopsided Grand Slam defeat in the French Open final two weeks ago, winning only four games against Nadal.

    Ranked No. 1 since February 2004, Federer blames his slow start this year on a winter bout with mononucleosis and says he feels fine now. He showed no signs of slippage when he moved to grass the week after the loss in Paris, winning a tournament in Germany without losing his serve, much less a set.

    That was against a weak field, however, and the title failed to squelch speculation Federer will soon be an ex-champion in gentlemen's singles at the All England Club.

    "I got the question, `Can Roger win Wimbledon?"' said Andy Roddick, who lost to Federer in the 2004 and 2005 finals. "I found that to be one of the most ridiculous questions I've ever answered in my life. You know, he has won it five times. I'm not sure what else he has to do."

    Tell it to Borg. After erroneously predicting Federer would give Nadal a tough test in the French Open final, Borg now says Nadal and Djokovic are more likely to win Wimbledon than Federer.

    Djokovic likes the sound of that. He won his first major title at the Australian Open after beating Federer in the semifinals -- the first sign of a narrowing gap atop the rankings.

    Djokovic, ranked third, believes Federer will suffer from a French Open hangover.

    "I think he's a little bit shaken with that loss, and mentally he has been struggling in the last couple of months," Djokovic said. "New names are coming, fresh, talented players who believe more they can win against him, and I am one of them. Suddenly he is worried a little bit."

    Federer's biggest nemesis disagrees.

    The No. 2-ranked Nadal is 11-6 against Federer, was runner-up at Wimbledon the past two years and pushed Federer to five sets in the 2007 final.

    But Nadal scoffed at the notion Federer is more vulnerable on grass this year.

    "Yes, a lot," Nadal said facetiously. "He didn't lose a set in Halle -- 59 matches without losing. Come on."

    In the wake of the French Open, there was debate about the decline of Federer even in Brazil, where Sampras competed in a senior tournament.

    "As great as Roger is, he's going to have his losses and his bad days," Sampras said. "When push comes to shove in the majors, he's still the guy that's most likely to win them. He has lost a couple, and if anything that'll do him some good. It'll get him going and fired up. He'll be just fine."

    Federer has won 12 Grand Slam championships, two shy of Sampras' record. With five Wimbledon titles, Federer has a chance to match the record of seven shared by Sampras and Renshaw.

    There's little debate the competition for Federer is stiffer at Wimbledon than when he began his reign in 2003. The lawn courts have become slower, which gives baseliners a fighting chance, and the precocious Nadal and Djokovic have adapted to grass more quickly than many young players.

    The big-serving Roddick, once Federer's most formidable obstacle at Wimbledon, has been reduced to an afterthought in discussions about the title contenders.

    How does Federer size up the field?

    "I feel like I'm the big favourite, obviously," he said. "It's a huge year for me, going for my sixth. Getting the fifth one was a dream come true. It's something that's going to be very hard to match, I think, in the future. I hope I can also match Pete's record of seven Wimbledons here. That's what my focus is."

    Federer faces the toughest draw of the top contenders, with potential first-week opponents including big-serving Robin Soderling, 2007 quarter-finalist Tomas Berdych and 2002 champion Lleyton Hewitt.

    On Monday, Federer plays Dominik Hrbaty. Following them on Centre Court will be top-ranked Ana Ivanovic, the French Open champion, against Rossana de Los Rios. Other show-court matches include Djokovic against Michael Berrer, and two-time champion Serena Williams against French Open quarter-finalist Kaia Kanepi.

    Defending women's champion Venus Williams begins a bid for her fifth Wimbledon title Tuesday against wild card Naomi Cavaday of Britain.

    Federer should have no trouble finding his footing against Hrbaty, whose record at Wimbledon is 4-11. It's worth mentioning again that since 2003, Federer's opponents are 0-59 against him on grass.

    "The game changes a whole lot when you play on grass," Federer said. "It really favours my game because of my ability to move, the way I defend, the way I use my shot selection. I haven't lost in such a long time on grass. Obviously my confidence is really, really high.

    "Then again, other players are around to really challenge me. That only motivates me. So it should be an interesting Wimbledon this year."

    That's one point on which everyone can agree.







  • Vermeulen pleased with fifth place
  • Federer continues dominance on grass
  • Davenport back at Wimbledon

    Davenport back at Wimbledon
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- In town for a tennis tournament, Lindsay Davenport strolled amid the shops and tea houses of Wimbledon village lugging her one-year-old son, accompanied by her husband and looking very much at home.

    She should: This is Davenport's 13th visit to Wimbledon, although it's her first since 2005. This is the latest stop in her career comeback after leaving the women's tour in late 2006 to have her first child.

    "This is my favourite Slam of them all -- because of the relative low-keyness," she said. "I love staying where we can walk to the club and have nice quiet dinners.

    "I'm an American, but the U.S. Open is a much more hectic lifestyle and pace. This one is much more serene."

    There's sure to be big roar for Davenport, however, when she takes the court for her first match Tuesday. She's been popular at the All England Club ever since winning the tournament way back in 1999, when she was 23.

    She was a finalist two other times and hasn't lost before the quarter-finals since 1997, which suggests she's a threat this year even at 32.

    Seeded 25th, Davenport figures her grass-court experience gives her an edge.

    "It's a surface you're always a little scared on because you don't play on it that much," she said. "Once you get used to it after the first few days, you feel a little better.

    "Knowing most girls don't excel on grass, I try to take that into account -- that if you are the more aggressive player, you'll be successful. Typically it takes someone a few years to learn to like it. That's what I bank on."

    However, rust could be an issue when Davenport plays her first match in two months against Renata Voracova in the opening round.

    Davenport skipped the European tournaments on clay, her least-favourite surface, then withdrew before the Wimbledon warmup event in Eastbourne, England because of a minor injury.

    "I wanted to play last week, but I had a little tweak in my knee and wanted to be careful so I could for sure play here at Wimbledon," she said. "There's definitely a little rustiness. Hopefully I can work that out in the first round or two."

    The three-time Grand Slam champion has flirted frequently with retirement in recent years. Will this finally be her last appearance at Wimbledon?

    "I've been through that so many times," she said with a laugh. "At a certain point it will be. I'm 32 with a one-year-old -- probably, but we'll see."



    DOUBLING UP : The doubles team of Venus and Serena Williams will make a comeback at Wimbledon.

    The sisters have combined for doubles in only three tournaments since Wimbledon in 2003. Their most recent title was the 2003 Australian Open, the sixth Grand Slam title for the partnership.

    "We always love playing doubles," Venus said Sunday. "We haven't been able to play for so long. We've had issues. We were injured and-or sick. Whatever it was, we just had issues."

    The sisters hope to play doubles together at the Olympics in Beijing. They combined to win gold medals at Sydney in 2000.



    PRE-TOURNAMENT BUZZ : A swarm of guests without tickets descended Sunday on the All England Club: bees.

    Hundreds buzzed a patio area for players, as well as the main walkway between practice courts and the locker room. Two security guards cordoned off the area, and a worker wearing netted headgear sprayed the insects.

    American Wayne Odesnik encountered them on his way to practice.

    "At first, I didn't know what it was, and then I was swamped by bees," he said. "I was trying to run through them."

    Frenchman Arnaud Clement decided not to walk through the area.

    "Of course not," he said with a smile. "It is dangerous."



    TRADITION LOVER : Andy Roddick says he enjoys the U.S. Open, which he describes as "a free-for-all, wild and crazy thing." But he also enjoys Wimbledon, where the atmosphere is much more subdued.

    "I love all the traditions," said Roddick, a two-time runner-up. "I love the all-white. I love the no-play on the middle Sunday. I love the stuff growing on the side of the walls. ... They meant for that to be there, right?"

    Ivy on the Centre Court wall is indeed a staple at the All England Club.

    And what's the worst thing about Wimbledon?

    "The worst thing?" Roddick said. "That I haven't won it yet."







  • Roddick bows out of French Open
  • Davenport withdraws from French Open
  • Revs searching for consistency
  • Saturday, June 21, 2008

    Sampras: Federer will break GS record

    Sampras: Federer will break GS record
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Pete Sampras remains confident that Roger Federer will beat his record for most career Grand Slam singles titles.

    In fact, Sampras plans to be sitting among Federer's most vocal supporters when he does win a 15th career major -- even if that requires a lengthy flight to Melbourne, Australia.

    Federer has 12 Grand Slam titles, two behind Sampras' record.

    If Federer won a sixth straight Wimbledon title next month and a fifth consecutive U.S. Open title in September, he would be aiming for No. 15 at the Australian Open in January.

    "There is a burning desire in Roger to break my record, and when he does it I would like to be there," Sampras said Thursday. "I said to Roger, 'Just make sure it's in New York or London. Australia is a long way to go. (But) if it worked out like that, I would fly there.'

    "I would just let him enjoy it as his moment but (I would want to be there) just to respect the record and what he was able to do and to just say, 'Congratulations."'

    Despite Federer's loss to No. 2-ranked Rafael Nadal in the French Open final, Sampras is confident the Swiss star will bounce back at the All England Club.

    "He's created this monster of winning so many tournaments and so many majors and doing it with ease," Sampras said in Sao Paulo, Brazil. "As great as Roger is, he's going to have his losses and his bad days. It's just human nature to go through some lulls."

    .That doesn't mean he has lost his edge, Sampras said.

    "In the majors, he's still the guy that's most likely to win them," Sampras said. "He's lost a couple and, if anything, that'll do him some good. It'll get him going and fired up. He'll be just fine."

    The 36-year-old Sampras was speaking from BlackRock Tour of Champions, where he makes his debut Thursday in Brazil against Thomas Muster.

    But Sampras will find it hard not thinking of Wimbledon, which begins Monday, and where he captured half of his career majors.

    "I think if I were to step back on that court at Wimbledon it would bring up a lot of emotion," Sampras said. "Just because of what the place meant to me and how big it was to the sport of tennis."





  • Federer continues dominance on grass
  • Quick Hitters - Week 14
  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Borg: Federer ‘greatest’ if he wins Open
  • Wimbledon draws up brackets

    Wimbledon draws up brackets
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    LONDON -- Roger Federer may not want to look too far ahead in the Wimbledon draw. Waiting in the semifinals could be the dangerous Novak Djokovic.

    Even the first round could be tricky for Federer, who will face a player he's never beaten as he begins his bid for a sixth straight Wimbledon title. He'll open against Dominik Hrbaty -- a 30-year-old Slovakian playing in his 45th consecutive major -- in the first match on Centre Court on Monday.

    In the women's draw Friday, top-seeded Ana Ivanovic and two-time champion Serena Williams are in the same top half. No. 2 Jelena Jankovic and Venus Williams, the defending champion and four-time winner, are in the bottom section.

    Hrbaty beat Federer in their only two previous matches in 2000 and 2004, but has slid from No. 12 in the rankings to No. 272 since their last meeting.

    If he gets past Hrbaty, Federer could face a third-round match against rising French star Gael Monfils, whom he beat in the French Open semifinals, and either 2002 champion Lleyton Hewitt or Fernando Gonzalez in the fourth. Federer's projected quarterfinal opponent is Spain's fifth-seeded David Ferrer.

    Djokovic, ranked No. 3, beat Federer in the Australian Open semifinals to end the Swiss star's winning streak there. Djokovic has the size, power and overall game to challenge Federer's supremacy.

    No. 2 Rafael Nadal, who lost to Federer in the past two finals, is in the other half of the draw. He could face two-time runner-up Andy Roddick in the semifinals.

    Djokovic believes Federer is vulnerable after his lopsided defeat to Nadal in the French Open final and lack of a Grand Slam title this year.

    "Some things are changing. I think he's a little bit shaken with that loss and mentally he has been struggling in the last couple of months," Djokovic said this week in London. "New names are coming, fresh talented players who believe more they can win against him and I am one of them. Suddenly he is worried a little bit."

    Few players have a winning record against Federer. Nadal, at 11-6, is the only one to have done it consistently.

    Federer and Nadal each won grass court titles last week. Nadal beat Djokovic at Queen's Club to claim his first title on the surface, and Federer extended his grass-court streak to 59 matches at Halle in winning his 10th grass-court title. The previous four times Federer won at Halle, he won Wimbledon three weeks later.

    "That's exactly what I hope for this time," Federer said. "That's why I'm so satisfied. That's why I will go to Wimbledon with a lot of hope."

    Nadal, coming off his fourth straight French Open victory, will open against German qualifier Andreas Beck. Nadal could face Mikhail Youzhny in the fourth round, Britain's Andy Murray or 2007 semifinalist Richard Gasquet in the quarter-finals and No. 4 Nikolay Davydekno or No. 6 Roddick in the semis.

    Roddick has a possible fourth-round encounter against fellow American James Blake.

    Djokovic has a first-round match against Michael Berrer of Germany and could face a tough second-round matchup with Russia's Marat Safin, a former No. 1 and two-time Grand Slam winner. Djokovic could meet 2002 finalist David Nalbandian in the quarter-finals before a potential showdown with Federer.

    Venus Williams, seeded No. 7, will open defence of the women's title against British wild card Naomi Cavaday. Williams could meet Sania Mirza in the third round, Daniela Hantuchova in the fourth, Jankovic in the quarters and 2004 champion Maria Sharapova in the semifinals.

    The Williams sisters could meet in the final again.

    Ivanovic, who took over the No. 1 ranking after winning the French Open for her first major title, faces Rossana De Los Rio of Paraguay in the first round. She could face Anna Chakvetadze in the quarterfinals and Serena Williams or No. 4 Svetlana Kuznetzova in the semis

    Serena Williams could play 2006 champion Amelie Mauresmo in the fourth round and Kuznetsova or last year's runner-up, Marion Bartoli, in the quarters.





  • Ivanovic, Federer top Wimbledon seeds
  • Queen’s: Nadal fires Wimbledon warning
  • Champions League format unveiled
  • Federer draws Querrey at French Open
  • Early exit for Ordina defending champ

    Early exit for Ordina defending champ
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    DEN BOSCH, Netherlands -- Defending champion Ivan Ljubicic was ousted by Viktor Troicki of Serbia 5-7, 6-4, 7-6 (5) in the second round of the Ordina Open on Wednesday.

    Ljubicic had 25 aces and lost his serve only once, but in the third-set tiebreaker he squandered a 3-0 lead and dropped five straight points.

    "In the tiebreak I thought I had a chance but I didn't find the weapons to finish it off," said Ljubicic, who was seeded fourth.

    Troicki was through to his first quarter-finals since last July at Umag, where he beat Novak Djokovic en route to the semifinals.

    "It was a great match, I played well and I'm happy that I won," Troicki said. "It was tough to break each other."

    In the quarter-finals, Troicki will face seventh-seeded Guillermo Canas, who beat Rohan Bopanna of India 6-2, 6-4.

    Also, Arnaud Clement of France beat Marcel Granollers of Spain 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-3, and Juan Martin Del Potro of Argentina beat Rainer Schuettler of Germany 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5).

    In the women's event, top-seeded Elena Dementieva of Russia beat Sara Errani of Italy 6-3, 7-5.

    Local favourite Michaella Krajicek overpowered Sania Mirza of India 6-2, 6-2, and seventh-seeded Katarina Srebotnik of Slovakia beat Chan Yung-jan of Taiwan 6-4, 6-3 but injured her left ankle and had to withdraw from the tournament. That advanced third-seeded Dinara Safina to the semifinals.

    Tamarine Tanasugarn beat Ashley Harkleroad of the United States 4-6, 6-4, 7-5 to reach her first quarter-finals since February at her home event in Pattaya City, Thailand, and set up a last-eight match with Krajicek.

    Sorana Cirstea of Romania defeated Mariya Koryttseva of Ukraine, 7-6 (3), 6-4 and faces Dementieva next.





  • Federer advances to Halle semi-finals
  • Wolves Battle Penguins in 2008 Calder Cup Finals
  • Hamilton quickest in practice 2 - Canada
  • Alonso tops second practice in France
  • Rome Masters: Qualifier upsets Gasquet
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