Wimbledon: Not a great day for the legends

 

Serena Williams and Petra Kvitova will contest the only predictable women’s quarterfinal on Tuesday, while the rest of the match-ups were exactly what were anticipated when the draw came out.

There are no entrants amongst the final eight who are true shockers, but an old rivalry, vintage match up between Maria Sharapova and Kim Clijsters did not come to past when they were overpowered by two good young Germans: Sabine Lisicki served the lights out and got revenge of Sharapova for two previous Slam losses in a 6-4 6-3 victory; and Angelique Kerber roared past 6-1 6-1 in the Belgian’s final match at Wimbledon

Sharapova was not advantageous on the day, didn

Fed Cup, Monte Carlos semis preview

Ivanovic and Jankovic will try and lead Serbia to its first final.

WORLD GROUP SEMIS

RUSSIA v SERBIA

Even though Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova has a 3-0 record against Jelena Jankovic, I

Roddick stuns Federer

Andy finally got over on Federer again.

After knocking back three break points down 0-1 in the third set of his somewhat shocking 7-6(4), 1-6, 6-4 over Roger Federer in Miami, Andy Roddick went out in third game and all of sudden after nearly a full year and three quarters of looking a slower due to injuries, he ran with sheer abandon. He earned a break point, and then dashed to his right and retrieved a forehand crosscourt volley. With the quick flick of his wrist, he curled a gorgeous forehand down the line pass that stunned the Swiss. That was the moment when he picked up his career again, and whether it lasts another week, month, or two years, he was finally rewarded for the relentless yet frustrating rehab work he has put in since his great run to the 2009 Wimbledon final, when Federer found a way to wear him down mentally him in a five set classic. “That was one of the best return games I have ever played,” Roddick said.

The 31st seed’s victory did not come easily at the end, when Federer out smacked him in a tough forehand-to-forehand rally to gain a 30-15 edge at 5-4. So what did Roddick do? What the old Andy would have done, and this time he succeeded against the Swiss: he nailed an ace and then two service winners, not allowing Federer to trip him up in a rally.

It was just Roddick’s third win in 24 career meetings with Federer, but two of his wins over the 16-time Slam champ have come at Crandon Park on Key Biscayne. It is somewhat hard to recall the last time he played that well against an elite player and actually won the match. His win over David Ferrer at the 2011 US Open showed his grit on a back court, but it was not a victory over a guy who has totally owned him and was on a 16-match win streak, which included titles in Rotterdam, Dubai and Indian Wells.

It was very likely when Nadal knocked out Rafael Nadal at 2009 Miami, a tournament where he has often times played his best.

“It was a great night for him and for American tennis, I guess, but it was tough for me. It was a close match that didn’t go my way,” Federer said. “I came out a bit flat today, I was a bit tired, I guess, but it was more mental than physical, I think.”

Roddick played as about as aggressively as he could: he did not allow Federer to push him around on the forehand side or trick him into absurd net approaches. He looked like the boss and while the win will not allow him to sleep easy for the rest of his life and not think about his Wimbledon defeat, it will make a very happy man in the short term, and also signals that he can be a relevant player again.

QUICK HITS on the rest of the results

Victoria Azarenka d. Dominika Cibulkova 1-6 7-6 7-5.

The victory was Azarenka’s 26th straight, but the contest was the Slovak’s to take, as she held a 2 break lead in the 2nd set. The new Vika was gutsy and clutch, while her old foe from the juniors, Cibulkova, once again failed to show that she has the mentality to be a top 5 player.

Serena Williams d. Samantha Stosur 7-5 6-3

Stosur looked in control of the match early on, but a nervous Serena finally began to take high hopping balls to her backhand early and came away with a small measure of revenge for her 2011 US Open loss to her.

Maria Sharapova d Ekaterina Makarova 6-4 7-6

Sharapova cannot always beat the rest of the top five with her “B” game, but she gutted this one out even though she was way off her top level, as was Makarova. She better up her game quickly as Li Na, who bested her at 2011 RG, is next, and nemesis Serena looms.

Caroline Wozniacki d Yanina Wickmayer 7-6(6) 6-0

Caro has not been so far under the radar since early 2009 publicity wise, but that will change as she will face Serena, who took her out at the 2011 US Open. She’ll take her to at least 3 sets this time around.

Li Na beat Sabine Lisicki 3-6 6-4 6-2

It’s so hard to figure Li and when she’ll will have a mental check out, but the surface and whether suits her and one would expect her to give Sharapova hell. Lisicki is stuck in place.

Agnieszka Radwanska d. Garbine Muguruza 6-3 6-2

If you are a Spanish rookie do you really want to face the white witch of the WTA? I think not, but Muguruza made major strides this week. And Aga, well if she doesn’t face Azarenka she has a good chance to win her sixth high grade outdoor hardcourt title in the past eight months.

Marion Bartoli beat Maria Kirilenko 6-1 6-2

All respect to Marion, but Kirilenko must have been sick or hurt here as she’s been playing way better than this score. Let’s see if Bartoli can go at Azarenka in the same fashion that Cibulkova did.

Juan Martin Del Potro d. Marin Cilic 6-3 7-6(3)

This use to be a super relevant match between up and comers, but Cilic is barely relevant any more. Delpo is promising better play than he showed against Ferrer in Davis Cup.

David Ferrer d Julien Benneteau 7-6(5) 6-4

Ferrer rarely loses early, on any surface, but does anyone actually see him reaching the final?

Novak Djokovic d. Viktor Troicki 6-3 6-4

What was that, the 1000th time Djokovic has defeated Troicki?

Nicolas Almagro d. Fernando Verdasco 6-3 6-4

Three years ago, Verdasco would have won this match but Nico has become more consistent. Maybe he’ll actually make a real run at a Slam this year

Richard Gasquet d Alberto Ramos 6-2 5-7 6-3

Do you realize that these days you can actually say that Gasquet does things quietly – like winning.

 

Mardy Fish d. Kevin Anderson 6-4 6-3

This is the first time this year that Fish has dug himself into a tournament. If he wants to move to Center court, he is going to need to be very focused vs. Almagro.

 

Murray matters again

Murray: so close yet so far

Andy Murray took down David Ferrer again, this time 7-5. 6-4 to claim the Shanghai Masters title, but more importantly he moved ahead of Roger Federer in the rankings for the first time, jumping to No. 3. The leap is well deserved as Murray won an Asian hat trick, also taking the titles in Bangkok and Tokyo. Winning any three tournaments in consecutive weeks is a huge feat physically and while neither Federer nor Novak Djokovic showed up in Asia this fall, Murray did take out a host of good players including No. 2 Rafael Nadal.

Murray

The relevance of the Asian swing


I

US Open: grading the pros

 

This was written before the women

The Serious Maria Kirilenko

Kirilenko will look to stay close vs. Serena

FROM THE BANK OF THE WEST CLASSIC – The first time that Maria Kirilenko faced Serena Williams at 2004 Roland Garros, she took the now 13-times Grand Slam champion deep into the third set before succumbing. The Russian wasn

A sizzling Saturday at SW19

Caro is headed into the land of heavy hitters

Who and what to pay attention to, Wimbledon, Saturday, Day 6

Centre Court: Caroline Wozniacki faces Jarmila Gajdosova in a contest which will largely be determined by how accurate the Aussie is when she’s aiming for the corners, and how ambitious the Dane is willing to be if Gajdosova happens to zone for while. This contest will be a good warm-up for Wozniacki for next week, as now there is no end to the big hitters on her side of the draw, and the quality of the powerballers will continue to improve. I realty cannot imagine how David Nalbandian is going take three sets from Roger Federer unless the Swiss has an awful day. Yes, if the Argentine serves great, returns well and clocks his backhand ,he may be able to grab two sets, but Federer is a better all round player, moves more quickly and clearly is more fit. This is not 2002-2003 when Nalbandian was still a significant Slam threat. This is 2011, when the Argentine is coming off a good dozen stints on the disabled list. I

Throw the Tactics Out the Window

Federer’s 5-Set Sweatfest, JJ, Kleybanova Fall

MELBOURNE – Perhaps the primary reason why Roger Federer hasn

Throw the Tactics Out the Window

MELBOURNE – Perhaps the primary reason whyRoger Federer hasn