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Raonic Comes Back To Beat Federer At Wimbledon

  • Posted: Jul 08, 2016

Raonic Comes Back To Beat Federer At Wimbledon

Canadian will play in first Grand Slam final

Milos Raonic took advantage of some rare shaky serving from Roger Federer to take the fourth set and even their semi-final contest 6-3, 6-7(3), 4-6, 7-5 on Friday at The Championships.

The winner will play second seed and 2013 champion Andy Murray or No. 10 seed Tomas Berdych, the 2010 finalist.

It seemed all but assured that the fourth set would head into a tie-break. Federer was serving at 5-6, 40/0. But Raonic hit a forehand winner and Federer donated two double faults to bring the game to deuce. On his third set point opportunity, Raonic struck a backhand pass to force a decider. He celebrated with a scream and a fist pump to his team.

The Canadian had consistently dug himself out of trouble in the fourth set, coming back to hold in four of his six service games and saving three break points. Until the last game, Federer hadn’t faced a break point since 1-2 in the first set. But Raonic came through to even the contest.

Federer had been riding the momentum he had earned in the third set, during which he landed more first serves and kept Raonic at the baseline and in rallies. The Canadian saw only seven net points in the third set after approaching 26 times during the first two sets.

The third seed had evened the match at one-set apiece after Raonic double faulted at 3/3 in the second-set tiebreak.

The sixth seed couldn’t have requested a better start to the Wimbledon semi-final. Raonic controlled the opener with his serve and forehand, successfully avoiding rallies with Federer. The Canadian won eight of his 12 net points. He also benefited from a Federer double fault on the set’s lone break point and had a one-set lead after 35 minutes.

Raonic is looking to make his first final at a Grand Slam championship and also is out for a bit of revenge. He lost to Federer 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 in the 2014 Wimbledon semi-final.

Federer leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 9-2. Raonic, however, won their most recent contest at the Brisbane International in January.

At 34, Federer is aiming to become the oldest Wimbledon finalist since 39-year-old Ken Rosewall finished runner-up in 1974. The last man older than Federer to reach any Grand Slam final was 35-year-old Andre Agassi, who fell to the Swiss at the 2005 US Open.

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Wimbledon 2016: Murray reaches third Wimbledon final

  • Posted: Jul 08, 2016

Andy Murray defeats Tomas Berdych 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 to reach his third Wimbledon final.

Britain’s number one will now face Milos Raonic in the final on Sunday.

Watch coverage of the men’s Wimbledon final from 13:00 BST on Sunday.

Watch more action from Wimbledon here.

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Wimbledon 2016: The colour and quirk of a uniquely British occasion

  • Posted: Jul 08, 2016
Wimbledon on the BBC
Venue: All England Club Dates: 27 June-10 July
Live: Coverage across BBC TV, BBC Radio and BBC Sport website with more on Red Button, Connected TVs and app. Click for more details

During two weeks in early summer, about half a million spectators converge on a corner of south-west London to watch a spot of tennis.

Here we discover some of the more unusual facts and characters that make Wimbledon a uniquely British sporting occasion.

Welcome to Wimbledon

A distinctive sight greets travellers as they head out of Southfields tube station, about a 15-minute walk away from the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis Club.

Tony Sedgwick is a taxi driver and a grandfather. He has also transformed his usual greying locks to bright yellow so that his head resembles a tennis ball. Only at Wimbledon.

“I got a number two haircut, bleached it myself and then one of the other cabbies colours it in with face paint,” said the 51-year-old.

Anyone for tennis?

Cafes, pubs, restaurants and other local businesses get into the spirit of Wimbledon fortnight with special displays and decorations.

Charity shops are a good place to snap up some SW19 bargains – official programmes from previous years can be bought for as little as 99p, in some cases five times less than their original prices.

Right on queue

“The best free campsite in Britain,” the attendant chuckles as punters flood into Wimbledon Park, across the road from the main venue and its 19 grass courts.

While members of the public can enter a public ballot for tickets in September, those who miss out can queue for tickets early in the tournament, with the first 500 guaranteed a spot on Centre Court.

Dozens camp overnight as the park becomes a mini festival, with burgers, coffee and ice cream among the food and drink for sale during the day and into the evening.

Strawberries and cream

Tennis fan Chris Fava travelled more than 5,000 miles from his home in California to visit what he calls the “hallowed ground” of Wimbledon.

“Venice Beach is crazy, but this is bananas,” said the 40-year-old dressed as a strawberry.

The creative director’s creations at previous tournaments included coming in fancy dress as “Sky Man, a daisy, and Mister Sunshine”.

New balls please

To play tennis, you need balls. And in Wimbledon’s case – more than 50,000 of them.

“We order 57,600 which covers qualifying, practice and the tournament matches, and probably use 53,000,” says Brian Mardling, manager of ball distribution.

The balls are stored in a temperature-controlled room at 20C (68F) and used balls can be snapped up by spectators for £3 a can of three.

Yellow balls were introduced for the first time in 1986. The balls are changed after the first seven games, and every nine games after that.

Courts in the act

Delays caused by rain have receded since Centre Court welcomed a retractable roof in 2009. In that first year, Andy Murray beat Stan Wawrinka in a match that ended at 10.39pm.

Murray was also involved the latest ever finish at SW19 when he beat Marcos Baghdatis in 2012 in a match that concluded at 11.02pm.

The grass at Wimbledon is maintained at a height of 15mm during the winter and 12mm in the summer, except during the tournament when it is trimmed to 8mm.

It is a gradual reduction so that the grass does not “go into shock”.

Flying high: Hawk-Eye

Every day of Wimbledon is an early start for bird scarer Rufus the Hawk, who flies from 5am to 9am.

Falconer Imogen Davis says his optimum weight is 1lb 6oz – perfect for chasing pigeons.

“He’s king of the Centre Court,” says Imogen, who has helped look after the bird, aged nine, since he was 16 months old.

Keeping to the rules

There are 350 match officials at the tournament – umpires, chair and line judges – and each is kitted out in identical gear.

If you like their sunglasses, you can pick up a pair for £99 in the Wimbledon shop, but you will need £650 if you fancy a lady umpire’s blazer.

Champagne moments at SW19

It is estimated 150,000 glasses of Pimm’s, 17,000 bottles of champagne and 112,000 punnets of English strawberries are sold during the tournament.

A portion of strawberries (minimum 10 berries) and cream is priced at £2.50, a large glass of Pimm’s is £8.30 while a pint of Stella Artois lager costs £5.20.

Like a hot roast? That will set you back £7.30. Worth noting it is ‘slow cooked pork in Artisan Focaccia Romana bread’.

Throwing in the towels

Towels are a topic of conversation at Wimbledon, where they retail for £29.

The All-England Club provides two towels – green and purple for the men, pink and orange for the women – for each match, which the players are told to leave behind.

But about 2,500 towels mysteriously “disappear” each year, at a cost of over £60,000.

Screens – and lots of them

Fifteen staff work in the referee’s office, monitoring the play, schedule and scores.

Did you know? Tennis scoring is thought to come from the face of a clock with its four quarters – 15, 30 and 45 (shortened to 40).

Last year, the men’s final drew a peak TV audience of more than nine million on BBC One, with others following online and on BBC Radio 5 live.

Wimbledon has its own TV and radio station. The official website, which had over 540m page views in 2015, also has a dedicated Chinese version.

Steeped in history

History hits you at every turn at this tournament, which first took place back in 1877.

There is an extensive museum on site, which boasts its own library and a stunning new virtual reality experience.

A poster from the 1893 tournament has been restored after being found 12 years ago by a member of the public and posted to Wimbledon. It had been at the back of a mirror for 110 years.

And finally… a footnote

Left to right are the trainers of players from 2015: Martina Hingis (shoe size 6.5), Caroline Wozniacki, Heather Watson, Leander Paes, Nick Kyrgios, Horia Tecau and Ivo Karlovic (size 16).

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Federer, Raonic To Kick Off Wimbledon SFs

  • Posted: Jul 08, 2016

Federer, Raonic To Kick Off Wimbledon SFs

Murray and Berdych to follow

Roger Federer is two wins away from securing his 18th Grand Slam title, but an in-form Milos Raonic looks to stop the Swiss star with a blend of power and guile.

Previewing the two semi-final matches…

[6] MILOS RAONIC (CAN) vs. [3] ROGER FEDERER (SUI)

FedEx ATP Head2Head: Federer leads 9-2

Despite overcoming a two-set deficit and saving three match points in an epic quarter-final match against Marin Cilic, Federer comes into the semi-finals having spent two fewer hours on court during the tournament than Raonic. The Swiss has only dropped two sets this fortnight, both against Cilic. Raonic came back from 0-2 down for the first time in his career against David Goffin in the fourth round and edged Sam Querrey in four sets in the quarter-finals.

Raonic, seeded No. 6, is a match away from reaching his first Grand Slam final. He’ll be out for revenge as Federer beat him in the same stage of The Championships two years ago. The Canadian has never won a grass-court title and has yet to win a set against Federer in a Grand Slam championship, but did win the pair’s most recent meeting in the final of Brisbane 2016.

At 34, Federer is aiming to become the oldest Wimbledon finalist since 39-year-old Ken Rosewall finished runner-up in 1974. The last man older than Federer to reach any Grand Slam final was 35-year-old Andre Agassi, who fell to the Swiss at the 2005 US Open.

[2] ANDY MURRAY (GBR) vs. [10] TOMAS BERDYCH (CZE)

FedEx ATP Head2Head: Murray leads 8-6

Murray has not lost to Berdych in nearly three years, but has never faced the 2010 Wimbledon finalist on grass. The 2013 champion has swept the pair’s past four meetings, three of them in straight sets. Coming into the semi-finals, Berdych is the fresher of the two, having dismissed first-time Grand Slam quarter-finalist Lucas Pouille in just under two hours while Murray needed a fifth set and nearly four hours to see off Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in his previous match.

With a semi-final win, Murray will reach his 11th Grand Slam final and take sole ownership of the record for most appearances in a Grand Slam final by a British man. He currently shares the record with Fred Perry. Only three active players (Federer, Nadal and Djokovic) have more Grand Slam final appearances than the Brit.

Berdych is looking to become the first Czech man since Ivan Lendl, Murray’s current coach, to reach multiple Wimbledon finals. He is on a 17-match losing streak against players in the Top 2 of the Emirates ATP Rankings. His last win came against Murray in Cincinnati 2013.

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All-French Wimbledon Doubles Final Locked In

  • Posted: Jul 08, 2016

All-French Wimbledon Doubles Final Locked In

The landmark championship match will take place on Saturday

History will be made at Wimbledon with the tournament’s first all-French doubles final after top seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert/Nicolas Mahut and Julien Benneteau/Edouard Roger-Vasselin won hard fought semi-final matches on Thursday.

Herbert/Mahut survived a five-set battle against No. 12 seeds Treat Huey/Max Mirnyi, 6-4, 3-6, 6-7(3), 6-4, 6-4, while Benneteau/Roger-Vasselin defeated No. 11 seeds Raven Klaasen/Rajeev Ram, 7-5, 6-4, 5-7, 7-6(5). The two French teams have only played each other once, with Herbert/Mahut prevailing in a deciding set in the quarter-finals at last year’s Australian Open. Only one all-French doubles team has won Wimbledon in the Open era (Arnaud Clement and Michael Llodra in 2007). The last all-French doubles final at a Grand Slam took place at Roland Garros in 1932.

Mahut has now reached the doubles final of all four Grand Slams, while Herbert reached his first Wimbledon final. The pair won last year’s US Open and finished as runner-up at last year’s Australian Open.

Benneteau and Roger-Vasselin haven’t reached a Grand Slam final since prevailing at Roland Garros in 2014. Roger-Vasselin’s best Wimbledon result is a semi-final finish in 2013 (w/Rohan Bopanna), while Benneteau reached three quarter-finals in 2010 (w/Michael Llodra), 2013 (w/Nenad Zimonjic) and 2014 (w/Roger-Vasselin)

Herbert/Mahut broke serve in the first game of their match and rode that momentum all the way to the opening set. Huey/Mirnyi earned their first break of the match on a double fault to lead 5-3 in the second set and then held serve comfortably in the next game to level the match at one set each.

Both teams held serve all the way through the third set to force a tie-break, where Huey/Mirnyi went on a four-game run to lead 6/2 and then took a commanding lead after winning their second set point. A backhand winner from Mahut gave the French pair the lone break of the fourth set to lead 5-4 and they forced a deciding fifth set in the next game.

The teams traded routine service holds in the final set until 4-4, when the top seeds were gifted a break of serve on a double fault. Herbert/Mahut held to love in the next game, with Mahut firing an ace on match point to send them into the final.

Benneteau/Roger-Vasselin grabbed the lone break of serve at 5-5 in the opening set of their match and served it out one game later, then repeated that script by earning the only break in the second set to lead 4-3. Klaasen and Ram were unable to convert on four break point opportunities in the first set, but didn’t have a single opportunity in the second set as the French pair took a commanding two-sets lead.

The No. 11 seeds finally made good in a return game by breaking to lead 6-5 in the third set and comfortably holding serve one game later to close the gap. Both teams held serve throughout the fourth set to force a tie-break, where Benneteau/Roger-Vasselin went on a four point run to lead 6/2. Klaasen and Ram nearly staged a comeback, but the Frenchmen prevailed on their fourth match point.

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