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Konta thrilled at British success – but Murray wants more

  • Posted: Jul 05, 2017
Wimbledon 2017 on the BBC
Venue: All England Club Dates: 3-16 July Starts: 11:30 BST
Live: Coverage across BBC TV, BBC Radio and BBC Sport website with further coverage on Red Button, Connected TVs and app. Click for full times.

Johanna Konta says the British success at this year’s Wimbledon is “great to be part of” and these are exciting times for home fans at the tournament.

Konta, Andy Murray, Heather Watson and Aljaz Bedene all won on Wednesday as four British players reached round three for the first time in 20 years.

Kyle Edmund can join them if he beats Gael Monfils on Thursday.

“It is happening because we have got some great players,” Konta said. “I think that is a good enough reason.”

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Konta beat Croatia’s Donna Vekic 7-6 (7-4) 4-6 10-8 in a thrilling match on Centre Court after Watson’s 6-0 6-4 win over Latvian 18th seed Anastasija Sevastova.

It is the first time since Jo Durie and Anne Hobbs reached the same stage in 1986 that there have been two British women in round three.

In the men’s draw, defending champion Murray beat Dustin Brown in straight sets and Bedene reached the third round at SW19 for the first time by overcoming Damir Dzumhur of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

“It is a great movement to be part of personally for me,” Konta added. “It is also something that I am sure is very exciting to the spectators that are coming to the Championships this year.

“I absolutely love playing in front of Brit crowds. Not many players get a home Slam, so I feel very fortunate about that.”

Murray wants more

It is also 20 years since Britain last had five players in the third round at Wimbledon, when Tim Henman, Greg Rusedski, Mark Petchey, Andrew Richardson and Karen Cross reached that stage.

Murray says the home results are “a positive thing” but feels British players should be aiming to go even deeper in Grand Slams.

“It is obviously good to have more players playing in the Slams and winning matches but hopefully we can keep going,” the Scot said.

“I wouldn’t say that this is the target – to get five players into the third round. We obviously want to try to do better than that.

“I don’t know what the level is, but aim as high as you can. Why not try to get five or six players into the quarter-finals of Slams?

“It’s better to set the goal as high as possible and fall a little bit short than go ‘yeah, we’re delighted with five or six players in the second or third round of a Slam’.

“I’d rather set the goal at reaching second weeks and quarter-finals and contending for Slams.”

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How will the Brits get on next?

Murray plays Italy’s clay-court specialist Fabio Fognini next, while Bedene is up against Luxembourg’s veteran Gilles Muller.

“I think the surface is the defining factor for Murray,” said four-time Wimbledon semi-finalist Henman.

“His head-to-head record is 3-3 with Fabio, but they have never played on a grass court.

“With Murray’s pedigree on this surface and the support of this crowd, I think he should be OK coming through that one.”

Konta meets Greece’s Maria Sakkari in round three, while Watson plays Victoria Azarenka, who is in her first Grand Slam since taking a year off to have a baby.

Watson came within two points of beating Wimbledon legend Serena Williams on Centre Court in 2015, and is likely to return to that stage to play the Belarusian on Friday.

Has Watson got a chance of making round four this time?

“It really depends on how Azarenka is hitting the ball,” said former British number one Sam Smith.

“She has got world-class ground-strokes, and she has been number one in the world. If Azarenka gets into a big rhythm, then her shots could be too heavy for Heather.

“But Heather is playing really well and Azarenka has only been back for a couple of tournaments so this is a good time to play her.

“With Jo, she has just taken to the big stage incredibly well when you think most of her career has been playing on the outside courts.

“I thought her composure on Centre Court was exceptional. Her mental toughness too – that impresses me more. Her all-round game was very good but her serving under pressure was exceptional.

“I don’t think she is going to be any more confident after winning it because she is super confident anyway and she is going to be very tough to beat at this year’s championships.”

No British woman has won Wimbledon since Virginia Wade in 1977, nor matched Durie’s run to the last eight in 1984.

A repeat of Wade’s win is still a long way off but there are plenty of reasons for British tennis fans to smile right now.

Just when you thought Wednesday couldn’t get any better for them, last year’s hero Marcus Willis won a five-set thriller in the men’s doubles with Jay Clarke.

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Nishikori Avoids Wimbledon Upset Bug

  • Posted: Jul 05, 2017

Nishikori Avoids Wimbledon Upset Bug

Ninth seed will next meet Bautista Agut

Kei Nishikori overcame the serve-and-volleying Ukrainian Sergiy Stakhovsky, who famously upset Roger Federer in 2013, 6-4, 6-7(7), 6-1, 7-6(6) on Wednesday at The Championships. Nishikori is looking to advance past the fourth round this fortnight and post his best Wimbledon result yet during his ninth appearance.

Last year at Wimbledon, the Japanese right-hander had to retire from his fourth-round contest against Marin Cilic. Last month, Nishikori also had to pull out of the Gerry Weber Open in Halle with a left hip injury.

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But the ninth seed looked in good health against Stakhovsky, who qualified and was playing in the Wimbledon second round for the fifth time. Nishikori had two set points in the second set to take a commanding two-sets-to-zero lead but the 33-year-old Stakhovsky stayed in the set and evened the match with an ace out wide in the tie-break.

Nishikori, though, quickly bounced back, winning the third set in 35 minutes, and in a back-and-forth tie-break in the fourth set, Nishikori hit a service winner to prevail on his third match point and move into the third round.

The 27-year-old Nishikori will next face 18th seed Roberto Bautista Agut, who beat German Peter Gojowczyk 6-2, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3 in two hours and 17 minutes. The Spaniard’s best Wimbledon result came in 2015 when he reached the fourth round. But Bautista Agut has never beaten Nishikori, who leads their FedEx ATP Head2Head series 4-0.

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Wimbledon 2017: Heather Watson beats Anastasija Sevastova

  • Posted: Jul 05, 2017
Wimbledon 2017 on the BBC
Venue: All England Club Dates: 3-16 July Starts: 11:30 BST
Live: Coverage across BBC TV, BBC Radio and BBC Sport website with further coverage on Red Button, Connected TVs and app. Click for full times.

Britain’s Heather Watson matched her best Wimbledon run with a stunning second-round win over Latvia’s 18th seed Anastasija Sevastova.

Watson, 25, won 6-0 6-4 in just over an hour to reach the third round for the third time in her career.

The Guernsey player raced to the first set in 19 minutes, then fought back from two breaks down in the second.

She will play either former world number one Victoria Azarenka or 15th seed Elena Vesnina in the last 32.

The former British number one has dropped outside the world’s top 100 after reaching a high of 38 in January 2015.

Speaking to BBC One, Watson said: “I felt very good at the beginning of match, very on it and relaxed, more than I was in my first match. I obviously know how she plays, she is a great player and I was expecting the best.

“She started to step up in the second set but I was able to keep my cool and just stick with her.

“I feel like I’m seeing the ball very big and am moving well.”

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Federer & Djokovic say Wimbledon should consider rule changes after opponents retire

  • Posted: Jul 05, 2017

Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic said Wimbledon should consider rule changes after both their first-round opponents retired with injuries.

Third seed Federer led 6-3 3-0 when Ukrainian Alexandr Dolgopolov quit with an ankle injury after 43 minutes.

Second seed Djokovic progressed after a calf injury saw Martin Klizan pull out after 40 minutes at 6-2 2-0 down.

“We had a joke in the locker room saying we should maybe play a practice set on Centre Court,” said Djokovic.

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Both Klizan and Dolgopolov have struggled with injuries recently and their retirements were among a total of eight – seven in the men’s draw and one in the women’s – over the first two days of the Championships.

The men’s tour, the ATP, introduced a rule at the start of 2017 that means a player can retire before a first-round match and retain their prize money.

A lucky loser then gets the place and money earned from qualifying, plus any further prize money accrued from the second round onwards.

The rule is not in place at the four Grand Slam tournaments.

“Maybe it should be addressed,” said Djokovic.

“I think the new rule that the ATP has reinforced allows players who have made it to the Grand Slam main draw to get what they deserve, but at the other hand allow someone else to play if they can.

“I support that kind of rule.”

First-round losers at Wimbledon earn £35,000 this year, potentially encouraging players to take to the court when they know they are not fit enough to compete.

“The question always is, should they have started the match at all?” said Federer.

“That, only the player can answer really, in my opinion. You hope that they would give up their spot for somebody else, even though they deserve to be in there, but fitness not allowing them.

“Maybe the Grand Slams should adopt some of that [the ATP rule], then maybe we would eliminate maybe half of the players [who retire],” said Federer.

“Some of them, maybe something really did happen. Now you’re thrown in the same basket, so that’s rough.”

It’s not a good look for our sport – McEnroe

Klizan suffered a recurrence of a calf injury that forced him out of tournaments in Rome and Geneva in May, and a groan went around Centre Court when, less than an hour later, Dolgopolov also failed to complete two sets.

The 15,000 spectators were at least cheered by the news that former world number one Caroline Wozniacki and Timea Babos would make a surprise appearance on Centre Court to bolster the schedule.

Three-time champion John McEnroe said on BBC Sport: “I do think when you saw Klizan, he clearly wasn’t ready or able to play from the very beginning.

“They’ve got to figure out some kind of rule change where, I suggest, they give him half the first-round prize money and bring someone else in who is at least fit and can go out 110%.

“It’s not a good look for our sport when you have to sit and watch that on Centre Court.

“For someone like Klizan, that £35,000 [first-round prize money] really matters and he’s reluctant to give that up.

“That’s where you need to get the powers-that-be at Wimbledon, the ATP, all the people involved in our sport, even a coach to speak to Martin and make him understand that in the best interests of the sport, and for himself – he’s risking a worse injury.

“This isn’t something that just cropped up, he’s had issues with this for a few months, so he’s got to get this sorted out.”

‘Players owe it to fans’ – Isner

John Isner, who won through round one on Tuesday, spent 11 hours and five minutes on court when beating Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon in 2010.

The American could barely walk at the end of what is the longest match in history but insists only players in agony should quit at Grand Slam level.

The 32-year-old said: “I know the Wimbledon Centre Court didn’t get their money’s worth today. That’s for sure.

“If it’s just excruciating pain, OK, you can’t play. If something is tweaked here or there and you feel like you can give it a decent go without hurting yourself, I think they should stay out there and I think you owe it to the fans.”

Del Potro fights back to reach round two

Juan Martin del Potro overcame a battling Thanasi Kokkinakis to seal a 6-3 3-6 7-6 (7-2) 6-4 victory and reach the second round.

The Argentine 29th seed won the first set before turning his ankle in the second as the 21-year-old Australian took advantage to level.

A poor tie-break from Kokkinakis handed Del Potro an otherwise even third set.

Kokkinakis then saved six match points in the final game of the fourth set but Del Potro, 28, finally came through.

The former US Open champion will face Ernests Gulbis in round two after the Latvian, ranked 589 in the world, beat the Dominican Republic’s Victor Estrella Burgos 6-1 6-1 6-2.

Canadian sixth seed Milos Raonic, last year’s runner-up, saw off Germany’s Jan-Lennard Struff 7-5 (7-5) 6-2 7-6 (7-4) in his opening match.

Elsewhere, seeded players Dominic Thiem, Alexander Zverev and Tomas Berdych all won their respective first-round ties late on.

Queen’s Club champion Feliciano Lopez became the seventh man to retire in the first round when trailing France’s Adrian Mannarino 5-7 6-1 6-1 4-3.

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