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Gordon Reid, Jordanne Whiley & Lucy Shuker on wheelchair tennis

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

Wimbledon men’s wheelchair singles finalist Gordon Reid says the thing he loves most about tennis is the “one-on-one battle”.

“It’s just you against the other person on the other side of the net – and it’s up to you to find a way to beat them,” said the Scot.

Reid and fellow Britons Jordanne Whiley and Lucy Shuker have all benefited from the Tennis Foundation’s performance programme.

“Since Beijing, when we’ve had UK Sport funding, we’ve been able to get a programme that concentrates on our performance to help our players, maximise their potential and compete against the world’s best,” said Geraint Richards, head of disability player performance.

READ MORE: Find out how you can get into tennis with our special guide.

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Wimbledon 2016: Serena Williams serve key v Angelique Kerber

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

Former Wimbledon champion Pat Cash takes an in-depth look at the powerful service game of Serena Williams, as she she prepares to defend her women’s singles title against Angelique Kerber on Saturday.

WATCH LIVE: Wimbledon 2016: Women’s Singles Final, BBC One, Saturday 9 July from 13:00 BST.

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Murray: 'I Never Take This For Granted'

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

Murray: 'I Never Take This For Granted'

Second seed eager to win his third Grand Slam title

For the first time in Andy Murray’s career, he’ll enter a Grand Slam final with more experience on his side than his opponent.

The second seed is into his third Wimbledon final after a convincing semi-final victory on Friday over No. 10 seed Tomas Berdych. The 2013 Wimbledon champion will now play for the title against sixth seed Miios Raonic, who defeated third seed Roger Federer in the other semi-final.

“It’s obviously the first time I’ll play a Grand Slam final against someone that isn’t Roger Federer or Novak Djokovic. So that’s different,” said Murray. “But you never know how anyone’s going to deal with the pressures of a Slam final. I just have to go out there and concentrate on my side and do what I can to prepare well for it.”

Murray will contest his 11th career Grand Slam championship match, while Raonic is competing in his first. The Brit also has history on his side, leading their FedEx ATP Head2Head rivalry 6-3 and winning their past five matches, including three this year. Murray most recently prevailed over Raonic in a deciding-set win in last month’s grass-court final at the Aegon Championships.

Although he is now extremely familiar with these occasions and Raonic’s game, Murray is no under illusions that his past experiences will guarantee him a victory.

“Milos is a very tough opponent,” said Murray. “He’s played very well on the grass this year and earned his right to the final by beating one of the best, if not the best player at this event. He deserves to be there.”

Murray’s success this fortnight can be partially attributed to Ivan Lendl, who rejoined Murray’s team last month. Having won Wimbledon and the US Open (in 2012) under the Czech-turned-American’s tutelage, he praised Lendl’s calming influence as an added benefit to his game.

“I had the best years of my career with him, but there are other people that go into it as well. I obviously wanted to work with Ivan again to try to help me win these events. That’s the goal,” said Murray. “I don’t think he’d be doing this job if he didn’t believe that I could. But the information I get from him, the psychological help that I get from having him around, being able to chat to him at these events and before the big matches makes a difference.”

Having lost his past three Grand Slam finals (all to Djokovic), Murray is eager to snap the streak. After more than a decade on tour, he said he’s gained awareness of just what it means to win a major.

“I guess the tournaments start to mean more to you the older you get. You start to appreciate the history of the events more. When you’re 18, 19, you’re probably not as aware about those things,” said Murray. “I know how difficult it is to make the final of these events and how hard they are to win, so it never feels normal. I never take this for granted.”

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After Positive Wimbledon, Berdych Looks Ahead

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

After Positive Wimbledon, Berdych Looks Ahead

Czech posts best result at Wimbledon since 2010

About two months ago, Tomas Berdych was in a far different place from where he stands today.

The 30-year-old Czech had just lost 6-0, 6-0 to David Goffin in Rome. The third-round defeat was Berdych’s first double-bagel loss in his hundreds of Futures, ATP Challenger and ATP World Tour matches. Berdych split with his coach and entered Roland Garros without any outside help. How he’d fare the remainder of the clay-court season and for the entire grass-court stretch was entirely up to Berdych, and the tour veteran has gone on to post some of his best runs at Grand Slam championships.

Berdych reached the quarter-finals at Roland Garros for just the third time in 13 appearances. On Friday, he fell to second seed Andy Murray in the Wimbledon semi-finals. His All-England Club run marked his best showing there since he had reached the final in 2010.

You May Also Like: Murray Flawless In Victory Over Berdych

“Right now, of course, it’s a bit of frustration,” Berdych said after the loss. “But overall, I think it was a good run. I think it was a good two weeks [that] definitely show me that’s the way to do it, that’s the way to go. That’s really positive signs for my second half of the year.”

Prior to Friday, Berdych had spent the most time on court out of any of the final four men at Wimbledon. The 6’5” right-hander had played 19 sets that lasted 13 hours and 19 minutes. To compare, Murray had played 17 sets and spent 11 hours and 11 minutes on court. Berdych’s fourth-round match against countryman Jiri Vesely spanned two days and lasted three hours and 56 minutes, with Berdych winning 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(8), 6-7(9), 6-3.

But, despite all that time on court, Berdych said he felt refreshed for his semi-final contest.

“I was really ready for the match. It was all fine in terms of rhythm, in terms of time to rest and everything. It was difficult in the days before,” Berdych said. “Just before the semis, I got the day off. I got back in rhythm of how it is normally. So everything in that sense was fine. I was feeling good on the court.”

Murray, who won almost 80 per cent of his first-serve points, was just too good, Berdych said.

“He played really well. He was able to defend the game, really play very solid,” Berdych said. “For him, he just deserves to win.”

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Rafter Reflects On Wimbledon Memories

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

Rafter Reflects On Wimbledon Memories

The beloved Aussie made an appearance this year at the All-England Club

Fifteen years after competing in one of the greatest finals in Wimbledon history, former World No. 1 Patrick Rafter said he still finds himself occasionally reliving the match.

In a battle of fan favourites, Rafter squared off against wild card Goran Ivanisevic in the rain-delayed 2001 final that was referred to as the ‘People’s Monday’. With an electric atmosphere that more closely resembled a football match, Rafter came within a few points of clinching the title, but fell 9-7 in the fifth set as Ivanisevic completed his improbable journey to win Wimbledon.

“I still think it was an ordinary match to watch, but what the crowd created in term of the atmosphere was unbelievable,” said Rafter. “It’s nothing like anything I’ve ever sat through, even in a Davis Cup match. It was pretty unique. I still replay certain situations from it in my head, but you do that less as you get older and you forget things exactly as they happened, so you make stuff up a little bit. I’ve sometimes relieved the moment in my head where I’ve won the match, but it doesn’t help!”

With his serve-and-volley game, Rafter’s style of play was tailor-made for grass. He also reached the Wimbledon final in 2000, only to lose to Pete Sampras in four sets. The win gave the American a then-record breaking 13th Grand Slam title.

“I looked very tight and nervous. I knew he had a small injury and was a little bit suspect. I got myself in a winning situation and my heart rate got so high that I couldn’t control the way I played,” said Rafter. “That’s probably the hardest one. I relive that moment more than I relive the final against Goran.”

Since retiring from the ATP World Tour at the end of 2001, Rafter has made several trips back to Wimbledon. He’s also returned to London as a player on the ATP Champions Tour, competing several times at the season-ending Champions Tennis at Royal Albert Hall, where he won the event in 2013.”

“To me, the Royal Albert Hall isn’t just a great tournament. It’s a great event,” said Rafter. “It’s such a special place to play, like playing at the Sydney Opera House. You don’t want to miss that opportunity. They always put on an unbelievable event, so I’m looking forward to coming back.”

Rafter has even reprised his classic Wimbledon final with Ivanisevic on three different occasions at Royal Albert Hall. Rafter leads their head-to-head there 2-1, including a straight-sets victory in their most recent match in 2013.

“I kicked his ass. It was good,” cracked Rafter. “It doesn’t bring back Wimbledon, though. He always makes sure to let me know that!”

Rafter rose to No. 1 in the Emirates ATP Rankings on 26 July 1999. In retirement, he was Australia’s Davis Cup captain from 2010 to 2015.

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Maria Sharapova 'incorrectly treated' says chairman of sponsor Head

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

Johan Eliasch, chairman of tennis racquet manufacturer Head, defends his company’s backing of Maria Sharapova.

The Russian was last month given a two-year ban for using meldonium, which she has used since 2006 for health issues but became a banned substance on 1 January.

Listen to the Wake Up to Money: Sport Edition podcast here.

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All-French Matchup Set For Wimbledon Doubles Final

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

All-French Matchup Set For Wimbledon Doubles Final

Herbert/Mahut to face Benneteau/Roger-Vesselin

There are few certainties in life beside death and taxes, but one can be sure that the Wimbledon doubles title will be claimed by an All-French team for only the second time in the Open Era.

Top seeds Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut, the 2015 US Open doubles champions, and unseeded Julien Bennteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, who won the 2014 Roland Garros title, will play for the coveted trophy on Centre Court Saturday. The other French duo to capture the Wimbledon title was Arnaud Clement and Michael Llodra, who pipped Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan for the crown in 2007.

“It’s good for French tennis,” said Mahut. “We know they are a really good team. They won Roland Garros already. Every time they play together they have some success. Hopefully we are going to win.”

“The final is going to be special for sure,” said Benneteau. “They have had a very successful year so far, they are second in the race and very strong. We know each other very well and we will have to stay focused on our game and forget who is on the other side of the net.”

Herbert and Mahut lead the teams’ FedEx ATP Head2Head matchup 1-0, having won in three sets in the 2015 Australian Open quarter-finals. Saturday’s winners will snap a streak of 11 Grand Slam championships won by different doubles teams. 

Event  Winning Team
2014 Roland Garros  Benneteau/Roger-Vasselin
2014 Wimbledon  Pospisil/Sock
2014 US Open  Bryan/Bryan
2015 Australian Open  Bolelli/Fognini
2015 Roland Garros  Dodig/Melo
2015 Wimbledon  Rojer/Tecau
2015 US Open  Herbert/Mahut
2016 Australian Open  Murray/Soares
2016 Roland Garros  Lopez/Lopez

The final will be an intriguing one, as both teams know each other’s games inside and out. Benneteau and Mahut, born a month apart, enjoyed a successful partnership in the junior ranks, winning the 1999 US Open juniors doubles together and being named the year’s ITF Junior Boys’ Doubles World Champions. At tour-level, Benneteau and Mahut won two ATP World Tour titles and reached two US Open semi-finals (2004 and 2007) while Mahut/Roger-Vasselin captured four ATP World Tour titles as a team between 2012 and 2013.

Herbert and Mahut have been on a roll since winning their first Grand Slam title together at the 2015 US Open. The pair swept this year’s first three ATP World Tour Masters 1000 events, at Indian Wells, Miami and Monte Carlo, before winning the Aegon Championships prior to Wimbledon. In addition to reaching their maiden Wimbledon doubles final, the pair also enjoyed successful runs in the singles draw. Mahut edged Herbert in four sets to reach the Last 16 for the first time at in a Grand Slam singles draw, while Herbert’s third-round showing matches a career best set at the 2016 Australian Open.

When asked why Herbert and Mahut have been so successful, former World No. 1 Mark Woodforde, who has been working with the top seeds, told ATPWorldTour.com, “Confidence plays a big part, belief and the drive about wanting to be the best.

“Pierre-Hugues and Nico have the attributes to be one of the best teams. They have climbed that mountain this year and now it’s not just about getting to the very top, but it’s about pushing yourself higher. Because if you plateau when you’re No. 1, the only way you’re going to go is down.

“That’s what I’ve been helping them with, telling them that the ride up to the top is terrific. They play serve and volley tennis and aggressive tennis as singles players. In being singles player, it can help them to become a very good doubles team. They’ve won big events and they built an aura for themselves.”

Benneteau and Roger-Vasselin renewed their partnership earlier this year after Benneteau recovered from an adductor injury which kept him out of action for nearly a year. The pair are into their second Grand Slam final, having beaten Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez in front of a home crowd in Paris two years ago. They are looking for a third tour-level title as a team (2014 Marseille).

Herbert and Mahut come into the final as the slightly fresher team, having spent three fewer hours on court than Benneteau and Roger-Vasselin (10:12 to 13:21). Both teams have put up identical returning stats, winning 27 per cent of first-serve return points and 47 per cent of second-return points. The top seeds have been slightly more aggressive on serve, hitting their first deliveries harder (119 mph to 114mph) and firing more aces (38-22) during the fortnight.

HERBERT/MAHUT

 

BENNETEAU/ROGER-VASSELIN

d. Adrian Mannarino/Lucas Pouille 64 ret. (Mannarino – elbow)

1st Round

d. Marc Lopez/Albert Ramos-Vinolas 63 63

d. Stephane Robert/Dudi Sela 61 63

2nd Round

d. No. 9 Dominic Inglot/Daniel Nestor 76(0) 64

d. Sam Groth/Robert Lindstedt 75 36 76(4) 63

Round of 16

d. No. 8 Vasek Pospisil/Jack Sock 64 36 67(3) 75 64

d. No. 10 Henri Kontinen/John Peers 64 67(6) 64 76(8)

Quarterfinals

d. No. 3 Jamie Murray/Bruno Soares 64 64 67(11) 67(1) 108

d. No. 12 Treat Huey/Max Mirnyi 64 36 67(3) 64 64

Semifinals

d. No. 11 Raven Klaasen/Rajeev Ram 75 64 57 76(5)

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Where to serve & the final shot: The anatomy of championship point

  • Posted: Jul 09, 2016

“You just do the normal things in that moment; towel yourself down, look for the two best balls and get ready. But your heart is pounding in your chest that much faster, the adrenaline takes over

“I looked down at my left hand. For the first time I could remember in the middle of a tennis match, it was shaking. Shaking pretty violently.

“I sensed that if I lost this point it might all be over, the opportunity completely gone.”

In tennis, not all points are created equal. There are big points in matches – at 30-30, at deuce, at game point – and there are big points in lives, points where wobbling nerves turn into real physical tremors.

That was what Andy Murray discovered before, at the fourth time of asking, converting match point against Novak Djokovic in the 2013 Wimbledon final.

So, how do you play the biggest point of your life? Wimbledon’s official data supplier IBM has crunched the numbers on the past 12 years of championship points in Wimbledon men’s and women’s finals to tell us more.

First serve

The finish line is one clean connection and a fraction of a second away.

The serve is the only shot you play on your own terms. It is the opportunity for a clean kill, to escape the tension, seize your chance and snuff out your opponent.

You bounce the ball, cut out the crowd and try to strip Centre Court down to a familiar pattern of lines.

One last look down the other end. Toss the ball overhead and, as it hangs at the apex of its arc, swat it down towards destiny.

It is an intense situation. And one that men and women react to differently.

On championship point in the men’s final, the first serve finds the mark 57% of the time. That compares to a hit rate of 67% for other points in the final.

In the women’s final, however, the trend is in the opposite direction.

When it comes to championship point, their accuracy jumps, with 86% of first serves landing in play compared with 65% through the rest of the match.

The contrast may be different calculations of risk and reward.

Men hit more aces than women. Milos Raonic leads the men’s tournament stats, having hit 137 at this year’s Wimbledon.

Serena Williams, owner of the most fearsome serve in the history of the women’s game, has chalked up 61. Russian Elena Vesnina, second in that category, managed just 31.

The jackpot of ending the match in one stroke is tantalisingly close for the men. It is not desperation but simple logic that dictates they go for broke.

For women players, an ace is a more distant prospect.

Instead, exposing your second serve on such a crucial point becomes the greater concern.

There is also a gender divide on where to hit your serve on championship point.

It seems men shift their sights out wide – possibly hoping if their opponent does claw back a return they will be open to the classic sucker-punch shot across court.

However, serving out wide is another high-risk, high-reward option. If a receiving player is able to hit an attacking shot, angles have opened up for them across court or down the line.

Women – generally more vulnerable to a counter – are instead more likely to go down the middle which ensures are well positioned for the third shot of the rally.

Second serve

Your first serve has missed.

The possibility of a double fault – your chances ended at your hand – looms.

Your priority now is to make sure you engage the enemy. Slice, spin and kick are all decorations. The ball just has to clear the net and land in the service box.

Under the crushing pressure of championship point, both men and women make doubly sure of at least getting into a rally on second serve.

Men’s second serves average 92.3mph on championship point – 4.4mph down on the rest of the final.

The drop-off in pace in women’s second serves is even more pronounced. At 79.7mph, their second serve is 10% shy of what it registered in the rest of the final.

Into a rally

The point is live. You and your opponent fighting for space, angles and depth over a 78ft-long strip of hallowed grass.

How aggressive can you be?

Do you seize the day and go for a winner? Or play it safer and hope your opponent crumbles first and concedes an error?

Yet again it seems men opt for the more aggressive mindset.

Rallies on championship point in their finals are shorter than those in the rest of the final, perhaps reduced by that death-or-glory approach to serving.

In the women’s finals, play tends to continue for a whole shot longer on championship point.

The final shot

What is the shot that clears the net, lands in and never comes back, the last one this side of lifting the trophy?

There are no easy answers here.

Women’s winning moments
Service winner Groundstroke winner Volley winner Opponent into the net Opponent wide/long
3 2 1 3 3

It comes in all shapes and sizes. And there is no tactic to favour on gender grounds.

Over the past 12 years, Venus Williams, Marion Bartoli and Petra Kvitova won titles with unreturnable serves, bettering the total managed by the men over the same span.

Men’s winning moments
Service winner Groundstroke winner Volley winner Opponent into the net Opponent wide/long
2 2 1 2 5

Celebration

Years of training, a fortnight of graft and a lifetime of dreaming have crystallised in this one moment.

You have conquered the highest summit in the game. Your name is now indelibly added to a roll call of champions stretching back to 1877.

And, after wrestling to keep control of mind and body through pressure and fatigue, you have won.

How do you react?

The classic image of the Wimbledon champion spread-eagled in ecstasy on Centre Court has become rarer in recent years.

After five of the previous six winners celebrated be getting up close and personal with the Wimbledon turf, in the past three men’s finals the winner has stayed standing.

Men’s Wimbledon champions
Year Champion Celebration
2015 Novak Djokovic Standing, fist pump
2014 Novak Djokovic Standing, arms aloft
2013 Andy Murray Walking, fist pump
2012 Roger Federer Fall to the floor
2011 Novak Djokovic Fall to the floor
2010 Rafael Nadal Fall to the floor
2009 Roger Federer Jumps and runs to net
2008 Rafael Nadal Falls to the floor
2007 Roger Federer Falls to the floor

In the women’s game, the trend never really caught on, with only two of the past 10 winners ending up on the court floor.

Instead, four different players have knelt in celebration in the past 10 years – a winning pose absent from the past decade of men’s finals.

Women’s winners
Year Champion Celebrations
2015 Serena Williams Walks to net
2014 Petra Kvitova Fall to floor
2013 Marion Bartoli Drops to knees
2012 Serena Williams Fall to floor
2011 Petra Kvitova Drops to knees
2010 Serena Williams Standing, racquet thrown
2009 Serena Williams Drops to knees
2008 Venus Williams Standing, arms aloft
2007 Venus Williams Standing, arms aloft
2006 Amelie Mauresmo Drops to knees

After the pleasantries at the net, it is no longer necessary to scale the commentary box rooftops – as Pat Cash famously did after winning in 1987 – to get to friends and family in the players’ box.

Wimbledon installed a gate in 2014 to allow champions a less perilous route to their connections.

Novak Djokovic has shown you can always start new traditions. The three-time champion has chewed the Centre Court cud after each of his triumphs, picking some blades of grass to eat.

He also danced with Serena Williams at last year’s Champions Dinner in a nod to the previously customary twirl with the women’s champion.

Graphics by Michael Milner

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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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