A shadow may have been cast over the best tennis tournament on the globe this year, due to the World Cup in South Africa. Yet, the last two weeks at SW19 produced some remarkable tennis stories, a return to form for a certain Scot, and the World No.1 players in both genders of the game, not disappoint, by eventually scooping the top honours.
When Rafael Nadal missed out on Wimbledon last year, and struggled with fitness concerns at the start of this year, some doubted whether he might have already reached his peak. However, he proved those doubters wrong, with some top-form tennis in recent months that have seen him rise to the top of the world rankings, possibly even here to stay for good. Certainly, if his troublesome knee holds up, Nadal could well be the new king of men’s tennis for years to come. His best form in London came in the latter stages, where he fought hard against an improving Robin Soderling, his French Open final opponent in the last eight, produced some outrageous shots to extinguish the Andy Murray challenge in the semis, then produce the untroubled performance we all expected, in the final, against the surprise package of the tournament, Tomas Berdych. Nadal is in the form of his life, and that is a worrying sign for many of his competitors.
As Nadal’s form gets better, the great Roger Federer is going through a lean spell. For the first time since the beginning of 2003, he has failed to reach at least the semi-finals in consecutive Grand Slam events. Soderling’s victory at Roland Garros over the great man in the quarters, followed by a shock reverse against Lleyton Hewitt in the pre-tournament event in Halle, were signs that the Swiss players was short of at least half a yard. When Alejandro Falla, an unheralded Colombian took a two set lead in Round One, normally a 90-minute cruise for Roger, it confirmed these suspicions. Berdych outplayed him on Centre Court on quarter-finals day, and thoroughly deserved his 4-set triumph. Federer will be back, no doubt about that, you would be a fool to write him off. However, he will find it tough to gain back his superior dominance he has held for the past decade.
With Juan Martin del Potro’s campaign ruined by injury, Andy Roddick’s predictable and lame exit at an expected time and Novak Djokovic freezing on semi-final day, when in his best form for three years, it was Tomas Berdych and Andy Murray who were the other main successes of the ATP tour at Wimbledon. Reaching the semis of the French Open seems to have given Berdych the new-found confidence in his game, which he had been previously missing. His nerve in not choking the initiative he had over Federer, and the efficient ease he saw off Djokovic in the semis must be credited. Granted, he was no match for Nadal in the final, which made the spectacle rather disappointing. However, he deserved his berth to even be playing Nadal on Sunday, and can leave SW19 with his head held high. As should Murray, who entered in the worst form of his career, and not having the traditional British fever that usually is associated with Wimbledon. Once England’s sorry excuse of a football team exited in South Africa, Murray lifted our spirits, with some breathtaking and comfortable tennis, which made him look at home. Some may say that he blew it again, especially following Federer’s early demise, but I disagree with that sentiment. Anyone would have struggled against Nadal in the latter stages of any ATP event, and Murray gave him a real run for his money. Whereas last year, against Roddick, he did choke on the big stage, this time, he was just outplayed by the better stages. The maiden Grand Slam will come eventually, though I doubt whether that will be a Wimbledon honour. Hopefully, Andy will now be able to take this momentum rebuild into his favourite surface, the hard court season.
The only surprise of the ladies event was it wasn’t a sisterly affair in the final, between Venus and Serena Williams. Venus departed earlier than expected, at the quarter-final stage. However, no-one could stop Serena, who won the final in just over an hour, against the surprise package, Vera Zvonareva of Russia. Serena is serving better than she ever has, and didn’t drop a single set in the championships, which is an incredible feat in itself. Apart from a stiff examination from a returning to form Maria Sharapova in the 4th round, Serena blew the opposition away and will no doubt, add to the 13 Grand Slam titles she already has. With Dinara Safina not taking part, Jelena Jankovic pulling out through injury in the 4th round, and the usual suspects, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Dementieva making surprise exits, the Russian influence is disappearing rapidly, despite Zvonareva’s excellent run to the final. It will take some very impressive to knock Serena Williams off the top of her perch.
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