Week Two of Wimbledon Begins Monday

June 28, 2010 | By Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Wimbledon_Logo_2

If week two is anything like week one, we are in for a special Wimbledon tournament. On the men’s side, we have all the usual suspects. Roger Federer, bidding for a record-tying seventh Wimbledon title. Rafael Nadal, seeking a second after missing last years tournament with an injury. Andy Roddick, looking to avenge last year’s loss to Federer in the finals and trying to take home his first Wimbledon trophy after three runner-up finishes. Andy Murray, well aware that all of Britian is counting on him to end its 74-year wait for a homegrown men’s champion.

Week two in the women’s draw features the Williams sisters, aiming for a fifth all-Williams final, and third in a row. Justine Henin and Kim Clijsters square off in the featured Round of 16 match, as both to get back to the top of the women’s tour. Another former number one, Maria Sharapova, also looking to get back on top, takes on Serena Williams in a much anticipated Round of 16 battle.

All 32 men and women left in the singles draws are featured on the fourth-round schedule when action resumes today, after Wimbledon’s traditional day of rest on the middle Sunday.

Looking back, week one brought us tons of storylines and great tennis.

In the opening Centre Court match, 16-time Grand Slam champion Federer dropped the first two sets before grinding out a self described "lucky" win. Nadal advanced by overcoming poor starts in consecutive come-from-behind, five-set victories. Both women’s finalists from this month’s French Open lost in the first round. Queen Elizabeth II attended the tournament for the first time since 1977, and watched hometown favorite Andy Murray advance.

And no one will soon forget the longest match in tennis history, a 183-game test of will that encompassed 11 hours, 5 minutes of action over three days between American John Isner and France’s own Nicholas Mahut. Isner survived in an epic fifth set, 70-68 to advance, but was beaten by unseeded Thiemo de Bakker of the Netherlands, 6-0, 6-3, 6-2.


Long Island Tennis Magazine Staff
Century
Century

March/April 2024 Digital Edition