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Sunday, February 27, 2011

FEDERER SPANKED BY NOLE.........

World No. 3 Novak Djokovic won the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships for the third year in a row on Saturday as he defeated top seed Roger Federer 6-3, 6-3 in the final of the ATP World Tour 500 hard-court tennis tournament. He became the sixth active player to win 20 tour-level titles (20-13 finals record).

Friday, February 25, 2011

Amazing diving shot gives Roddick 30th career title

          Top seed Andy Roddick ended Milos Raonic’s courageous run at the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships, prevailing 7-6(7), 6-7(11), 7-5 on Sunday to claim his 30th tour-level title and third in Memphis.
           World No. 8 Roddick became the third active player on the ATP World Tour to win 30 or more career singles titles, joining Roger Federer (67) and Rafael Nadal (43). He also became the eighth American-born player to accomplish the feat.

Andy Roddick's scraped elbow is visible as he holds his winner's trophy for the championship match of the Regions Morgan Keegan Championships tennis tournament.


Justine Henin regrets "THE HAND" incident.


               In an interview with Belgian TV, the now-retired Justine Henin discusses her controversial win over Serena Williams in the semifinals of the 2003 French Open, when at 4-2, 30-0 on Williams' serve in the third set, Henin raised her hand to indicate she was not ready to receive and Williams then put her serve into the net.
Williams thought she would be allowed to replay her first serve, but the chair umpire didn’t see Henin raise her hand and the Belgian didn’t say anything. Williams lost the next four points to lose the service game and, eventually, the match 6-2, 4-6, 7-5. Later, a tearful and angry Serena accused her of  "lying and fabricating."
              Henin now seems to regret the incident.


              Take a look at the video above, starting at approximately minute 8:44.  Serena was serving to go up 5-2 in the French Open semi-finals, and Justine put her hand up in the air, signalling that she wasn't ready to receive.  Serena saw Justine's hand while serving and then served the ball into the net.  Technically Serena should have had a first serve again, but the serve was called a fault because the chair umpire didn't see Justine raise her hand.  Justine stayed silent as Serena unsuccessfully challenged the call.  Serena then double faulted, was broken in that game, and eventually lost the match. 

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Players Vote Shanghai, Dubai & Bastad Tournaments Of The Year

LONDON — The ATP announced the 2010 ATP World Tour Tournament Award winners on Tuesday, with the Shanghai Rolex Masters, the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, and the SkiStar Swedish Open all triumphing in their respective tournament categories.

             The tournament awards, voted annually by ATP players, recognise leading standards set within the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (Shanghai), ATP World Tour 500 (Dubai), and ATP World Tour 250 (Bastad) tournament categories last season. Shanghai, Dubai and Bastad continue to lead by example, each having won the awards on previous occasions.


             The Shanghai Rolex Masters has captured the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 award in each of its first two years as a Masters 1000 event (2009-10). The tournament, held at the Qi Zhong Tennis Centre, saw Andy Murray defeat Roger Federer in last year’s final to capture his 6th career ATP World Tour Masters 1000 title.


              The Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships, taking place this week, won the ATP World Tour 500 award for an impressive seventh time in eight years (2003-06, 2008-10). Novak Djokovic captured the 2010 title, adding his name to an illustrious list of former champions that includes the likes of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Roddick.


              The SkiStar Swedish Open, the popular clay court event in July, continues to excel in the ATP World Tour 250 category, triumphing for a remarkable ninth consecutive year (2002-10). In 2010, Spaniard Nicolas Almagro capped off an impressive week by denying home favourite and defending champion Robin Soderling in the final.

Bhupathi-Paes overcomes the Djokovics' Dubai Campaign


            Top seeds Mahesh Bhupathi and Leander Paes advanced to the quarter-finals of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships on Tuesday with a 6-4, 6-1 victory over Novak Djokovic and his younger brother, Marko Djokovic, who had taken a wild card into the ATP World Tour 500 hard-court tennis tournament.
             The Indian pairing, who won the Dubai title in 1998, converted six of eight break points to clinch victory in 57 minutes. They reunited at the start of the season to great success, winning the Aircel Chennai Open title (d. Haase-Martin) and reaching the final of the Australian Open (l. to Bryans).

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Top 5 significant matches of Roger Federer


Match 5: 2009 French Open semi-final – Federer defeated Juan Martin Del Potro 3-6, 7-6(2), 2-6, 6-1, 6-4
            In a surprise loss at Roland Garros, Roger Federer’s biggest contestant at this event, Rafael Nadal, was knocked out in the fourth round. With his exit from the tournament, Federer had an open path to his career Grand Slam. However, it seemed as if Juan Martin Del Potro had other plans, and he got in the way of an easy win for Federer. In the first two sets, Federer appeared to be completely fazed. He dropped the first two and it seemed as if his dream of career Grand Slam completion would not come true in that year. However, he returned to emerge victorious in the third set and broke Del Potro in the third game of the fourth set. In the next two sets, he only lost two games. After this, his 9-0 win loss record against Swedish player Robin Soderling came in handy, and their match was merely a formality.

Match 4: 2009 Wimbledon final – Federer defeated Andy Roddick 5-7, 7-6(6), 7-6(5), 3-6, 16-14
            In the same year as his career Grand Slam, Federer went on to win the next Grand Slam at the All-England Club. Federer won almost 80 percent of the points he made on his serve during this match, and he never let the crowd feel as if he was in any danger of losing the match – not even during his epic last-set battle with American Number 1 Roddick, which would have fazed any other player. If Roddick had won the match, Federer would have lost his second consecutive final at Wimbledon.
The next and last installment of this series details the next three noticeable matches of Federer’s career.

Match 3: 2008 Wimbledon final – Federer lost to Rafael Nadal 4-6, 4-6, 7-6(5), 7-6(8), 7-9
            When sports fans who do not watch tennis, or have a die-hard interest in the sport are asked about the 1980 Wimbledon final between Bjorn Borg and John “Superbrat” McEnroe, a great deal of them may think that McEnroe emerged as the victor from the unbelievable, greatest match ever. This may be because McEnroe managed to take away the stupendous 18-16 fourth set tiebreak. However, Federer will not be awarded that benefit 20 years after his 2008 Wimbledon final with Nadal, as every fan will remember that Rafa took him down in the classic title match despite his superb performance. However, despite the fact that this loss was probably the most crushing defeat ever suffered by any tennis legend, Roger Federer returned to the court in September with a new purpose and focus. He came to the US Open with ultimate determination, and only lost three sets in the entire tournament before making it to the final match.

Match 2: 2001 Wimbledon fourth round – Federer defeated Pete Sampras 7-6(7), 5-7, 6-4, 6-7(2), 7-5
            This match is frequently considered one of the most overwhelming and significant victories of Roger Federer’s career. The player, who was 19 years old at the time, managed to stun American legend Pete Sampras on Centre Court at the tournament. With this victory, Federer managed to break Sampras’s record of 31 successful matches on the courts of Wimbledon. “Pistol” Pete began the match with Federer after winning 56 of the last 57 matches which he had played. Even though Federer was defeated by British favourite Tim Henman in the next round, the quarterfinals, Federer’s victory over Sampras made sure that the tennis world took notice of FedExpress as a player to be intimidated by. It would take two more years for Federer to live up to the many expectations generated by this victory.
 This success also earned the Swiss Maestro the name of “Yankee Killer”, because this was the seventh consecutive time that he had managed to score a win over players from the United States. He would go on to win one more match against an American tennis pro until Andre Agassi took him down in the fourth round of the 2001 US Open, held a few months later.

Match 1: 2003 Wimbledon final, Federer defeated Mark Philippoussis 7-6(5), 6-2, 7-6(3)
            This is no doubt the most important and significant victory in this list, since it was the match kicked off Roger Federer’s Grand Slam spree. Today, Federer has a record breaking number of Majors titles; this January, he completed the Australian Open to win his 16th Grand Slam. However, until 2003, Federer had never even been able to make it past the quarterfinal of a Grand Slam tournament. However, all that changed at the Wimbledon tournament in 2003. The tournament lasted for a fortnight, and Federer only dropped one set over the course of all his matches. In the epic final which won him his first Majors title, the Swiss Maestro committed only nine unforced errors. After he raised the cup, he wondered about the future of his career, saying, “To win Wimbledon as a first Grand Slam. I hope it’s not going to be my last.”
Federer can rest on his laurels, knowing that he has made an impact on the sport which no tennis player has been able to do. He is indeed the Greatest of All Time.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Nadal Named Laureus World Sportsman Of The Year


                 Spain’s World No. 1 Rafael Nadal was acclaimed Laureus World Sportsman of the Year after his remarkable 2010 winning three Grand Slam events - at Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the US Open. It was Nadal’s second Laureus Award - he also won the Laureus Breakthrough Award in 2006.
                 Nadal also joined in the celebrations as the Laureus World Team of the Year Award went to the Spain World Cup Team following their victory in South Africa. The first time Spain, a powerhouse of European football, had won the FIFA World Cup.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Djokovic playing tennis in swimming pool


             There have been many media reports about how Novak Djokovic, world No. 3 tennis player, along with his childhood friend Ana Ivanovic, currently ranked No 6, practiced in an empty swimming pool while growing up in Belgrad. A sports club official drained an Olympic-size swimming pool in the winter and put down a green carpet and net.
             Ana Ivanovic is the first Serbian woman to reach a Grand Slam final at Roland Garros since Monica Seles. The 20-year-old Djokovic is ranked No. 3 after winning four titles this year and reaching the U.S. Open final only to lose the top-ranked Roger Federer.
             Don’t we love those Cinderella stories?