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| MARIA SHARAPOVA of Russia receivees medical attention during her women's singles tennis match against Michelle Larcher De Brito of Portugal at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships. (AP) Source: http://www.indianexpress.com |
Second seed
Victoria Azarenka, Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and even Steve Darcis,
man-of-the-moment after his opening day victory over Spaniard Rafa Nadal, were
among the casualties as the medical bulletins piled up.
With title
contenders dropping like flies, some before even striking a ball in anger, home
favourite Andy Murray must be licking his lips after avoiding the scrapheap
with an incident-free second round win over Taiwan's Lu Yen-Hsun.
Murray's
hopes of emerging as "last man standing" to claim his first Wimbledon
crown on Sunday week have soared after two rounds which have culled Nadal,
Federer and fifth-seeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfrid Tsonga from his half of the draw.
After a day
of slips and slides, strained shoulders and aching knees, seven-times champion
Federer was expected to glide serenely above the mayhem around him when he
stepped out on Centre Court
to play Ukraine 's
Sergiy Stakhovsky.
Three hours
later on what former champion John McEnroe called "the craziest day
ever" the Swiss great's dream of an eighth title was over.
Playing
old-school serve and volley tennis the like of which was supposed to have gone
out of fashion, the 27-year-old world No.116 won 6-7(5) 7-6(5) 7-5 7-6(5) to
snap third seed Federer's streak of reaching 36 consecutive grand slam
quarter-finals.
"I'm
still in disbelief," Stakhovsky said. "I played the best tennis I
have ever played. When you play Roger Federer it's like your're playing two
persons.
"First
you play Roger Federer, then you play his ego. I couldn't play any better
today. It was a fantastic day for me."
For once,
Federer's box of tricks could not rescue him and there was an "end of
era" feel as the 31-year-old walked into the Centre Court shadows to a standing
ovation.
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| ROGER FEDERER lost to world number 116 Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine. Source: http://www.sportskeeda.com |
LOOKING FORWARD
"It's
normal that after all of a sudden losing early after being in the quarters 36
times, people feel it's different," Federer, who suffered his earliest Wimbledon defeat since a first-round loss in 2002,
defiantly told a news conference.
"Usually
I do turnarounds pretty good. I'm looking forward to what's to come. I hope I
can play a good summer."
Nadal's
first round defeat by Darcis on Monday created shockwaves but Wednesday's
seismic events went off the scale.
Ten seeds perished
and the seven players to withdraw or retire mid-match was record for a single
day at a grand slam.
Croatian
10th seed Marin Cilic, who could not take to the court to play France 's Kenny
De Schepper after a knee injury flared up, described Wednesday as a "very
black day".
Third-seed
Sharapova was sent across the grounds to the bowl-like Court Two to face
Portuguese firebrand Michelle Larcher de Brito and found the 131st-ranked
qualifier too hot to handle as she slipped and slid to a 6-3 6-4 defeat.
Sharapova
needed a 10-minute injury timeout after one of several falls left her clutching
her hip and at one stage was overheard describing the court surface as
"dangerous."
"I
don't think I've ever fallen three times in a match before in my career, so
that was a little strange," the Russian former champion told reporters.
Women's
ninth seed Caroline Wozniacki also fell heavily on Court Two in her defeat by
Czech Petra Cetkovska while second seed Azarenka did not even start against
Italy's Flavia Pennetta due to the knee injury she suffered in a first-round
tumble.
"I
don't know if it's the court or the weather," the Belarussian told
reporters. "I can't figure it out it.
"Would
be great if the club or somebody who takes care of the courts would examine
(it)."
THE SAME
A
tournament spokesman said "the surfaces at the start are always lusher
than at the end," while three-times former champion Boris Becker added
"grass is always going to be slippery in the first couple of matches, that
has been the case for the past 100 plus years."
Tsonga did
not blame the surface for a knee injury that forced him to stop against Latvian
Ernests Gulbis while Czech veteran Radek Stepanek also had to quit with a
hamstring injury while trailing Poland 's
Jerzey Janowicz.
Spare a
thought for Darcis.
Two days
after easily the biggest win of his career over Nadal, the 29-year-old's
tournament ended with a whimper as the shoulder he hurt in a fall against the
Spaniard made it too painful to face Poland 's Lukasz Kubot.
Even American
marathon man John Isner was struck down.
The 18th
seed played 183 games to beat Nicolas Mahut in a record-breaking epic in 2010
but lasted only two before his knee buckled and he quit against Frenchman
Adrian Mannarino.
Kazakh
Yaraslava Shvedova handed 2011 Wimbledon
women's champion Petra Kvitova a walkover, meaning the Czech eighth seed is the
highest-ranked player left in the rubble of the bottom half of the draw.
The lower
half of the men's draw was supposed to have been the one to avoid but with
Federer, Nadal, Tsonga and Isner all gone, "Murray Mania" is cranking
up with home fans salivating at the prospect of him emulating Fred Perry's 1936
title.
The world
number two has not dropped a set so far and with Spain 's Nicolas Almagro, seeded 15,
the next highest-ranked survivor in his half the route to the latter rounds
suddenly looks an enticing one for last year's runner-up.
However,
Wednesday proved just how unpredictable tennis can be and the Scot is not
counting his chickens.
"That's
sport," he said of a chaotic day. "You can fall down the stairs, trip
over your shoelaces. Who knows? But I feel fine right now," said Murray whose next
opponent is Tommy Robredo. (Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Ken Ferris)


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