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It has been said that the likes of Maria Sharapova or Ana Ivanovic to win the French Open 2008.

But  Serena Williams believes this could be the year she adds a second Roland Garros crown to the one she won in the final against sister Venus in 2002.

Still only 26 years old despite having been in the spotlight for a decade, Williams was bubbling with confidence when she met the press ahead of Sunday’s kick-off to the year’s second Grand Slam tournament.

“It’s probably the best preparation I’ve had since 2002. I feel like I’ve played so many clay court tournaments,” the American former world No. 1 said.

“I just really am feeling like a real clay court player, which, I think, is important for me. I’m really comfortable out there on the clay, so it’s great.”The younger of the Williams sisters is just one of the potential story-lines in what is gearing up to be one of the most unpredictable women’s tournaments in Paris in years.

Henin, had she competed, would once again have been the hot favorite having won the last three straight in Paris.

But her shock retirement announcement last week has suddenly opened the doors for a number of players.

Sharapova is the new world No.1 and freely admits that the slow clay surface of Roland Garros is not her favourite surface, but she is dismissive of those who say that she can never win in Paris as she has already done at Wimbledon and at the US and Australian Opens.

“To be quite honest, it’s quite amazing to be 21 years old and have somebody tell you that it’s the only Grand Slam that you not haven’t won,” she said.

“Coming here last year I knew that this was one of the two I haven’t won, And coming in this year it’s the one that I haven’t won.

“I’ve always said it. It’s the toughest one - it’s always going to be in my career, to win. But that’s why I’m here. I’ve said it every single year. I love the challenges.

“When someone puts something in front of the line, that challenge in front of me, I’m hungry to go and try to achieve that challenge.”

Sharapova’s win in the Australian Open in January came in the final at the expense of Serbia’s rising Ana Ivanovic, six months her junior and bent on usurping the Russian’s crown.

But while she clearly has the raw talent, there remains a question mark over her resolve and mental fortitude on the big occasions.

This was showcased in last year’s final when she collapsed to an embarrassing 6-1, 6-2 defeat to Henin after breaking the Belgian’s serve in the opening game and going 40-0 up on her own serve only for one dodgy toss up to derail her.

“It just hit me where I was in that single moment as I tossed the ball up to serve,” she said.

“I started to think ‘Oh, my God, don’t panic now’ and the more I thought about it the more I panicked.

“You just don’t know if it will happen again, but I will definitely know how to deal with it better.”

That leaves the rest of the Russian brigade with any of 2006 runner-up Svetlana Kuznetsova, 2004 runner-up Elena Dementieva, Anna Chakvetadze or Vera Zvonareva capable of mounting a challenge.

Hopes of a first French win on home soil since Mary Pierce in 2000 look dim.

Amelie Mauresmo looks set to be in a downward spiral and will be lucky to make it past the first week, Marion Bartoli is not at her best on clay and last week’s surprise Italian Open finalist Alize Cornet is still too tender at just 18.

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May
06

Mauresmo withdraws from German Open

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Mauresmo withdraws from German Open

Amelia Mauresmo has been battling with a ribcage injury for some time now and was forced to withdraw from the German Open on Monday. It seems Mauresmo has been so unlucky with injuries especially last season as she missed alot of action and we all know what she is capable of having won Wimbledon 2006 and the Australian Open.

Amelia Mauresmo was due to play compatriot Aravane Rezai on Tuesday.

For all your Wimbledon news, tickets, updates, scores, videos and more visit http://www.mywimbledon2008.com

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Shahar Peer fails to perfrom at Qatar Telecom

Shahar Peer, ranked no. 18 in the world, lost 7-5 6-1 to rising star Sabine Lisicki and what was a disappointing performance by Peer as she seemed so dominant after winning the quarter finals last week in prague.

Peer looked good in the beginning of the match as she went up 4-2 in the 1st set but Lisicki who is know as the comeback queen (beating Davenport recently) showed what she is made of!

For all your Wimbledon news, tickets, updates, scores, videos and more visit http://www.mywimbledon2008.com

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May
06

Tennis News from around the World

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Tennis News from around the World


Nicolas Almagro had a cracker of a game against wild card Flavio Cipolla winning 6-1 6-3 in just 58 minutes. He will next play David Nalbandian who is ranked seventh in the world, should be a classic game!

Fabrice Santoro went 6-4 6-2 down to Itallian Stallion Andreas Seppi and will face James Blake in the next round.

Andy Roddick will face his compatriot Mardy Fish after Fish won a rider of a game against Michael Llodra (7-5 3-6 7-6 (7/2))

For all your Wimbledon news, tickets, updates, scores, videos and more visit http://www.mywimbledon2008.com

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May
06

Gasquet Out of Rome Masters

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Gasquet Out of Rome Masters

Richard Gasquet’s dream of winning the Rome Masters was suddenly destroyed in the 1st round of the Rome Masters on Monday when he lost 6-4 6-1 to Peruvian qualifier Luis Horna. Some would say it was fate, as Richard Gasquet committed 27 unforced errors and 4 double faults.. you cant really win a match with that style of play. The 21 year old has not been up to form this year, so let’s hope Richard’s game improves with the next tournament.

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Andy Murray Progresses, While Del Porto Strikes Injury in Rome Masters

Andy Murray has made it to the 2nd round of the Rome Masters. Juan Martin Del Porto, his opponent, ended play in the deciding 3rd set due to back injury. The Argentinian had just been broken to go 1-0 down, when he realized his back was giving him problems and he could not carry on with the match.

It was no doubt Del Porto was in serious pain and while he was close to tears, he managed to keep his cool. 5 min after treatment from his trainer, he admitted defeat. Del Porto, rank no. 17th in the world, took the 1st set 7-5, while Murray made a comeback in the 2nd set winning 6-4.

Murray will play Stanislas Wawrinka in the third round of the Rome Masters

For all the latest from Wimbledon 2008, visit MyWimbledon2008.com

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Dulko

FEZ, Morocco (AP)— Second-seeded Gisela Dulko beat Emilie Loit 6-3, 6-2 yesterday to advance to the quarterfinals of the Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem.

Gisela Dulko will play seventh-seeded Sorana Cirstea, who beat Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-4, 6-2.

Alisa Kleybanova defeated Arina Rodionova 6-7 (3), 6-3, 6-4.

Kleybanova plays fourth-seeded Aravane Rezai, who defeated Rossana De Los Rios 7-6 (2), 6-0.

 

 

Catch all the latest of Dulko from MyWimbledon2008.com

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Nadal

BARCELONA, Spain (AP)—Rafael Nadal defeated Feliciano Lopez 6-4, 6-3 Thursday to reach the Barcelona Open quarterfinals, posting his 100th win on clay in his last 101 matches.

The three-time French Open champion’s only loss during that stretch—dating back to 2005—came against Roger Federer in Hamburg Masters final last year.

“That’s not bad,” Nadal said.

Taking control from the start, Nadal forced Lopez to save three break chances in the third game to hold his serve. Nadal, the three-time defending champion, broke in the fifth game when the 35th-ranked Lopez hit long.

Nadal’s backhand was sharp throughout the match, and another break in the second set was enough to set up a quarterfinal match against Juan Ignacio Chela, who defeated Ernests Gulbis 2-6, 6-4, 6-3.

Nadal, who had bandages across his left shoulder and under both knees, had been critical of the scheduling of clay-court tournaments.

The second-ranked Spaniard next plays at Rome and Hamburg, and has a one-week break before the French Open.

Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland will play Albert Montanes after upsetting seventh-ranked David Nalbandian 6-3, 6-1. Montanes held on to beat Mikhail Kukushkin 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

Earlier, fifth-seeded David Ferrer rallied to stop Nicolas Lapentti 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.

He will next play Tommy Robredo, who topped ninth-seeded Guillermeo Canas 6-1, 7-5.

Robredo, the last player to win the tournament before Nadal, eased through the first set and held a 4-1 lead in the second. But Canas rallied and led 5-4, before Robredo won the last three games and won the match when Canas hit into the net.

Denis Gremelmayr defeated 15th-seeded Dmitry Tursunov 6-4, 6-0. He will face Nicolas Almagro, who improved to a 21-3 record on clay this season after defeating Mario Ancic 7-6 (5), 6-2.

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Wimbledon Center Court

Yesterday the continuation of work on Wimbledon’s new-look Centre Court took place. Yesterday the All England Club announced a few changes for Wimbledon 2008 championships, including a £750,000 winner’s cash for the men’s and women’s singles, the first of a set of 70-ton “trusses” – 75-metre-wide coat-hanger-shaped structures which will span the width of the court – was successfully lowered into place over the new roof.

After the 2007 crowd was left exposed to arguably one of the wettest Wimbledon fornight’s in recent memory following the removal of the old roof, the new fixed cover will provide protection at the wimbledon 2008 tournament. By the 2009 championships a retractable cover will also be in operation, allowing for play in any condition, although the All England Club insists it will not be a prelude to regular night sessions.

There will be 1,200 more places on Centre Court compared with wimbledon 2007, taking the centre court capacity to 15,000. Most of the other new features on Wimbledon Centre Court will be up and running this year. There are improved catering facilities, including a rooftop bar for debenture holders, and a new Wimbledon shop.

They have also started working on the new No 2 court, which will be operational from 2009. The 4,000-capacity stadium, which is being built on what was Court 13, has a sunken playing surface, 3.5 metres below ground level.

Total Wimbledon prize money has been increased by 4.7 per cent to £11.8m. The 2 singles champions will receive £750,000 each, a 7.1 per cent increase on last year, while prize money for each of the men’s and women’s doubles competitions will exceed £1m for the first time.

Andy Murray was yesterday knocked out of the Open Sabadell Atlantico Barcelona at the second-round stage, losing 6-4 6-4 to the Croat, Mario Ancic. Murray squandered a handful of break points in losing to the world No 51.

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Federer

Federer has only won one small event in Estoril so far this year, and even that came by default, Nikolay Davydenko retired with injury halfway through the final. Federer lost in the semi-finals of the Australian Open to Novak Djokovic,as well as the second round in Dubai to Andy Murray, in the semi-finals of Indian Wells to Mardy Fish, in the quarter-finals of Miami to Andy Roddick and in Monte carlo final at the Monte-Carlo Country Club to Rafael Nadal.

Federer has spent the most consecutive weeks (currently 222) as world No 1, made the most consecutive appearances in Grand Slam finals (a run of 10 ended in Melbourne in January) and enjoyed the most consecutive grass-court victories (his last defeat was 55 matches and six years ago, to Mario Ancic at Wimbledon ).

Federer’s current trial with a new coach, Jose Higueras, is going so so. The Spaniard, who has guided Pete Sampras, Jim Courier and Carlos Moya in the past, is a clay-court specialist and is aiming to help his new charge win this month’s French Open, the only Grand Slam title that has eluded him.

“I think it’s very hard for coaches to work with me,” Federer says. “They’ll no doubt have a good CV afterwards, but at the same time they’re under a lot of pressure.

Jose came to Estoril for two days and the whole world wanted to talk to him, even when there was nothing to talk about. He doesn’t want to do anything wrong or to confuse me about anything because if I had bad results then people would say it was because of the coach. It could easily backfire on him. It’s a big challenge, which is why Jose doesn’t want to do any press interviews. I think that’s the best approach.”

What benefits does he think Higueras can bring to his game? “You look for little things, the small details,” Federer said. “It’s not as though I’m going to start playing all of a sudden with a two-handed backhand. We’re not looking for that sort of crazy stuff, but little things that can make a big difference. I obviously have to get on well with the coach as well. I want to be able to go and have dinner with him. Jose seems like a nice guy and we get on well. We like talking.”

Could Federer ever see himself coaching? “I don’t think it would be a problem, though I’ve realised over the years that it’s sometimes not so easy. I can’t just tell a guy: ‘Do that, do this. It’s very simple for me’. For the other guy it might be impossible. I’ve found this when I’m at a Davis Cup tie and I’m trying to help someone like Stan [Stanislav Wawrinka] or someone ranked maybe 150 in the world. You obviously have to have a different approach.”

Federer insists that most of his problems this year have been down to illness. He fell sick before January’s Australian Open, but it was only the following month that doctors diagnosed mononucleosis (glandular fever). Despite suffering from an illness that drags most mortals down for weeks on end, he recovered in Melbourne from a five-set marathon against Janko Tipsarevic to beat two top players in Tomas Berdych and James Blake before losing to Djokovic.

“The first time I got sick [before Christmas] I didn’t think it was anything out of the ordinary,” Federer said. “The second time [before the Australian Open] I thought it was food poisoning. The third time I thought something was wrong. That was when the doctors told me I had mononucleosis, but they said that by then it was almost over.

“By the time they’d done one more test they said it was over already, so it was never really a case of me saying: ‘Oh my God, I’ve got mononucleosis‘. It didn’t really scare me. It wasn’t as though I was in bed 24 hours a day for six weeks. I could play. That was what was so amazing. I was able to get up and play a five-setter against Tipsarevic at a time when apparently my mononucleosis was at its strongest.

“I hope I didn’t take any health risks, because if the doctors had found out then they would have told me not to play. It was over before it started for me. When I started practising again I was feeling slow and not too good, but a month later, when I caught up with my conditioning trainer in Miami, he said how different a person I was to when I was with him just before the tournament in Dubai.

“After I won in Estoril people were saying how relieved I must be to win my first title of the year, but I really don’t care about this stuff. I was never going to play very much at the start of the season anyway. This is a year when I want to save myself for the most important tournaments coming up now – the French Open, Wimbledon, the Olympics and the US Open. That’s when I want to have extra energy. It was part of my scheduling that I knew maybe I wouldn’t win a tournament early on.”

Did ROGER Federer think it would be harder to win his first French Open, on a surface where Nadal is so dominant, or to win three more Grand Slam titles and beat Sampras’s record of 14? “My goal is both to win the French Open and to break Sampras’s record. What’s important is to have the desire, the motivation, the will to want to do those things. I have it and I hope that will stay forever. Eventually it will probably be my body that breaks down, but for the moment I have no problems.

“I know I can win the French Open. I know I have the game. I’m a natural on clay. And I’m very close to Pete’s record. It’s such an interesting time for me. I’m chasing Olympic gold, my sixth Wimbledon, my fifth US Open, my first French Open. If I win any of those I’ll be such a happy person. And I believe I can do it all.”

Whenever Federer’s clay-court credentials are questioned he points to his outstanding record on the surface. In the last three years he has reached the semi-finals and two finals of the French Open, three successive finals in Monte Carlo and the final in Rome. On each occasion he has lost to Nadal, who has dominated clay-court tennis like no player in history. It was Federer who ended the Spaniard’s record 81-match winning run on the surface in Hamburg 12 months ago, which confirmed his belief that he has the game to beat the world No 2 on terre battue.

“I’ve proved so many times now that I know how to play against Rafa,” Federer said. “At the start I felt uncomfortable playing against him, but now it’s different. Beating him in Hamburg may have proved that I can beat him, but I think that’s more something for the media and the experts to talk about. I always knew that I could beat him. For me it didn’t mean any change mentally.”

The slowing-down of the game’s faster surfaces – particularly at Wimbledon 2008, where Nadal has reached the last two finals largely from the baseline – has led to a blurring of the distinction between clay-court specialists and those who prefer quicker courts. Federer agreed this had led to a lack of variety in the modern game. “Unfortunately you have to play today with a style that allows you to win tournaments at the very top,” he said. “And for this you need to be able to play from the baseline. I don’t think you can dominate the tour any more by playing serve-and-volley on first and second serve, unless you’re really tall and have a 220kph first and second serve.

“It’s become more difficult today because conditions have slowed down quite drastically. People definitely don’t volley as well as they used to, but then again the game from the baseline has become so fast. Some people think the game is slow because it’s being played from the baseline, but look at how fast we have to move, how much we have to be on the defensive all the time, how players can only attack when they’re in the best possible situation.

“I guess players like Mario [Ancic] and I have a different option – to shorten points – if we want. Players like Nadal, Djokovic and Blake have the shots to shorten points, but they’re not natural attackers who want to come to the net. I like to come to the net and don’t mind playing a low volley. I think other guys don’t want to do that.”

The rise of Nadal and Djokovic, combined with his own results this year, has arguably put Federer under greater pressure than at any stage of his reign, but he still gives the impression of taking everything in his stride.

“It’s not as though you get used to being No 1 in the world, but for me there is pressure at every tournament, from fans, sponsors, the media and not least myself. I expect a lot from myself. I try to give everything I have. It doesn’t matter whether the tournament is Estoril or Wimbledon. I always try to give my best.

“I feel completely fine about it. I like the excitement around me. I realise I may not be as free as a bird, but I feel that life is fine for me. I can live pretty much a normal life. I don’t have a problem in Switzerland or in Dubai. And on tour I’m ready for a problem. I’m at hotels and there are fans who expect me to be there and to sign autographs.”

Having his own charitable foundation, which supports under-privileged children in Africa, helps retain a sense of perspective. “I know my life is busier than ever, but I try to generate as much money as possible for people in need,” he said. “I definitely want to find more time for that. I’ll try to go to South Africa next year. I want to visit the projects I support now. I have one in Mali, one in Ethiopia, one in South Africa. For me that’s important.”

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