Monday, 26 March 2012

Roddick gets third win over Federer in Miami

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â€"Techno music rocked the stadium during a changeover, then faded, the din replaced by the crowd’s cheers as Andy Roddick took his position at the baseline, one game from a win over nemesis Roger Federer.
 
Roddick held the balls, and that was the edge he needed. He served out the match to win 7-6 (4), 1-6, 6-4 Monday night in the third round at the Sony Ericsson Open.
 
With that, the fans roared again, saluting only the third victory for Roddick in 24 meetings with Federer.
 
“There is no script in sports, you know. I think that’s what makes it the best entertainment in the world,” Roddick said. “Nights like tonight are why you play the matches. You don’t know what’s going to happen.”

On paper, it looked like a mismatch between former No. 1s, each a two-time champion in the event. The third-ranked Federer began the night 40-2 since the U.S. Open, while Roddick’s ranking had slipped to 34th, his lowest point since 2001.
 
But Roddick’s serve kept him in the match, and then won it. He broke only once but held every service game in the first and last sets.
 
After falling behind 15-30 in the final game, he closed out the victory with an ace and two service winners, all at more than 130 mph. That ended Federer’s streak of 77 consecutive wins against players outside the top 20.
 
“I feel like I lost against a former No. 1, not that I lost against a guy ranked 30 in the world,” Federer said. “I’m happy to see Andy play really well. He’s a great champion, and enjoy him while you have him. It was a great night for him and America’s tennis.”
 
Also dominating with the serve were Serena and Venus Williams, who both reached the quarterfinals.
 
Serena matched a career high with 20 aces to beat Samantha Stosur 7-5, 6-3.
 
“My serve was hot,” Williams said. “I was like, `That’s pretty cool.”’
 
She avenged a loss to Stosur when they last met in the U.S. Open final in September.
 
“That wasn’t in my mind,” Williams said. “I just thought, `This is a new game.”’
 
Older sister Venus won her third consecutive three-set match, hitting 13 aces as she outlasted No. 15-seeded Ana Ivanovic 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-2. Williams is playing in her first tournament since withdrawing from the U.S. Open last August after being diagnosed with an autoimmune disease.
 
“I come out on court knowing I can play well, but almost with no expectations,” Williams said.
 
Top-ranked Victoria Azarenka lost 10 of the first 11 games, then rallied to remain unbeaten this year by beating No. 16-seeded Dominika Cibulkova 1-6, 7-6 (7), 7-5. Azarenka was two points from defeat five times, but swept the last three games and extended her winning streak to 26 matches, all in 2012.
 
“I’m proud of the way I fought,” she said. “With my game I don’t think I’m really pleased, but it doesn’t really matter. The most important is that I found the resources.”
 
Also reaching the quarterfinals was No. 2 Maria Sharapova, who overcame 11 double-faults to beat Ekaterina Makarova 6-4, 7-6 (3). Sharapova won despite committing 52 unforced errors and losing her serve four times.
 
No. 1 Novak Djokovic advanced to the fourth round by beating No. 27-seeded Viktor Troicki 6-3, 6-4. Djokovic is bidding for his third Key Biscayne title and second in a row.
 
No. 8-seeded Mardy Fish assured he’ll remain the top-ranked American man by beating No. 28 Kevin Anderson 6-4, 6-3.
 
Federer lost only seven points on his serve in the opening set, but when he failed to put away an overhead trailing 4-3 in the tiebreaker, the match swung Roddick’s way.
 
Federer squandered another chance with a 1-0 lead in the third set, failing to convert four break points in the next game. After Roddick escaped for 1-all, he earned his lone break in the next game, his grunts filling the stadium as he cracked four forehand winners.
 
“One of the best return games I ever played,” Roddick said.
 
“It was a big turn of events there in five minutes,” Federer said. “That’s how tennis goes sometimes.”
 
Roddick served out the final four games without facing a break point. When he let loose a 134-mph serve to win the final point, he raised his arms and waved his racket at the heavens.
 
He was thinking of his agent, Miamian Ken Meyerson, who died in October.
 
“I felt like I was a crazy person because I think I was having full dialogues with him the last 30 minutes of the match,” Roddick said. “I was just letting him know that I heard him.”
 
Roddick had reason to look for assistance from above: He had lost 52 of 64 sets against Federer entering the match. Federer had won six meetings in a row since Roddick beat him in the Key Biscayne quarterfinals in 2008.

Indians End Title Bid Of Granollers/Nadal

Sixth-seeded Indians Mahesh Bhupathi and Rohan Bopanna defeated Spaniards Marcel Granollers and Rafael Nadal 6-4, 6-3 on Monday at the Sony Ericsson Open.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Isner displeased by loss to Mayer in Miami

New Top 10 player John Isner looked lethargic in last night's 6-4, 6-2 loss to Florian Mayer at at the Sony Ericsson Open and said he might be overplaying. Isner told Foxsports that playing five events in the past seven weeks may have taken its toll. "I don’t like to use the word pitiful, but it certainly wasn’t great on my part tonight," Isner said. "I had no patience; my feet weren’t under my shots, and he was hands down the better player. I’m disappointed in myself. I haven’t had any time to take a breath and rebuild and I will go home for a few days and do that now. I have a very important event coming up."

Isner will contest the United States' Davis Cup quarterfinal against France in Monte Carlo on April 8-10.

Clijsters not contemplating early retirement

Kim Clijsters told TENNIS.com today that she is not contemplating retiring earlier than planned.

The Belgian Journalist and former touring pro Filip Dewulf reported that she was considering so, and Tennis Channel mentioned DeWulf’s tweet in a Monday morning broadcast. The frequently injured Clijsters says that while she is considering changing her practice regimen and possibly her overall schedule, she is still planning on trying to win the two Grand Slam crowns that elude herâ€"Roland Garros and Wimbledonâ€"and playing the London Olympics.

After falling to fellow Belgian Yanina Wickmayer at Miami, Clijsters, who has been dealing with ankle issues for the past year and has only played two events in 2012, said that she was playing at less than 50 percent.

Clijsters later tweeted: "I am not quitting!! Not yet! I have some great tennis left in me! Just making that very clear!"â€"Matt Cronin

Ferrari, Sauber’s ‘team order’ conspiracy

As a long-time Ferrari fan, you can call me biased on this Op Ed but the recent spate of “team order” accusations toward Ferrari and Sauber regarding the radio communication to Sergio Perez in the waning laps of Sunday’s Malaysian Grand Prix are simply wide of the mark in my opinion. Sauber radioed Perez telling

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Possible Olympic spot motivating Venus

World No. 134 Venus Williams says that trying to qualify for the London Olympics is seriously motivating her to improve her ranking. Venus, whose ranking will rise at least into the Top 100 after her three wins in at the Sony Ericsson Open in Miami, still needs to reached the Top 56 at the end of Roland Garros to automatically qualify and not have to ask for an exemption.

"Whenever things look bleak, I think about the Olympics,” Williams said after her near three-hour win over Alexandra Wozniak. "That keeps me motivated. When I don't want to get up or, you know, I want to do something different, I want to make an error, then I think about the Olympics and how if I don't do the right thing I might not be there. That keeps me on the straight and narrow."

Venus added that she is also hoping to play doubles at the Olympics, but has not considered playing mixed doubles. John Isner has said he would liked to play mixed doubles with either Venus or Serena.

Australia win to secure drawn series

Somehow, a 2-2 draw seemed a fitting result for a series that was so closely fought. That was the outcome after Australia's best all-round performance of the tour so far finished in a 30-run win

Muamba making 'encouraging progress'

Fabrice Muamba has been said to have been able to get out of bed, eat and watch television as the Bolton Wanderers midfielder makes "encouraging progress" from the cardiac arrest he suffer nine days ago.

Fish Cruises Past Anderson

Eighth seed Mardy Fish won 70 per cent of his service points to defeat No. 28 seed Kevin Anderson of South Africa 6-4, 6-3 on Monday for a place in the Sony Ericsson Open fourth round.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Diawara philosophical on injury

Souleymane Diawara has admitted "life goes on" after being ruled out for the rest of the season with a knee injury and is more keen on Marseille focussing on beating Bayern Munich in the UEFA Champions League.

Miami Monday Briefing - Djokovic, del Potro In Day Action; Federer-Roddick At Night

Media notes for the Sony Ericsson Open, an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Nadal Dismisses Stepanek, Dropping Just Four Games

World No. 2 Rafael Nadal moved swiftly into the fourth round of the Sony Ericsson Open Sunday, dismissing 25th seed Radek Stepanek 6-2, 6-2.

[[More Tennis News on ATPWorldTour.com]]

Massa’s problem is…the car?

Ferrari are certainly playing down aany potential move away from current driver Felipe Massa as the Brazilian faces a barrage of discouraging remarks from fans and pundits on the heels of two bad performances to start the 2012 season. It was known that the 2012 season was his moment of truth in retaining his ride at Ferrari

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Vettel calls Karthikeyan an ‘idiot’ as two exchange verbal jousts post-crash

Lest it be lost amid Sergio Perez’s great finish and the rumors of his Maranello matriculation, Sebastian Vettel and Narain Karthikeyan exchanged comments after this weekend’s Malaysian Grand Prix, with Vettel calling the HRT driver an “idiot.” Although he didn’t do it by name. The BBC has a nice little wrap-up, with these details: “Like

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Nine different teams in Malaysia top ten

Amid the excitement generated by Fernando Alonso's victory for Ferrari at Sepang on Sunday - and by Sergio Perez's superb second place for Sauber - one fascinating statistic almost fell by the wayside: one that illustrates just how competitive Formula One racing is in 2012. An amazing nine of the sport's 12 teams had a presence among the top-ten finishers (only Force India brought both cars home in the points) - something which hasn't happened since Europe 2010. Not only that, incredibly, those ten cars were covered by less than 50 seconds after an intense 310.408 kilometres of racing.

Venus saves match point to win thriller

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KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)â€"Weary winner Venus Williams stood near the net swatting souvenir balls to cheering fans, but a marathon match had taken its toll, and one of her attempts didn’t even reach the stands.

Williams had already expended all her energy, erasing a match point and outlasting Aleksandra Wozniak 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (5) in Sunday’s third round at the Sony Ericsson Open.

Her career comeback now includes a come-from-behind win. Williams is playing in her first tournament since withdrawing from the U.S. Open last August after being diagnosed with a fatigue-causing autoimmune disease.

The three-set victory was her second in less than 48 hours, and took nearly three hours.

“I just kept coming back,” Williams said. “I tried not to let anything discourage me.”

Other winners included Rafael Nadal, bidding for his first Key Biscayne title, and two-time champion Victoria Azarenka. American John Isner was eliminated.

Wozniak served for the match at 5-4 in the final set, but dumped a forehand in the net when she had a match point. Talking later about the situation, Williams claimed to be unaware Wozniak had been so close to victory.

“She had match point?” Williams said. “Oh no. Thank God I’m oblivious to the score a lot of times.”

The tiebreaker swung Williams’ way when she smacked an overhead that clipped the net cord before landing softly for a winner and a 4-2 lead. On the final point, she somehow found the strength to whack a 119-mph service winner.

“That’s the serve I wantedâ€"just a big one to hopefully force the issue,” Williams said. “Thank God it went in. Wow.”

She’ll need to recover quickly for a fourth-round match Monday night against No. 15-seeded Ana Ivanovic, who beat No. 20 Daniela Hantuchova 6-2, 7-6 (2).

Nadal, seeded No. 2, defeated 33-year-old Radek Stepanek 6-2, 6-2 and has lost only six games in two rounds.

“Good, solid start of the tournament,” Nadal said. “Two good matches, comfortable wins.”

The No. 10-seeded Isner, coming off a runner-up finish at Indian Wells a week ago, lost to No. 19 Florian Mayer, 6-4, 6-2. No. 4 Andy Murray, the 2009 champion, advanced in a walkover when Milos Raonic withdrew because of a sprained right ankle.

The top-ranked Azarenka improved to 25-0 this year by beating wild card Heather Watson 6-0, 6-2.

On a sweltering spring afternoon, Williams looked lethargic at the outset, struggled with an erratic forehand and kept falling behind. She played with straps on her right ankle and right calf, and often seemed a step late to the ball.

“Wake up, Venus!” a fan shouted in the second set. Younger sister Serena, who plays her fourth-round match Monday, watched solemnly from the club section of the stadium.

“I didn’t feel that great, and I was kind of starting to panic,” Venus said. “I needed to calm down and try to figure out a strategy that was going to work a little better than what I was doing at the moment.”

She managed to pull even after two sets, then fell behind 4-2 in the third set and looked increasingly weary. During one changeover she hung her head for 15 seconds before slowly lifting it to take sips from two drink bottles.

Wozniak looked fresher, but the wild card from Canada couldn’t serve out the match. Instead, the opportunity unnerved her. She hit consecutive double-faults and committed unforced errors on the game’s final three points, which made it 5-all.

Play continued for another half hour before another match point, this one held by Williams. After her service winner clinched the victory, she managed to raise both fists and muster a smile.

A former No. 1 and seven-time Grand Slam singles champion, Williams is ranked No. 134 and needed a wild card to enter the tournament. She’s trying to improve her ranking enough in the coming weeks to qualify for the London Olympics.

“Whenever things look bleak, I think about the Olympics,” Williams said. “That keeps me motivated.”

Pacos deny Porto late on

Porto missed their chance to go three points clear at the top of the standings in Portugal as they were held to a draw at Pacos Ferreira, while Nacional defeated Beira Mar 3-0.

Nuremberg chief frustrated by defeat

Following their 1-0 defeat to Stuttgart yesterday, Nuremberg director of sport Martin Bader feels his side were unlucky to be on the losing side and thinks they have shown why they have already accrued 31 points.

Huntelaar: I'll decide on contract after EUROs

Schalke's on-form striker Klaas Jan Huntelaar has said he intends on waiting until after UEFA EURO 2012 to decide on whether he will extend his contract at the Bundesliga side, saying it will allow him to "gather his thoughts".

New Zealand still looking to 'kick on' after starts

New Zealand look at the final day of the third Test against South Africa as an opportunity to bat better than they have in the rest of the series and end their summer on a high note

Late drama and title parties abound

FIFA.com’s weekly review of domestic action in Asia features the handing out of trophies in Qatar and Australia, while there was action aplenty in Japan, Korea Republic, United Arab Emirates and elsewhere.

Lugano: We’re not letting success go to our heads

Having captained Uruguay through one of their best periods of the last half-century, Diego Lugano sat down with FIFA.com to talk about his desires on the Olympics, Paris St Germain and following in the footsteps of greatness.

Williams chairman Parr leaves team

Williams announced on Monday that their chairman Adam Parr will depart the team at the end of the week. Parr joined Williams as chief executive officer just over five years ago to assist team founder Frank Williams. Â"I asked Adam to join Williams at the end of 2006 to support me in the running of our team,Â" said Williams. Â"Over five years, Adam's achievements have surpassed my expectations and I must thank him for his service. Not least for the decisive role he played in the technical changes made last year which are beginning to show through in the team's improved competitiveness this season, and for leading this company to a successful IPO.

Malaga go fourth after win at Espanyol

Malaga climbed into the UEFA Champions League spots after they scored twice in two second half minutes to complete a 2-1 turnaround courtesy of goals from veterans Ruud van Nistelrooy and Martin Demichelis.

Former champions draw as road begins

The beginning of the CAF Champions League qualifying first round saw four former winners of the trophy draw, including title-holders Esperance who were held by Wajdi Bouazzi to a 1-1 result in Gambia.

Conte despairs of Milan squad strength

Despite moving within four points of leaders AC Milan following their impressive win against Inter, Juventus coach Antonio Conte fears his side may not have the firepower needed to haul in the Rossoneri.

BREAKING: Adam Parr leaves Williams F1

In a surprise move, CEO Adam PArr will be leaving Williams F1 on the 30th of March, 2012. HEre is the presser from Williams: Williams Grand Prix Holdings PLC (WGPH, Ticker: WGF1) today announced that its Chairman Adam Parr has resigned from the Company. Adam will leave Williams on Friday 30 March 2012. Nick Rose,

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