Wimbledon:Champion Roger Federer completed an elegant half century in 10 minutes today to reach the third round of Wimbledon.
Local hope Tim Henman, however, teased his long-suffering fans
for more than three tense hours before his Wimbledon dreams were
shattered by a Spaniard who serves and volleys.
Since making his debut here in 1994, the Briton has rarely
done anything without plenty of drama and his 7-6 7-6 3-6 2-6 6-1
defeat by Feliciano Lopez followed the pattern.
By the end of the five-set thriller each had won 153 points
but unfortunately for four-times semi-finalist Henman, it was Lopez
who had won all the important ones.
"We played 306 points and we're even and it's obviously
highlighted on grass that you've got to win the rights ones at the
right time. That's frustrating," said Henman, whose defeat marked
the end of the British challenge in either singles draw.
There was nothing wrong about Federer's timing.
The world number one's bid to emulate Bjorn Borg's five
successive titles at the All England Club gathered momentum when he
won his 50th consecutive grasscourt match 6-2 7-5 6-1 against
Argentine teenager Juan Martin Del Potro.
While Federer's progress was never in doubt, Marat Safin set
up an intriguing meeting with the Swiss by reaching the last 32 at
the grasscourt grand slam for only the third time.
In the process he ruined Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi's bid to become
the first Pakistani to reach the third round here with a 6-4 6-2
7-6 victory.
Federer was 2-0 up in the third set on Wednesday when rain
stopped play and on resumption swiftly finished the job.
Safin had originally been scheduled to play on Court
One but probably did himself no favours with the organisers
by criticising what he saw as exorbitant prices in the players'
restaurant.
On Thursday, officials demoted him to Court 18 and in a
rather muted performance, the upredictable Russian conjured an
array of lobs and passing shots to outwit Qureshi.
Safin's performance would hardly have worried Federer, who
has won seven of their nine duels and has dropped just one set in
his last 13 Wimbledon matches.
"I hope he's not going to have one of those crazy good days
against me," said Federer.
Lleyton Hewitt, the only other men's champion in the draw,
romped to a 6-2 6-2 6-1 win over a clueless Simone Bolleli. Rafael
Nadal dropped only two more games than the Australian in a 6-2 6-4
6-1 exhibition against Austrian Werner Eschauer.
Three-times former winner Venus Williams geared up for a
potential fourth round showdown with 2004 champion Maria Sharapova
with a 6-2 6-2 thrashing of 170th ranked Czech Hana Sromova.
The Russian second seed was even more ruthless and trampled
France's Severine Bremond 6-0 6-3.
Just 24 hours after creating a stir at the championships by
emerging on court wearing red underwear, Tatiana Golovin discovered
that red was not really her lucky colour.
"I'll keep wearing them as long as I keep winning, they are
lucky," the 17th-seeded Frenchwoman had said.
She had obviously spoken too soon as on Thursday she became
the highest women's seed to exit following a 6-2 3-6 6-1 defeat by
Austrian Tamira Paszek.
Serbia enjoyed a double celebration with French Open
runner-up Ana Ivanovic and Novak Djokovic both advancing.
Tommy Robredo became the first big casualty in the men's
draw. The 11th-seeded Spaniard failed to last the distance against
36-year-old Wayne Arthurs and fell 6-3 7-6 6-3. Next up for the
Australian will be the second oldest man in the draw, 35-year-old Jonas Bjorkman of Sweden.