Wimbledon entered the twilight zone on
Monday as Serena Williams became the latest high-profile champion to
fade into oblivion at a tournament where reputations and star status are
counting for nothing.
Just when it seemed that this year’s
grasscourt major had exhausted its quota of shocks with grand slam
champions Rafa Nadal, Roger Federer, Maria Sharapova and Victoria
Azarenka all blotted out of the draw by the second round, along came
Sabine Lisicki.
The German, playing a brand of fearless
tennis that many dream of but only the brave produce, jettisoned the
American holder 6-2 1-6 6-4 to leave Wimbledon gasping in disbelief once
again.
Lisicki also struggled to catch her breath.
“I’m still shaking, I’m so happy,”
gulped a tearful Lisicki, who fell flat on her stomach in her moment of
triumph. “It’s amazing; I love this court so much. It’s unbelievable!”
It certainly was unbelievable because
even before the first-week exodus of big names, Williams had been the
overwhelming favourite to win a sixth title having triumphed at three of
the last four majors.
She walked on court armed with the
knowledge that she was on a 34-match winning streak and had suffered
only two losses all year.
That record failed to salvage her
Wimbledon dreams and her exit left world number four Agnieszka Radwanska
as the highest seed and Czech Petra Kvitova as the only former champion
still alive in the women’s draw.
Eighth seed Kvitova dispatched Spaniard Carla Suarez Navarro 7-6(5)6-3 to set up a last-eight meeting Belgian Kirsten Flipkens.
William’s downfall also meant that Sloane Stephens was the only American, man or woman, to reach the quarter-finals.
The 20-year-old lived up to her billing
as the next generation of American tennis by beating Puerto Rican
teenager Monica Puig 4-6 7-5 6-1.
At the other end of the age spectrum, Li
Na proved that 31-year-olds can still do damage on grass as she
narrowly missed out on dishing out the dreaded double bagel during a 6-2
6-0 thrashing of Italian 11th seed Roberta Vinci.
Day seven at Wimbledon is unique as it
is the only one of the four grand slams to schedule 16 fourth-round
showdowns – both in men and women’s singles – on the same day.
But after a week of seismic shocks
decimated the draw and left it shorn of house-hold names, it was a case
of guess who for the fans who wandered around the outside courts.
Lukasz Kubot v Adrian Mannarino on Court 14?
“Oh it’s a couple of nobodies!,” quipped one spectator as he craned his neck to see the names on the on court scoreboard.
Had the fan stuck around to see the
match to its conclusion, he would have caught sight of Kubot doing his
bizarre can-can victory jig along the service line following his
absorbing 4-6 6-3 3-6 6-3 6-4 win over Frenchman Mannarino.
Kubot and Mannarino were among four players outside the top 100 who had made it to the second Monday at Wimbledon.
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