Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Murray mania gathers steam

Murray mania gathers steam
Wimbledon begins;rain roof ready
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By Pritha Sarkar
LONDON (Reuters) - The now familiar tide of Murray-mania began sweeping across Wimbledon on Tuesday as Andy Murray prepared to begin his bid to end Britain's 73-year wait for a men's singles champion.
With the sun beating down on southwest London, record crowds were expected to file into the All England Club for the second day running as the countdown began for Murray to make his much-anticipated appearance on Center Court.
One man hoping to gatecrash the British party was American Robert Kendrick, Murray's opening round opponent.
"I would love to disappoint a nation," he told British media in the build-up to the match. "But then I would probably have to leave the country the next day."
Third seed Murray can expect a bumper crowd to turn up after 42,811 spectators came through the gates on the opening day.
That was 354 higher than the previous single-day record set during the 2002 championships.
But before the main Murray show, they were plenty of supporting acts around to entertain the fans on day two.
Venus Williams performed her duties as champion with the minimum of fuss to stride into the second round with a 6-3 6-2 win over Switzerland's Stefanie Voegele.
LONG LIMBS
The American, described by nine times former champion Martina Navratilova as having "the wingspan of a 747," used her long limbs to great effect to easily fly past Wimbledon debutant Voegele.
"It's the best place to be when you are a pro tennis player and I savor every blade of it," said Williams, who is chasing a sixth title at Wimbledon. "I've had that crown for several years and I want to make it mine again."
Sixth seeded Jelena Jankovic clawed her way back from 5-2 down in the second set to beat Germany's Julia Goerges 6-4 7-6.
While the bubbly Serbian skipped back into the locker room, her namesake Jelena Dokic buried her head in a towel after her return to Wimbledon ended in a 3-6 7-5 6-2 defeat by Tatjana Malek of Germany.
Almost four weeks after Dokic left court in floods of tears, when her Roland Garros challenge ended with a back injury, she suffered another blow at the grasscourt major.
DIZZY SPELL Continued...
Source: Reuters

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