Ottawa Citizen

Wimbledon introducin­g final-set tiebreaker­s

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That epic 70-68 fifth set at Wimbledon will never be matched or surpassed, or even challenged.

The All England Club said Friday it will introduce final-set tiebreaker­s next year, starting when the score reaches 12-12 in the decider.

The grass court Grand Slam tournament is the second of the four majors to use a final-set tiebreaker to determine a singles match: either the fifth set in a men’s match or the third set for the women. The U.S. Open, however, starts its final-set tiebreaker­s at 6-6.

At the Australian Open and the French Open, players still have to win by two games in the final set in singles matches.

“Our view was that the time had come to introduce a tiebreak method for matches that had not reached their natural conclusion at a reasonable point during the deciding set,” Wimbledon chairman Philip Brook said.

In a tiebreaker, the first player to get seven points — leading by at least two points — wins the set.

In 2010, John Isner and Nicolas Mahut played the longest match in tennis history at Wimbledon. The match took more than 11 hours and lasted over three days before Isner won 70-68 in the final set.

According to Wimbledon CEO Richard Lewis, many players were in favour of the change.

“There were mixed views, it’s fair to say. But predominan­tly, players favoured the final-set tiebreak,” Lewis said. “They recognize the quality of tennis goes down, players start playing not to lose rather than the excitement or the determinat­ion to win. And they recognize it affects the quality of the matches on subsequent rounds.”

This year, eventual finalist Kevin Anderson beat eight-time champ Roger Federer 13-11 in the fifth set in the quarter-finals, and then defeated Isner 26-24 in the fifth in the semifinals, the second-longest match in the history of a tournament that began in 1877.

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