New Straits Times

Remarkable mixed doubles final on the cards

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LONDON: Andy Murray and Jo Konta’s campaigns may have faltered, but as Wimbledon enters its final weekend, Britain is guaranteed a champion at the All England Club.

Defending mixed doubles champions Heather Watson and Henri Kontinen will face Jamie Murray and Martina Hingis for the title today, after both pairs came through late-night semi-finals.

For Jamie, this is a second major mixed doubles final, 10 years after he won his first Grand Slam here with Jelena Jankovic. This will also be the fifth year in six that a Murray has featured in a Wimbledon final.

Heather, meanwhile, is a win away from what would be a remarkable double triumph. One would imagine that last year’s pre-final routines would be religiousl­y followed, but Kontinen revealed otherwise.

“One thing is different, we’re not hitting together on Saturday,” said the Finn. “She wants to hit at 11am but I want to sleep in. We’ll hit before our match.”

The holders knocked out No 2 seeds Elena Vesnina and Bruno Soares 6-4, 6-7, 6-3. Watson and Kontinen were more dominant than the scoreline suggests, but they could only take two of their 14 break-point chances. Between them they hit 23 winners and just four unforced errors. Murray and Martina are No 1 seeds for a reason, but they will have a serious challenge against the KontinenHe­ather double act.

In a British-Finnish love-in after the match, the pair threw compliment­s back and forth. “Henri tells me what to do (with serve) and I do my best to do it,” said Heather. “And if I succeed then he just goes and wins the point for us.”

Kontinen said: “Her returns are great, much better than mine,

“When she’s being brave and aggressive she’s really good at the net too. And her serve, other guys hate her serve, it’s so precise and low.”

The unlikely pairing get along famously and this undoubtedl­y helps them on court. Heather has struggled during her singles career when confronted by highpressu­re situations and she clearly thrives in the more happygo-lucky environmen­t of mixed doubles.

Kontinen, 27, from Helsinki, is a jocular figure, and the pair chat at changeover­s like a couple of pals at a bus stop.

For all the hilarity on one side of the net, on the other it was strictly business. Brazilian Soares, who partnered Jamie Murray to two men’s doubles Grand Slams last year, is a high-class operator and

Heather, on paper, was the odd one out on a court of doubles experts, but the 25-year-old from St Peter Port in Guernsey held her own superbly, making few errors and even scurrying across the net a few times to intercept volleys.

While Heather and Kontinen say they were always going to team up this year to defend their title, Murray was not even planning on playing the mixed event.

But there are some things — such as an offer from an iconic 17time doubles Grand Slam champion — that you just don’t turn down.

“It was a great opportunit­y for me to play with a great player,” said Jamie, “and I’m glad I did!” Daily Mail

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