The Star Malaysia

Wimbledon and Australian Open considerin­g final-set tie-breakers

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WIMBLEDON and the Australian Open are considerin­g introducin­g final-set tie-breaks in 2019.

The issue hit the headlines after the six-hour, 36-minute semi-final between Kevin Anderson and John Isner at Wimbledon this year, which Anderson won 26-24 in the final set.

The exhausted South African then lost in straight sets to Novak Djokovic in the final.

An All-England Club spokespers­on said the topic will be “reviewed and considered as part of the post-Championsh­ips debrief ” at Wimbledon.

Tennis Australia officials have been canvassing opinion at the US Open, including from players, ex-players and coaches, about finalset tie-breaks – in the men’s and women’s singles events – and even best-of-five sets versus best-of-three.

The US Open is the only one of the four Grand Slam events to have a final-set tie-break in singles, though the Australian Open and French Open use it in doubles.

Advocates of the final-set tie-break believe it will help to extend players’ careers after serious injuries to several of the top names in recent years and attract new fans to the sport.

The four Grand Slam tournament­s are due to hold a scheduled meeting at Flushing Meadows this week.

Anderson, a member of the ATP Player Council, said he felt it was a matter of time before the final-set tie-break came in.

“I think Wimbledon are looking at it,” he said.

“There are obviously some pros and cons but I have heard that they are discussing it.

“It will be interestin­g to see what they come up with. And Australia, potentiall­y, as well. A lot of sports are having to change their formats, there’s a different demographi­c coming up, so maybe even three-outof-five-set tennis may have to be looked at, at some point.

“So I wouldn’t be surprised if at some stage we do get to that (final set) tie-breaker.”

Judy Murray, the mother of Andy and Jamie Murray, said she had been asked about final-set tie-breaks and her preferred format for the game.

“I prefer best-of-three with a full set for the third set,” she said.

“Over the years I’ve watched the game getting so much tougher physically and the calendar getting so much more demanding on the players, emotionall­y and physically.

“At the end of last year there were so many of the top 10 who were out of action with serious injuries – you need to look after that.”

Doubles specialist Jamie Murray told reporters at Flushing Meadows on Sunday he was “a big fan of the final-set tie-break”.

“I think tennis is long enough. If you haven’t sorted the match out by six-all in the fifth set ... the players have played enough tennis, the fans have seen enough tennis, TVs seen enough of that match, a tie-break is enough, so it doesn’t get out of control and sort of mess up schedules, mess up players’ next rounds, mess up draws and things like that.” —

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