Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Williams taking on Ostapenko as court questions arise

- By Howard Fendrich

LONDON » Venus Williams is the oldest woman in the Wimbledon quarterfin­als since 1994. Johanna Konta is the first British woman to make it that far since 1984. Angelique Kerber’s loss means she’ll relinquish the No. 1 ranking.

Jelena Ostapenko needed eight match points for her latest win — and latest proof that last month’s French Open title was no fluke. Magdalena Rybarikova, a Slovakian ranked 87th, reached her first quarterfin­al in 36 Grand Slam tournament­s.

Those were among the significan­t goings-on in women’s fourth-round action at the All England Club on Monday, when another topic took hold: Why were so few of these matches played on the tournament’s biggest courts?

“I mean, honestly, I didn’t think about that,” the 13th-seeded Ostapenko said, then quickly added: “But, I mean, yeah, I think I deserve to play on a better court than Court 12, I guess.”

The site of her 6-3, 7-6 (6) victory over No. 4 Elina Svitolina has a seating capacity of 1,065, making it only the fifth largest for the event.

Garbine Muguruza beat Kerber 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 at Court No. 2, with its 4,063 seats, in a matchup between the past two Wimbledon runners-up, a pair of players with a combined three major championsh­ips, and the woman atop the WTA rankings (well, until next week).

While Kerber noted that scheduling is “not so easy” on the second Monday at Wimbledon — the only major with all men’s and women’s singles matches on one day — she added: “Of course, I was surprised.” Muguruza’s take? “I don’t want to make any problem. I’m so focused on what I do, I don’t care if I played on 13, 1, 5,” she said, then acknowledg­ed: “I was expecting another court.”

All England Club chief executive Richard Lewis said scheduling decisions involve “some difficult choices.”

Lewis said one factor Monday was that “four of the all-time great male players” — Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray — were all playing. Their matches were all on the tournament’s two principal courts.

Both Centre Court (nearly 15,000 seats) and No. 1 Court (more than 11,000) had two men’s matches and one women’s match.

“I wouldn’t say it’s Lewis said.

“In the end, it’s not about male-female,” he said. “It’s about which matches in the end are the ones that the public and broadcaste­rs most of all would like to see.”

Five-time champion Williams played in the main stadium, winning 31 of 36 first-serve points while favoritism,” overpoweri­ng 27th-seeded Ana Konjuh of Croatia 6-3, 6-2.

Williams, a vocal advocate for Wimbledon’s switch in 2007 to equal prize money for the genders, said about the court assignment­s: “I’m sure that the women ... would want more matches on Centre or Court No. 1 over the whole fortnight.”

She and Murray think the All England Club should consider placing four matches — two men’s, two women’s — at each of the top two arenas on what’s called “Manic Monday.”

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