Dayton Daily News

Anderson outlasts Isner

South African advances to final after winning a more than 6½-hour match.

- By Howard Fendrich

Kevin Anderson won the LONDON — longest Centre Court match in history and earned a chance to try to collect his first Grand Slam championsh­ip, edging John Isner 7-6 (6), 6-7 (5), 6-7 (9), 6-4, 26-24 at Wimbledon in a marathon between two big servers that lasted more than 6½ hours Friday.

The fifth set alone lasted nearly 3 hours as the semifinal became a test of endurance more than skill. Anderson finally earned the must-have, go-ahead service break with the help of a point in which the right-hander tumbled to his backside, scrambled back to his feet and hit a shot lefty.

Only one match at the All England Club has been longer: Isner’s 2010 first-round victory over Nicolas Mahut, which went more than 11 hours over three days and finished 70-68 in the fifth. That was played over on Court 18, which now bears a plaque commemorat­ing the record-setter.

Anderson, a 32-year-old from South Africa, eliminated eight-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer in a 13-11 fifth set in the quarterfin­als Wednesday. Between that and the energy-sapper against Isner, it’s hard to imagine how the No. 8 seed Anderson will have much left for Sunday’s final, his second at a major.

Anderson was the runner-up to Rafael Nadal at last year’s U.S. Open. There could be a rematch now. Anderson’s opponent for the title will be Nadal or Novak Djokovic, who did not set foot on Centre Court until just before 8 p.m. on Friday evening, after waiting around all day. Because it was so late, and with rain forecast, the All England Club shut the retractabl­e roof above the main stadium before the second semifinal.

The expectatio­n was the first semifinal would be a tight contest filled with tiebreaker­s — and that’s precisely what it was.

Wimbledon doesn’t use tiebreaker­s in the fifth set for men, or third set for women, so there’s nothing to prevent a match from going on and on and on — and that’s precisely what Isner and Anderson did, often thanks to one ho-hum hold after another.

At one point in the fifth set, a spectator shouted, “Come on, guys! We want to see Rafa!”

Anderson and Isner go way back, to their days when they played in college, Isner at Georgia, Anderson at Illinois.

Not much difference between them. Both are tall — Isner’s 6 feet 10, Anderson 6 feet 8 — and lanky. Both wore a white baseball hat, Anderson with the brim in front, Isner with his turned his backward.

In the pros, Isner’s generally gotten the better of things, leading their headto-head series at 8-3 entering this semifinal.

But this one was as competitiv­e and close as can be.

Two hours and two sets in, they were even at one apiece, each via tiebreaker, with zero service breaks, only the very occasional extended point and aces by the dozen.

There was not a ton of intrigue or momentum shifts, not a whole lot of memorable shotmaking, either, save for some impressive return winners.

And the serving? Well, that was something else. Isner pounded his at up to 142 mph; Anderson reached 136 mph. They combined for 102 aces, 53 by Isner, 49 by Anderson.

 ?? CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES ?? John Isner (left) and Kevin Anderson leave Centre Court after Anderson defeated Isner 7-6 (6), 6-7 (5), 6-7 (9), 6-4, 26-24 in a semifinal that lasted more than 6½ hours Friday. The match was the longest in history on Centre Court, and the fifth set took nearly 3 hours.
CLIVE BRUNSKILL / GETTY IMAGES John Isner (left) and Kevin Anderson leave Centre Court after Anderson defeated Isner 7-6 (6), 6-7 (5), 6-7 (9), 6-4, 26-24 in a semifinal that lasted more than 6½ hours Friday. The match was the longest in history on Centre Court, and the fifth set took nearly 3 hours.
 ?? JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES ?? John Isner also played a 2010 match at Wimbledon that lasted more than 11 hours over three days.
JULIAN FINNEY / GETTY IMAGES John Isner also played a 2010 match at Wimbledon that lasted more than 11 hours over three days.

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