San Francisco Chronicle

Walk-off wins for both Federer and Djokovic

- By Howard Fendrich

LONDON — Novak Djokovic’s first-round match at Wimbledon lasted all of 40 minutes Tuesday. Roger Federer’s, which was next in the All England Club’s main stadium, went 43.

When two of the game’s biggest names crossed paths after both advanced when opponents stopped playing because of pre-existing injuries, they kidded each other about a way to try to make it up to the fans.

“We had a little joke about it in the locker room,” Djokovic recounted, “saying we should maybe play a practice set on the Centre Court, have the crowd stay.”

The short workdays for the two were quite similar. Djokovic led 6-3, 2-0 when Martin Klizan retired with a left leg problem that has bothered him for about two months. Federer was ahead 6-3, 3-0 when Alexandr Dolgopolov quit because of a painful right ankle he first twisted last month.

Those still go into the books as wins, allowing Federer to collect his 85th at Wimbledon, breaking a tie with Jimmy Connors for the most in the Open era. Djokovic picked up his 234th match victory at all majors, moving ahead of Connors and alone into second place in history, behind only Federer’s 315.

The way the afternoon went meant Centre Court spectators who paid more than $70 per ticket, some of them waiting in line for hours, got only brief glimpses of Federer, a seven-time champion, or Djokovick, a three-time champ. They did, however, have the opportunit­y to watch two top women, current No. 1 Angelique Kerber and former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki, win full-length matches.

“I feel for the crowd. They’re there to watch good tennis. Proper tennis. At least they see the two of us, who gave it all they had. They saw other players that tried, at least,” Federer said. “It’s unfortunat­e that it happened.”

Two other men also stopped mid-match Tuesday, 19th-seeded Feliciano Lopez (left foot) and Janko Tipsarevic (right leg), bringing the first-round retirement total to seven. That equals 2008 for the most by men in the first round during the 50 editions of Wimbledon in the Open era.

It sparked discussion about whether Grand Slam tournament­s should change their rules to allow players to still receive prize money if they withdraw before an event. That’s a system being employed on a trial basis this season on the ATP Tour — which doesn’t run majors — and lets someone who lost in qualifying take the spot in the main draw of an injured player. The theory behind that setup: Players who are injured won’t step on court simply to collect their prize money as an entrant before calling it a day without finishing the match.

“Even if I had a torn muscle today, and the doctor says, ‘You shouldn’t go on court. You have serious damage to risk,’ I could have faked it, stayed there for two less games, and still picked up the paycheck,” said Tipsarevic, who stopped while trailing 5-0 after only 12 minutes against Jared Donaldson.

A first-round loser at Wimbledon earns about $45,000.

“Unless you’re (in the) top 10 ... it’s significan­t money,” said Dolgopolov, who is ranked 84th.

Tipsarevic, Dolgopolov and Federer all would like to see the majors follow the ATP’s lead.

“A player should not go on court if he knows he (can) not finish. The question is: Did they truly believe they were going to finish? If they did, I think it’s OK that they walk on court. Otherwise, I feel they should give up the spot,” Federer said. “The ATP has adjusted its rule, but maybe the Slams should ... look at what they could do for the players to make it just a little bit easier.”

Kerber, last year’s runnerup to Serena Williams at the All England Club, had more to do to get past Irina Falconi 6-4, 6-4. Wozniacki, a twotime U.S. Open finalist, needed three full sets to edge Timea Babos 6-4, 4-6, 6-1.

 ?? Glyn Kirk / AFP / Getty Images ?? Novak Djokovic waves as he leaves the court with Martin Klizan after Klizan retired because of a leg problem during the second set. Their abbreviate­d match took 40 minutes.
Glyn Kirk / AFP / Getty Images Novak Djokovic waves as he leaves the court with Martin Klizan after Klizan retired because of a leg problem during the second set. Their abbreviate­d match took 40 minutes.

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