Daily News

Nadal crushed as Rosol rocks Wimbledon to core

- TENNIS

LAUNCHING outrageous winners left, right and centre, obscure Czech Lukas Rosol rocked Wimbledon’s Centre Court to its foundation­s yesterday by winning a final-set shootout after dusk against twice former champion Rafa Nadal.

Ranked 100th in the world, few of the enthralled 15 000 fans inside the famous arena would have heard of Rosol before the match started but none present will forget witnessing one of the biggest shocks in the tournament’s 126-year history.

When Nadal levelled the match at two sets all it seemed inevitable that he would go on to reach the third round, albeit with plenty of battle scars after being staggered by the heavy artillery coming off Rosol’s strings.

However, after a 30-minute delay while Centre Court’s roof was slid into position, 26-year-old Rosol returned to overpower the 11-times Grand Slam champion and complete an electrifyi­ng 6-7 6-4 6-4 2-6 6-4 victory in three hours and 18 minutes.

The late-night drama left everything that went before it on the fourth day looking almost bland by comparison although there were plenty of sub-plots.

Nadal’s defeat meant Andy Murray’s chances of ending Britain’s 76-year wait for a men’s grand slam champion increased considerab­ly as his nemesis would have been his prospectiv­e semi-final opponent.

Murray survived a barrage of Ivo Karlovic serves to reach the third round in four sets, after which his livid Croatian opponent accused Wimbledon of bias.

Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova stayed on course for a possible replay of their 2004 final with contrastin­g second-round victories and Frenchman Gilles Simon’s comments that women should not get equal prize money continued to ruffle feathers.

The day will be remembered, however, for a performanc­e of rare power from a player who usually inhabits a different tennis universe from the one Nadal resides in.

The game’s journeymen are supposed to fight valiantly against the so-called “Big Four”, provide some entertainm­ent before packing their bags and disappeari­ng back into the wilderness.

Not Rosol. He showed Nadal scant respect and even went faceto-face at one stage as they col- lided while changing ends.

After losing the first set tiebreak 11-9 he hit back with blistering tennis to stun Nadal and take a two sets to one lead. The Mallorcan swept through the fourth set but Rosol returned after the roof closure like a man possessed.

Serving at 5-4, all eyes were on the Czech to see if his nerve would hold.

He simply took a deep breath, stared over the net at his quarry and fired down an ace, a clubbing forehand winner, an ace and another ace to leave Nadal powerless.

After his 22nd ace flashed by the Spaniard, Rosol fell to the court in disbelief before clambering to his feet and shaking the hand of a shell-shocked opponent who had not tasted a secondroun­d defeat at a grand slam since Wimbledon 2005.

“I’m sorry for Rafa but today I was somewhere else and I’m really happy for this,” said Rosol, who had never played a main draw match at Wimbledon until this week.

“I still can’t believe it. It’s like dream for me. I didn’t feel anything. I was in a trance a little bit. I had my adrenalin so high.”

Rosol thumped 60 winners during the match, some groundstro­kes clocked on the speed gun at 160km/h.

Nadal, who had hoped to complete a third French Open/Wimbledon double, admitted there was little he could do in the face of a Rosol’s extraordin­ary last-set onslaught.

“In the fifth set he played more than unbelievab­le,” said the world number two Spaniard, who looked mildly irritated when the match was halted to close the roof at the end of the fourth set, when the momentum has swung his way.

“I didn’t have the right inspiratio­n in the first three sets. Later was impossible, no? That’s what happens when you play against a player who is able to hit the ball very hard, hit the ball without thinking and feeling the pressure.

“At the end, when the opponent wants to play like he wanted to play in the fifth, you are in his hands, no? Everything was going right for him in the fifth.”

Nadal’s exit could prove to be a boost for Murray, whose title bid was halted by Nadal for the past two years in the semi-finals.

Murray survived a scare when losing the second set against Karlovic, winning 7-5 6-7 6-2 7-6.

Karlovic complained that he was foot-faulted 11 times.

“I don’t know what to say but it was a little bit outrageous,” he said.

“Is it Davis Cup or is it Wimbledon? After this match, the whole credibilit­y of this tournament went down for me.”

Women’s top seed Sharapova lost her way against dangerous grasscourt­er Tsvetana Pironkova before claiming a 7-6 6-7 6-0 victory while Williams, the fourtimes champion who Sharapova beat to win her sole Wimbledon crown in 2004, was far more ruthless in a 6-1 6-4 defeat of Hungarian Melinda Czink.

After contrastin­g victories they both ganged up on Simon.

“Oh, my gosh. You know I can’t bite my tongue,” sixth seed Williams told reporters. “I mean, definitely a lot more people are watching Maria than Simon. She’s way hotter than he is. Women’s tennis I think is really awesome.”

Awesome could not even come close to describing what occurred at the end of a hot, humid and, for Nadal, a tumultuous day in southwest London. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? WINNING FORM: Czech Republic’s Lukas Rosol returns during his 6-7 6-4 6-4 2-6 6-4 second-round win over Spain’s Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon yesterday.
PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X WINNING FORM: Czech Republic’s Lukas Rosol returns during his 6-7 6-4 6-4 2-6 6-4 second-round win over Spain’s Rafael Nadal at Wimbledon yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa