The way
I see
it, only
four men
and five
women
can be
regarded
as
serious
threats
to win
the
world’s
premier
title
this
time
around.
In the
end,
among
the men,
the four
prime
candidates
are
Roger
Federer,
Rafael
Nadal,
Andy
Murray
and Andy
Roddick.
The five
women
whom I
separate
from the
pack are
Serena
Williams,
Venus
Williams,
Justine
Henin,
Kim
Clijsters
and Sam
Stosur,
although
the
latter
is a
long
shot.
Let’s
look at
the
draws.
Federer
may face
some
dangers
from the
fourth
round
on, but
he
should
be
relatively
happy
with his
draw.
Nadal’s
path
could be
much
more
arduous.
When
Wimbledon
announced
they
were
upgrading
Federer
to No. 1
over
Nadal in
the
seedings,
it did
not seem
all that
significant.
But, as
it turns
out, the
demotion
of Nadal
to No. 2
matters.
Federer
should
move
swiftly
through
the
early
rounds.
The
first
seed he
should
meet is
No. 30
Tommy
Robredo.
He could
have a
battle
on his
hands in
the
round of
16, when
the
Swiss
would
conceivably
confront
either
the
left-hander
Feliciano
Lopez
(the No.
22
seed),
or the
Austrian
southpaw
Jurgen
Melzer,
a
semifinalist
at
Roland
Garros.
On the
grass,
Lopez,
who just
made it
to the
semifinals
at
Queen’s
Club
with a
win over
Nadal,
should
have the
edge. I
see him
facing
Federer
in the
round of
16, and
the
Spaniard
will win
the
first
set. But
Federer
will
come
roaring
back to
gain the
triumph
in four
sets for
a place
in the
quarterfinals.
In that
round,
Federer
will
meet
Tomas
Berdych
(the No.
12
seed),
countryman
Stanislas
Wawrinka
(No. 20)
or No. 7
seed
Nikolay
Davydenko.
Davydenko
does not
seem to
be sharp
enough
yet to
advance
that
far. His
long
layoff
with a
wrist
injury
set him
back
considerably.
I see
Federer
taking
on
Berdych.
Berdych
has some
confidence
after
winning
his last
meeting
against
Federer
in
Miami,
when he
saved a
match
point
against
his old
rival,
toppling
the 16
time
Grand
Slam
tournament
champion
for the
first
time
since
2004.
Berdych
has the
explosive
game and
the
returns
to worry
Federer
to a
degree,
but will
he serve
well
enough
to get
the job
done? I
doubt
it.
Federer
will
find his
range
and,
after
losing
the
second
set,
pull
away for
a
comfortable
four set
victory.
That win
propels
Federer
into the
semifinals.
A
cluster
of men
will be
fighting
ferociously
for a
place in
the
penultimate
round.
Novak
Djokovic,
a
semifinalist
at
Wimbledon
in 2007
but
largely
a
disappointing
performer
on the
grass,
is
seeded
third,
and
should
be the
favorite
to come
through
that
section
of the
draw. I
don’t
believe
he will.
Djokovic
might
need to
work
inordinately
hard
against
2002
Wimbledon
champion
Lleyton
Hewitt
in the
round of
16.
Hewitt
just
ended a
15 match
losing
streak
against
Federer
in the
final of
Halle on
grass,
and that
win
could
give him
a
substantial
boost.
He is
seeded
15th.
The
Hewitt-Djokovic
match
could be
a
beauty,
with
both men
fighting
it out
hard
from the
backcourt.
But
Djokovic,
despite
continued
problems
with his
serving
rhythm,
will get
by
Hewitt
in a
five set
showdown.
Andy
Roddick,
meanwhile,
will
have his
own
daunting
challenge
to
overcome
in the
round of
16. The
No. 5
seed
could
take on
No. 11
seed
Marin
Cilic
after
winning
a
demanding
four set
encounter
with
Philipp
Kohlschreiber,
who
toppled
the
American
at the
2008
Australian
Open.
Cilic
will
meet the
American
Mardy
Fish---
one of
the most
dangerous
floaters
in the
draw---
in the
second
round. I
see
Cilic
prevailing
in a
five set
contest
there,
and then
moving
on to a
fourth
round
collision
with
Roddick.
Cilic
held
back
Roddick
in five
sets at
the
Australian
Open
back in
January,
and he
will
make a
go of it
again in
Great
Britain.
But
Roddick’s
high
first
serve
percentage
and his
grass
court
acumen
will be
the
difference
in this
encounter.
Roddick
will be
the
winner
in four
tight
sets. In
the
quarterfinals,
Roddick
and
Djokovic
will
have a
bruising
confrontation.
Roddick
will be
burned
for a
while by
the
scorching
returns
of
Djokovic,
who will
also be
the
better
man from
the
baseline.
But, in
the end,
Roddick
will
elevate
his game
and
attack
at the
right
times.
He will
advance
to the
semifinals
in five
tumultuous
sets.
And so
Roddick
and
Federer
will
meet for
the
fifth
time at
the
world’s
premier
championship.
Not only
did
Federer
stop
Roddick
in an
epic
last
year---
overcoming
the
American
16-14 in
the
fifth
set---
but he
also
beat the
American
in the
2004 and
2005
finals,
plus the
2003
semifinals.
Roddick
is 2-19
in his
career
against
Federer,
and has
had to
settle
for two
isolated
wins
over his
nemesis
on hard
courts,
prevailing
in the
semifinals
of
Montreal
in 2003
and
again in
Miami
two
years
ago. But
the fact
remains
that he
has
competed
well
almost
every
time he
has
played
Federer
over the
last
three
years.
They
will
have
another
blockbuster
here in
the
semifinals.
Roddick
will
drop the
opening
set in a
tie-break
as both
men
serve
prodigiously,
but the
American
will
take the
second
set 6-4,
and go
on to
win the
third
7-5.
With his
back to
the
wall,
down a
break in
the
fourth
set,
Federer
will
reassert
himself,
securing
that set
in
another
tie-break.
But, at
the
start of
the
fifth
set,
Roddick
will
catch
Federer
off
guard
with one
of his
few
great
returns
of the
match
off the
backhand.
He will
have the
early
break,
and he
will not
be
halted.
Roddick
will
come
away
with a
6-7 (5),
6-4,
7-5, 6-7
(3), 6-4
victory,
and for
the
first
time
since
2002,
Roger
Federer
will not
be in
the
semifinals
at the
shrine
of the
sport.
On the
other
half,
Nadal
will be
tested
comprehensively.
In the
third
round,
he will
do
battle
with
Ernests
Gulbis,
the No.
27 seed
from
Latvia.
Gulbis
gave
Nadal
quite a
scare in
2008
when
they met
at
Wimbledon,
losing
in four
sets.
Their
contest
this
time
around
will be
similarly
stressful
for
Nadal.
Gulbis,
after
all,
took a
set off
Nadal on
the clay
in Rome
this
season,
and
stayed
with the
Spaniard
all the
way to
4-4 in
the
final
set
before
Nadal
got the
win.
Gulbis
is an
enormously
gifted
player
who can
play on
any
surface,
and
Nadal
will be
hard
pressed
to break
Gulbis
more
than a
few
times in
this
match.
Gulbis
will be
overpowering
and
overwhelming
at the
outset,
winning
the
first
set. But
Nadal
will
take the
next two
and then
close
out the
match in
a fourth
set
tie-break.
Yet
Nadal’s
struggles
will not
be over.
He will
play big
John
Isner in
the
round of
16. The
6’9”
American
played
two
impressive
matches
against
Nadal
earlier
this
year,
taking a
set off
the
Spaniard
at
Indian
Wells,
and
acquitting
himself
well
when
they
collided
again on
the clay
in
Madrid.
Isner
will not
only be
serving
thunderbolts
that
seem to
be
coming
down
from the
trees,
but he
will
back his
delivery
up with
some
terrific
low
volleys
off fine
returns
from
Nadal.
Isner
will
take
command
by
winning
the
opening
set in a
tie-break,
Nadal
will
capture
the next
two
sets,
and then
Isner
will
regroup
to win
the
fourth.
The
fifth
set will
be a
tremendous
tussle,
but at
5-5
Nadal
will
break
his
daunting
adversary
and then
serve
out the
match
confidently.
Nadal
wins 6-7
(5),
6-4,
6-4,
5-7,
7-5.
In the
quarterfinals,
Nadal
will
find
himself
up
against
the man
he just
beat in
the
French
Open
final.
Three
years
ago at
Wimbledon,
Soderling
extended
Nadal to
7-5 in
the
fifth
set in
the
third
round
after
losing
the
first
two
sets.
Soderling
is now a
much
more
strategic
and far
superior
server
what he
was was
back
then,
and he
will
come at
Nadal
forcefully
off the
ground
as well.
But
Nadal’s
big
point
mastery
will
separate
the two
competitors.
He will
make
some
timely
returns,
refuse
to lose
his own
serve
more
than
once,
and the
Spaniard
will be
the
victor
over the
Swede in
four
well
played
sets.
Waiting
for
Nadal in
the
semifinals
will be
Murray.
Murray
will
have
some
anxious
moments
against
Queen’s
Club
champion
Sam
Querrey
in the
fourth
round.
Querrey
will
build a
two sets
to one
lead
before
Murray
escapes
with a
five set
triumph.
In the
quarters,
the
flamboyant
Frenchman
Jo-Wilfried
Tsonga
will
face
Murray.
Tsonga,
the No.
10 seed,
will
move
past No.
19 seed
Nicolas
Almagro,
and then
will win
a
spectacular
five set
clash
with No.
9 seed
Fernando
Verdasco.
Tsonga,
however,
will be
worn
down
from
some
long
matches,
and
Murray
will be
ready to
exploit
his
edge.
Moreover,
the
British
crowd
will
lift the
spirits
of their
man, and
Murray
will
defeat
Tsonga
in four
sets.
Nadal
and
Murray
will
have a
fascinating
showdown.
Murray
will
have the
upper
hand
early,
serving
as well
as he
can,
acing
Nadal
down the
T in the
deuce
court on
some
crucial
points,
taking
control
from the
baseline
with his
two-handed
backhand
down the
line and
his
inside-out
forehand.
Nadal
will be
slightly
caught
off
guard,
and he
will
play one
nervous
service
game to
lose the
set. But
Nadal
will
change
the
tempo of
the
match in
the
middle
of the
second
set,
adding
velocity,
spin and
depth to
his
forehand,
pushing
Murray
back
farther
and
farther
behind
the
baseline.
Nadal
will
keep
swinging
his
first
serve
wide to
Murray’s
two-handed
backhand
in the
Ad
court,
and he
will
take the
second
and
third
sets.
But
Murray
will
reemerge
in the
fourth,
and
build a
5-2
lead.
The
frenzied
fans
will be
eagerly
anticipating
a fifth
set, but
Nadal
will not
go along
with
that
scenario.
The
Spaniard
will
sweep
five
games in
a row in
a blaze
of glory
to get
to the
final.
The fans
will be
absolutely
torn as
they
watch
Nadal
and
Roddick
play for
the
title.
They
have
seen
Roddick
lose
those
three
finals
to
Federer
across
the
years,
and they
vividly
recall
his
gallant
effort
last
July in
the
final. A
large
segment
of the
crowd
believes
Roddick
deserves
to be
the
Wimbledon
champion
at last,
and they
think it
would be
a
fitting
and
crowning
moment
in his
career.
And yet,
an
equally
big part
of the
audience
is
sympathetic
to
Nadal,
who
toppled
Federer
in the
majestic
final of
2008 but
could
not
defend
his
title a
year ago
as
tendinitis
in his
knees
prevented
him from
playing.
This
final
will be
exhilarating.
Roddick
will
keep
Nadal at
bay with
his
explosive
serve,
and the
kind of
aggression
off the
forehand
that he
must
produce.
Roddick
will
flatten
out that
forehand
over and
over
again,
making
Nadal
pay a
substantial
price
for
every
short
ball.
But
Nadal
will
sedulously
hold on
to his
own
serve,
and he
will
make
some
excellent
returns
off
Roddick’s
second
serve.
Nadal
will
also
control
a good
share of
the
rallies,
sending
Roddick
scurrying
all over
the
court in
pursuit
of the
Spaniard’s
magnificent
inside-out
and
crosscourt
forehands,
rolling
his
two-handed
deep
down the
line and
sharp
crosscourt
to keep
on top
of the
points.
Nadal
will win
the
first
set by
breaking
serve at
4-4, but
Roddick
will
strike
back to
win the
second
7-5. The
third
will go
to a
tie-break,
and it
will be
the
pivotal
set.
Roddick
will be
serving
at 4-3
in that
sequence,
up a
mini-break,
ready to
take
control
of the
contest.
But a
brilliant
return
from
Nadal as
he is
stretched
out wide
on the
forehand
startles
Roddick,
who then
double
faults
on the
next
point.
Nadal
wins the
tie-break,
and
there is
no
halting
him from
there.
Nadal
beats
Roddick
6-4,
5-7, 7-6
(4),
6-3,
winning
Wimbledon
for the
second
time,
taking
his
eighth
Grand
Slam
championship,
reaffirming
his
status
as the
best
player
in the
world.
Top
seeded
and
defending
champion
Serena
Williams
figures
to meet
No. 16
seed
Maria
Sharapova
in the
round of
16 in a
rematch
of the
2004
final,
which
the
Russian
won in
straight
sets.
Since
then,
however,
Serena
has
owned
Maria.
After
Sharapova
beat
Williams
later in
2004,
Serena
has won
their
last
four
head to
head
clashes.
Williams
will be
keyed up
for this
contest,
and her
returns
will be
far
better
than
Sharapova’s.
Williams
will win
6-4,
6-3.
Williams
will
upend Li
Na in a
three
set
quarterfinal.
Na will
defeat
No. 19
seed
Svetlana
Kuznetsova
in the
third
round
and then
will
topple
No. 7
seed
Agnieszka
Radwanska
in the
round of
16.
Meanwhile,
Caroline
Wozniacki---
the No.
3
seed---
will be
upset in
the
fourth
round by
No. 14
Victoria
Azarenka.
Stosur
will
stop No.
10 seed
Flavia
Penetta
in the
fourth
round,
and will
then
defeat
Azarenka
4-6, 7-6
(5), 6-3
in the
quarters
after
Azarenka
squanders
three
match
points
when
serving
for the
match at
6-5 in
the
second
set.
Williams
will be
looking
to
avenge
her
French
Open
loss to
Stosur,
and she
will do
just
that.
The No.
6 seed
Stosur
will
serve
for the
opening
set at
5-4, but
Serena
will
strike
back
boldly
to win
7-6 (4),
6-4.
That win
will put
Serena
back
into the
final.
On the
other
half of
the
draw,
No. 17
seed
Henin
has her
work cut
out for
her. She
will
need to
deal
with No.
12 seed
Nadia
Petrova
of
Russia
in the
third
round,
and then
will
face
countrywoman
Clijsters
in the
match
everyone
will
want to
see.
Henin
has lost
two
agonizingly
close
matches
to
Clijsters
this
year,
falling
in final
set
tie-breaks
in both
Brisbane
and
Miami.
But
Henin,
honing
her
grass
court
game
impressively,
striving
to win
the only
major
she had
not yet
taken,
attacking
skillfully
on the
grass
and
volleying
crisply,
will
turn the
tables
on the
No. 8
seed
Clijsters.
This
time
around,
Henin
wins
4-6,
7-5, 6-3
in a
high
quality
encounter.
After
that
emotional
triumph,
Henin
will
have
much
work
left to
do. In
the
quarterfinals,
she will
play
Jelena
Jankovic.
Jankovic
remains
somewhat
suspect
on grass
courts,
but she
will
display
improved
form
this
year,
making
more
aggressive
returns,
going
for
bigger
shots
during
the
rallies,
getting
better
depth on
her
second
serve.
Jankovic
will
play her
usual
good
match
against
Henin.
Every
time
they
step on
a court
for a
match,
it is
inevitably
close.
But
Henin
will
extend
her
record
over
Jankovic
to 11-0
with a
5-7,
6-2, 6-4
victory
over the
No. 4
seed and
former
world
No. 1,
moving
into the
semifinals
with
that
win.
No. 2
seed
Venus
Williams
will
have a
stern
test in
the
third
round
with the
explosive
Alisa
Kleybanova
of
Russia.
The No.
26 seed
will
push
Venus to
her
limits
in a big
hitting
encounter,
making
her
share of
second
serve
return
winners.
But the
five
time
champion
Venus
will
somehow
carve
out a
6-4, 6-7
(6), 7-5
triumph.
Dinara
Safina---
No. 1 in
the
world a
year ago
and the
No. 20
seed
now---
will
stop
Shahar
Peer in
the
third
round
but she
will
lose to
Venus
emphatically
in
straight
sets in
the
round of
16.
In the
quarterfinals,
Venus
will
stop
Marion
Bartoli
of
France
in a
repeat
of the
2007
final.
Bartoli
will
have
beaten
French
Open
champion
Francesca
Schiavone
in the
round of
16. And
so the
stage
will be
set for
Venus
Williams
to meet
Justine
Henin,
for the
right to
earn a
final
round
appointment
against
Serena
Williams.
It will
be a
blockbuster
duel
featuring
the
dynamic
power of
Williams
on serve
and off
the
ground
with the
all
court
acumen
of
Henin.
Henin
won’t be
able to
get to
the net
as much
as she
would
like
during
the
rallies,
but she
will go
in
behind
her
second
serve
returns.
Venus
will
need to
keep her
first
serve
in the
range of
70%. And
Henin
will be
feeling
an
enormous
amount
of
pressure
on her
second
serve as
Venus
fires
away
with
excellent
returns.
Justine
will
need to
gamble
from
time to
time
with
bigger
second
deliveries,
and she
will
serve
her
share of
double
faults.
Williams
will
come out
of the
blocks
in style
and
sweep
through
the
opening
set 6-3,
but
Henin
will
gradually
get her
bearings
and find
her
game.
She will
strike
back to
win the
second
set 7-5,
and then
will
rally
again
from 2-4
down in
the
final
set for
a 3-6,
7-5, 6-4
victory.
For the
second
time in
2010, it
will be
Serena
Williams
versus
Justine
Henin in
the
final of
a major.
The
storyline
will be
similar.
Williams
will
serve
brilliantly
in the
opening
set and
will
take it
6-4 on
one
break,
but
Henin
will
rescue
herself
from 1-3
in the
second
set to
make it
one set
all. At
3-3 in
the
final
set,
Serena
will be
down
0-40 on
her
serve,
but she
will
release
a pair
of aces
and a
daring
forehand
winner
down the
line to
make it
back to
deuce.
Serena
will
hold on,
break
Justine
in the
following
game,
and
serve
out the
match
commandingly.
Williams
beats
Henin
6-4,
4-6,
6-3. She
will be
the
Wimbledon
champion
for the
fourth
time.
She will
capture
her 13th
major
title.
She will
be on
top of
the
world.