Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

Agassi sends Philippoussis down under

LONDON, JULY 5: Second seed Andre Agassi of the United States kept on course for a second Wimbledon singles crown on Wednesday when he def...

.

LONDON, JULY 5: Second seed Andre Agassi of the United States kept on course for a second Wimbledon singles crown on Wednesday when he defeated Australian 10th seed Mark Philippoussis 7-6 7-4 6-3 6-4 in 1 hour 58 minutes to reach the semi-finals.

Agassi, beaten by Pete Sampras in last year8217;s final, now faces Australian 12th seed Pat Rafter, who earlier beat Germany8217;s Alexander Popp 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 7/1 in 1 hourr 48 minutes.

The shaven-headed Las Vegan turned in an awesome lesson of grass court tennis 8212; though he made the Centre Court crowd wait at the end, double faulting on triple match point. The tension broke seconds later, however, as a dejected Philippoussis fired into the tramlines to finish well beaten.

Agassi treated the first few games of the encounter as sparring practice and had to save a break point at 2-3 in the opening set. Two games later a wonderful passing shot gave him one of his own which Philippoussis saved with one of his trademark monster serves to hold for 4-3. Philippoussis, who came into the match on the back of a record 5 hour one minute third-round win over Dutchman Sjeng Schalken and a five-setter against British eighth seed Tim Henman, started brightly enough.

Several running forehands showed his game is not just about a howitzer of a serve topping 195 kph. In the first set tie-break, however, Agassi started to wear him down. The contrast in styles between the two men was evidenced by a brilliant Agassi lob which clipped the line 8211; Philippoussis responding with his seventh ace. The Australian, nicknamed Scud, would win the ace count 22-7 8211; but he wouldn8217;t win much else as he made 53 unforced errors to Agassi8217;s 38.

A brilliant Agassi forehand return on a serve which was massive even by Philippoussis8217; standards brought the American a mini-break for 5-3. Given three set points to play with, Agassi slapped a forehand return into the net on the first but the Las Vegan8217;s first ace of the match brought him the set in 50 minutes.

Story continues below this ad

Agassi, title winner here eight years ago, was producing his whole repertoire of shots 8212; a series of running lobs among his favourites 8212; and took command in the second set. Philippoussis needed three aces to level for 2-2 but he was increasingly coming under pressure as Agassi began to give him the run-around before breaking in the seventh game as the Australian hit two double faults.

Agassi then had to dig deep to save two break points but a vicious forehand drive wrong-footed him and he had to save a third. He got back to deuce and an ace and a brilliant forehand down the line gave him the set.

Philippoussis fell over on the rain-moistened turf as he tried to hold for 2-1 but Agassi passed him to break and then held to love to motor into a 3-1 lead. Philippoussis, who had a 1-3 career record against the Las Vegan before Wednesday8217;s match, held but then spurned a break point 8212; his fifth of the match with all going begging. Agassi8217;s ratio in crucial contrast was two breaks from his first four. Philippoussis held for 4-5 but Agassi served out to love 8212; the double fault a minor irritation.

Defending champion Pete Sampras followed Agassi onto Centre Court to face unseeded fellow American Jan-Michael Gambill while qualifier Vladimir Voltchkov of Belarus was facing Zimbabwe8217;s Byron Black, another non-seed, on Court One. Rafter, who has yet to meet a seeded player, warmed up for Agassi as he raced to his second straight semi-final here.

Story continues below this ad

The Queenslander raced to 4-1 leads in the opening two sets 8212; the first took just 31 minutes 8212; as Popp, playing in only his second Grand Slam event, failed to mask his nervousness. Popp8217;s shoulders slumped as he netted a forehand, registering a 36th unforced error as he fell two sets behind after just 56 minutes.

The two-time US Open champion Rafter, who won the warm-up event at Rosmalen in the Netherlands a fortnight ago, broke for 4-3 and although Popp held his next service game that appeared to be his last hurrah. It wasn8217;t quite as Popp pulled out four stupendous returns, the last a crosscourt back hand, as he broke to love for 5-5 and then held.

But Rafter held for 6-6 and the 27-year-old raced to a 3-0 lead in the tie-break as he recovered his composure after a rocky period. Popp fired into the tramlines and his brave attempt was over. For the German, 10 double faults and 60 unforced errors 8212; compared to four and 24 for his opponent 8212; told their own story. AFP

Curated For You

 

Tags:
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
History HeadlineFamine relief to job scheme: a forgotten history of public works
X