[新聞] 3/26 ESPN版(第一篇有賽事報導影片)

看板Tennis (網球)作者 (!!)時間14年前 (2012/03/27 15:19), 編輯推噓0(000)
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http://espn.go.com/tennis/story/_/id/7741443/andy-roddick-upsets-roger-federer -key-biscayne KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -- Andy Roddick beat Roger Federer for only the third time in their 24 meetings Monday, dominating with his serve to win 7-6 (4), 1-6, 6-4 in the third round at the Sony Ericsson Open. Roddick broke serve only once but held every service game in the first and last sets. After falling behind 15-30 in the final game, he closed out the victory with an ace and two service winners, all at more than 130 mph. On paper, it looked like a mismatch between former No. 1s, each a two-time champion in the event. The third-ranked Federer began the night 40-2 since the U.S. Open, while Roddick was ranked 34th, the lowest he has been since 2001. Roddick ended Federer's streak of 77 consecutive wins against players outside the top 20. No. 1 Novak Djokovic advanced to the fourth round by beating No. 27-seeded Viktor Troicki 6-3, 6-4. Djokovic is bidding for his third Key Biscayne title and second in a row. No. 8-seeded Mardy Fish assured he'll remain the top-ranked American man by beating No. 28 Kevin Anderson 6-4, 6-3. Fish has yet to play in the stadium this tournament and instead faced Anderson at 11 a.m. on the grandstand court, but he said that was fine because prefers an early start. "I like to know my fate," Fish said. "I like playing in the heat. And I think everyone likes to know exactly when they play." Federer lost only seven points on his serve in the opening set, but when he failed to put away an overhead trailing 4-3 in the tiebreaker, the match swung Roddick's way. Federer squandered another chance with a 1-0 lead in the third set, failing to convert four break points in the next game. After Roddick escaped for 1-all, he earned his lone break in the next game, his grunts filling the stadium as he cracked four forehand winners. Roddick served out the final four games without facing a break point. When he let loose a 134-mph serve to win the final point, he raised his arms and waved his racket at the heavens. Roddick had cause to give thanks: He had lost 52 of 64 sets against Federer entering the match. Federer had won six meetings in a row since Roddick beat him in the Key Biscayne quarterfinals in 2008. Information from The Associated Press was used in this report. 另外這篇算作家評論 http://espn.go.com/tennis/story/_/id/7740955/tennis-andy-roddick-overcomes -history-roger-federer-sony-ericsson-open Reality check: A-Rod can bring it Updated: March 27, 2012, 2:06 AM ET KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -- Earlier this month, after he beat Roger Federer in a kicks-and-giggles exhibition at Madison Square Garden, Andy Roddick's sardonic wit -- it is rarely contained -- emerged in the postmatch news conference. "Obviously I'm in Roger's head," he said. "He has no idea how to play me." Roddick, for the record, had lost 21 of 23 official matches to Federer, including one of the best Wimbledon finals in history; the score in the fifth set in 2009 was 16-14. It was a wrenching loss for Roddick, perhaps as impressive as his lone major victory at the 2003 U.S. Open. Maybe more. So how do you convince yourself to battle and persevere when the final result already seems to be written? When does optimism give way to reality. When does it congeal into denial? In professional sports, a selective memory is an invaluable tool. Like the streaky power hitter, Roddick prefers to dwell on the occasional home run -- not the handfuls of swinging strikeouts. No, he has clung to those two victories like a life vest a mile offshore in the Atlantic Ocean. The funny thing? One of those wins came here at the Sony Ericsson Open in 2008. On Monday night, when Roddick won a first-set tiebreaker against Federer, the buzz began to build on the stadium court and Roddick looked like a believer. When he broke Federer early in the third set, it seemed possible. But -- and Roddick always seems to be the butt of Federer's jokes -- you were waiting for that "but." It never came. When Roddick won, after an ace and two thunderous and unreturnable serves, he looked more stunned than Federer. He glanced skyward and shook his head, contemplating the depth of his 7-6 (4), 1-6, 6-4 victory. Admit it, you probably never thought you'd see it. Roddick, as the result proves, was one of the very few who imagined it could be done. Afterward, he was eerily calm, almost subdued. "You still have to come back tomorrow," Roddick said. "As much as you want to take it in -- because, obviously, these wins are few and far between -- you have to do what you can to get ready. "In 2008, I beat Roger [in Miami] and lost to [Nikolay] Davydenko in the next round. There's no script in sports, which is why it's the best entertainment. You don't know what's going to happen. Nights like tonight are why you play." Tuesday, Roddick meets Juan Monaco in a fourth-round match. After winning 77 consecutive matches against players ranked outside the top 20, Federer fell to the No. 34-ranked Roddick. And this wasn't just Federer, 16-time Grand Slam single champion. This was the best player in the world going back the past six months. Federer had won 40 of 42 matches since last year's U.S. Open, but in front of a lively full house there were times when he looked tentative. The usually fabulous forehand was a tad loose and, ultimately, let him down. "It was more mental than physical thing," Federer said. "I tried to push myself and gave myself a fighting chance, and then when things were under control, sort of, he fought off those break-point chances -- and had the perfect game after that." After he won his second-round match here, Roddick was asked if he knew who was next. "I do, yeah," he said. "Thanks. Nice to ask, though. He's pretty good, yeah. "We've played a ton; there's no secrets. I know I have to execute really, really well. There's a small window of percentages where you have to be right. What he does is he shrinks that window with his strengths." Roddick played the percentages almost perfectly in the first set, staying out of trouble on his serve and forcing a tiebreaker. It was Federer who failed in the tiebreaker, most notably when he fluffed an overhead and Roddick banged it past him into the open court for a pivotal 5-3 lead. Federer, thoroughly unimpressed, won six of the second set's seven games, setting up the single all-or-nothing frame. Roddick was down love-40 in the second game and -- as Federer wasted two replay challenges -- somehow managed to escape. But when he threw Federer into a love-40 hole, Roddick didn't let him out. He hooked a running forehand past Federer for his first service break and strode to his changeover chair pumping his racket with the same hyperactive pulse that has been driving him for the dozen years he's been a professional. Nearly a decade ago, Roddick's serve was once the most lethal weapon in the sport. Over time, his game has become more complete but, at the same time, his serve has been overtaken by those of more than a dozen peers. On this night, though, he crushed the last three offerings and Federer was unable to answer. Roddick, who has been struggling with injuries this year, said he finally feels healthy. "It would be a little presumptuous to go from people talking about me retiring to winning a Masters event," Roddick said. "I probably wasn't as bad as I looked two weeks ago." Earlier, Roddick had joked, "I played pretty good in that Wimbledon match. I would have won that one, too, if it was two out of three sets." Federer was, as always, gracious. He told Roddick that, on this night, he deserved to win. "He's still very good," Federer said afterward. "I hope you guys give him more credit than he's getting at the moment. Enjoy him while you have him." -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 119.14.54.78
文章代碼(AID): #1FSMe7ZG (Tennis)
文章代碼(AID): #1FSMe7ZG (Tennis)