SF Examiner: Pac-12 commissioner Scott just staying competitive in NCAA

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


The way Larry Scott is remolding the Pac-10 — err Pac-12, um, Pac-16 — is no surprise to those here in New York at the U.S. Open. They saw the way he reworked what once was called the Women’s Tennis Association but now goes only by the initials WTA.

Scott was the demon of change when he served for six years as the chairman and CEO of the tour.



Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: The (Too) Long Nights at the Open

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEW YORK – “In a real dark night of the soul, it’s always 3 o’clock in the morning.” That’s from F. Scott Fitzgerald, and it came to mind during a changeover and between yawns as Roger Federer battled Juan Monaco.



New York is the city that never sleeps. Nobody wrote it’s the city where it never rains, because Tuesday the U.S. Open Tennis Championships were washed out and there was no play. Well, there was, for 1 hour, 12 minutes.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: American Revolution at U.S. Open

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEW YORK -- Andy Roddick called it a healthy jealousy. It looks more like an American revolution. The country that couldn't do anything right in tennis has done very little wrong for the last few days. At last, the U.S. Open is no longer closed to U.S. male players.

The sport still belongs to those from across the Atlantic - Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer - until proved differently. But here we are into the second week of the Open, and four of the 16 men remaining are Americans.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Serena Gives a Bravura Performance

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEW YORK — It won't be a sister act for a while. So call it a Serena solo. And it's quite a show. Across the river on Broadway, they'd describe the performance as bravura. On Arthur Ashe Court at the U.S. Open, it was just a good old rout.



The day after Venus Williams announced she was withdrawing from the tournament because of a fatiguing disease called Sjogren's syndrome, Serena in effect announced she was very much a possibility to win another championship.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

RealClearSports: Disease Puts Venus' Career in Jeopardy

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEW YORK — There is always skepticism about the Williams sisters, some of it unjustified, some of it very logical.



The questionable injuries, such as when Venus pulled out four minutes before a scheduled semifinal against Serena at Indian Wells because of tendinitis.

The often expressed belief, especially among other players ...

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

SF Examiner: Sun appears to be setting on Giants' season, Venus Williams’ career

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


It was here in the Big Apple 60 years ago that Chuck Dressen, manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, declared in a statement that some English teachers defended on the grounds a team is a collective noun, “The Giants is dead.”

The New York Giants weren’t — coming back from a 13½-game August deficit to force a playoff with the Dodgers, which resulted in the “Shot Heard ’Round the World,” by Bobby Thomson.



Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 SF Newspaper Company

CBSSports.com: 'Joker' comes up aces against Nadal in breakthrough

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange/CBSSports.com


WIMBLEDON, England -- He was a mimic and a comic, an athlete with a reputation for capturing the routines and characteristics of others. His nickname, "The Joker," was as much reaction to his personality as his given name with the silent "D."

Novak Djokovic had everything to be a champion but staying power and temperament. He could fist-pump with the best of them ...

Read the full story here.

© 2011 CBS Interactive. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Kvitova beats Sharapova for title

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


WIMBLEDON,  England -- It might have been less an upset than a preview.

Women's tennis is changing, former champions aging, and failing, a new cast arriving, though a group little known outside the sport.

That the young Czech lefthander Petra Kvitova is the 2011 Wimbledon champion -- defeating Maria Sharapova, 6-3,  6-4, Saturday on Centre Court -- was a surprise to some, but not all.

Especially not to another lefty who came from what then was Czechoslovakia, is now a naturalized U.S. citizen and won nine Wimbledon singles.

"A new star,'' Martina Navratilova said of  the 21-year-old Kvitova. "It didn't happen overnight, but she's a champion. It's great.''

Depending on one's viewpoint. Sharapova, 24, who for nearly three years has struggled back from 2008 surgery on her rotator cuff, is the sort of personality tennis needs.

She won Wimbledon in 2004, as a 17-year-old, the U.S. Open in '06 -- remember that commercial built around the song "Maria'' from "West  Side Story"? -- and the Australian Open in 2008. She's engaged to the Nets' Sasha Vujacic and although Russian  by birth, she speaks flawless English.

But she didn't have much chance against the 6-foot Kvitova, who ended the match with a service ace.

"She was hitting really powerful, and hitting winners from all over the court,'' said Sharapova, who is 6-2. "She made a defensive shot into an offensive one.

"She just kind of laid on a lot of those shots. I think she was more aggressive than I was, hit deeper and got the advantage in points.''

Kvitova, who was a semifinalist last year, losing to eventual champion Serena Williams, opened  the match by losing her serve, and seemed affected by the pressure of reaching  her first major singles final.

But she broke back immediately, and took control in the sixth game when Sharapova made four straight double faults.

"It's still unbelievable,'' Kvitova said among giggles when asked to describe her feelings. "I don't know. Maybe I accept it.''

She's the third lefthander to win the women's title here after Navratilova and Ann Jones.

"She served quite hard,'' Sharapova said. "The second serve, also, she was going for it. And, yeah, I could have reacted a little bit better. She placed the ball well.''

Sharapova was caught between dismay and hope.

"Besides the fact that I lost,'' Sharapova said, "I think this is a big step for me, being here in the final. You know I feel like I'm proving this year. That gives me a tremendous amount of confidence for the rest of the year.''

Winning certainly didn't hurt the confidence of Kvitova (pronounced Kuh-VIT-uh-vah), who entered the tournament eighth in the WTA rankings, two places down from Sharapova. Kvitova had won three tournaments this year.

"Hopefully not last Grand Slam,'' Kvitova said. "I try play everything. Yeah, my game was improve.''

Caroline  Wozniacki, ranked No. 1, has been the star of the new generation, which includes Victoria  Azarenka and Agnes Radwanska -- all Europeans -- but Kvitova is the only one  of the group to win a major.

"I think she's a much more powerful hitter [than the others],'' Sharapova  said of Kvitova. "She has bigger strokes, and I would say a better serve.''

Navratilova and fellow Czech Jana Novotna (the 1998  winner), who watched from the Royal Box, talked to Kvitova afterward.

"They were so happy,'' Kvitova said. "I cried after I met them.''

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/tennis/kvitova-beats-sharapova-for-title-1.3000678
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): It's Djokovic vs. Nadal for men's title

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

WIMBLEDON,  England -- Twenty-four hours separate Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic from the  top of the men's tennis rankings. The Wimbledon final Sunday separates them from the trophy of the sport's oldest tournament.

Nadal will be ranked No. 1 until Monday, when Djokovic, who has won 47 of the 48 matches he played this year -- four against Nadal -- moves to the top.
That's almost incidental compared with who takes the 145th All England Lawn Championship.

Nadal has been the winner the last two times he played Wimbledon, 2008 and 2010, missing in 2009 because of knee problems. For Djokovic, it's uncharted territory, the reason Nadal is slightly favored.


"It's quite different playing Nadal in a Grand Slam,'' Djokovic, the 24-year-old Serb said Saturday, "because it's best of five. So physically, we  all know that he's superior, and he's the strongest player around, most prepared.


"I need to be physically ready, which I am. The four times I won against him
this year [in finals of regular tournaments] can probably help me in some ways mentally prior to this match.''


Nadal, 25, the lefty Spaniard, has 10 major singles titles, including this
year's French  Open, which he took a sixth time. Nadal also will be appearing in a fifth  Wimbledon final, in modern tennis done only by Bjorn Borg, Roger
Federer and John McEnroe.


Djokovic has won two Grand Slam events, the Australian  Open, this year and in 2008. He lost twice in the final of the U.S. Open at Flushing Meadows, in 2010 to Nadal, in 2007 to Federer.


"His mental position over me is probably a little bit better because he won the last four finals against me,'' Nadal said of Djokovic. "I have to play
aggressive. I have to play with intensity, with rhythm. That's what I'm going to try.''


He had both Friday, defeating fourth-ranked Andy Murray in one  semifinal, and "crushing'' -- the word in one tabloid headline -- Britain's hopes of a  first
men's title in 75 years.



In the other semi, Djokovic defeated 12th-ranked Jo-Wilfried Tsonga,  a
Frenchman with a facial resemblance to Muhammad Ali.

Overall, Nadal is 16-11 against Djokovic, but he has lost their four matches  in
2011, all in finals, at Indian Wells, Miami, Madrid and Rome.

"I have always believed I can win against the best players in the world in  the
biggest tournaments,'' Djokovic said. "For a couple of years, I was losing most of the matches against Nadal and Federer in the major events. Now I feel that I can win against those guys in big events.''


He will find out Sunday if that feeling becomes  reality.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/tennis/it-s-djokovic-vs-nadal-for-men-s-title-1.3000423
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Yahoo! Sports: Czech point: Kvitova looks like new Navratilova

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange


WIMBLEDON, England — Czech, mate. The new generation from the land of the Martinas and Janas has arrived. Prodigiously.

Petra Kvitova found splendor on the grass Saturday, a surprise winner of the Wimbledon women's singles title, 6-3, 6-4 over one-time champion Maria Sharapova. Then again, considering Kvitova's strength, length (she's 6 feet tall) and youth (she's 21), maybe it wasn't a surprise.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 Yahoo! Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Yahoo! Sports: Nadal vs. Djokovic — what a final it should be at Wimbledon

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange


WIMBLEDON, England — This is what sports is all about, the best against the best. In men's tennis these days it's a final offering the player who is No. 1 in the rankings, Rafael Nadal, against Novak Djokovic, the player who will replace him as No. 1 — if not necessarily replace him as Wimbledon champ.

Nadal has taken over the All England Lawn Tennis tournament, The Championships, from Roger Federer, winning the last two times he entered.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 The Sports Xchange. All Rights Reserved.

RealClearSports: Tsonga Ready for His Biggest Moment

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


WIMBLEDON, England -- A door closes, and another opens. Change is the constant in sport, indeed in life. The familiar merges with the unknown, forcing us to consider the future even as we wistfully think about the past.

Tennis has changed. Wimbledon has changed. Roger Federer exits for a second straight year after a quarterfinal, and we wonder once more whether his time has passed.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

Yahoo! Sports: Sharapova’s comeback continues—she's in Wimbledon final

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange


WIMBLEDON, England — Yes, there were doubts for Maria Sharapova. You undergo an operation on your right shoulder, the one with which you serve a tennis ball, the one with which you made your reputation, and the demons fly, taunting and teasing.

The imperfection. The impatience. The disappointment as defeats mount and skeptics question.

"I set myself certain goals," Sharapova said ...

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 The Sports Xchange. All Rights Reserved.

Yahoo! Sports: Federer in denial after his shocking collapse

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange


WIMBLEDON, England — It wasn't as much what happened, Roger Federer losing at Wimbledon, but the way it happened — Roger Federer for the first time in his career defeated after he had taken the first two sets of a match in a Grand Slam tournament.

Unprecedented. Never before in 178 Slams. Or as the delightfully disbelieving young man who stunned Federer, indeed stunned all of tennis, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, would sigh, "Unbelievable."

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 The Sports Xchange. All Rights Reserved.

RealClearSports: The Moment Arrives for Fish

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


WIMBLEDON, England — The opportunity was here at last. All those years and finally, almost when it was time to say goodbye. Mardy Fish was able to tell us hello.

"I've never been past this spot in a grand slam,'' he confirmed, as if anyone needed confirmation. The chance of his tennis lifetime had arrived.

A quarterfinal at Wimbledon, the oldest of tournaments ...

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2011

Yahoo! Sports: Sharapova, now the "old woman" at 24, advances to semis

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange

WIMBLEDON, England — She was an ingenue with a forehand and determination. Maria Sharapova hit the top when she was hitting her teens, and then after an injury she has struggled to return.


She carries a Russian passport but has lived in the United States for years, speaks better English than many Americans and plays her game better than most people anywhere.



Sharapova went under the roof at Wimbledon on Tuesday ...

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 Yahoo! Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Venus, Serena, Wozniacki out at Wimbledon

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


WIMBLEDON, England — They were talking of what could be. But on the warm Monday when Serena and Venus Williams, within two hours of each other, were ousted from Wimbledon, the issue should be of what was.

They had been the prima donnas, in the positive context of the term, of the All England Lawn Tennis Championships. One or the other won the previous four years — Serena in 2010, 2009, Venus in 2008, 2007 — and nine of the last 11.

The domination came to a halt as the second week of the 145th Wimbledon began, Marion Bartoli of France stopping an erratically hitting Serena, 6-3, 7-6 (6), in one fourth-round match and Tsvetana Pironkova defeating Venus, 6-2, 6-3, in another. That was the same score Pironkova, of Bulgaria, beat Venus last year in a quarterfinal.

Were they upsets? Perhaps, although with the Williamses coming off long absences because of health problems, perhaps not. Were they surprises? Absolutely, as was 24th-seeded Dominika Cibulkova's 1-6, 7-6 (5), 7-5 win over the top seed, Caroline Wozniacki, who despite her place on top of the WTA rankings never has won a Grand Slam event.

A minor surprise on the men's side was the 7-6 (5), 6-4, 6-4 triumph by Mardy Fish overTomas Berdych, one of last year's finalists. Fish, unexpectedly, guaranteed the United States would not go without someone in either men's or women's quarterfinals for the first time since 2006 and only the second time since 1911.

Venus, 31, hadn't played for five months because of a strained hip flexor until coming back two weeks ago. Serena was out nearly a year. She severely cut her right foot stepping on glass a week after winning Wimbledon, then was diagnosed with life-threatening pulmonary thrombosis, and finally developed a hematoma that required surgery.

"Considering my condition," said Serena, "I think I really did well. I never came here thinking I would lose. I was able to hang in there, and I can only get better. And that potentially can be really scary, because I can only go up from here, and I can do so much more."

Venus described her play against the 5-10 Pironkova, who has defeated her three times in a row, as "inexplicable." Venus missed overheads, swinging volleys, "shots I never miss."

But Venus reminded that both Williams sisters "hit the ground running," because they didn't want to miss another Grand Slam tournament.

"At least I wasn't making errors trying to keep the ball in," Venus said. "I made errors that normally would go as winners. So those balls will land pretty soon . . . I got ready for this tournament so fast. You wouldn't believe how quick it happened. With more time I can definitely play better.''

Serena, who will be 30 in September, tried to be philosophical. "Even if today I lost," she said, "I was able to kind of hang in there and play tough . . . I would have been sad being at home and watching it on TV, like I'm going to be soon."

The thought of some in tennis is it would have been sad for women's tennis if, with so little preparation, either Serena or Venus won. Could she appreciate that? "Yeah," Serena said sarcastically, "I'm super happy I lost. Go women's tennis."

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/tennis/venus-serena-wozniacki-out-at-wimbledon-1.2988416
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Yahoo! Sports: End of an era? Williams sisters both lose

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange


WIMBLEDON, England — For a decade, it had been their tournament. You almost could have renamed it the All Williams Lawn Court Tennis Championships. Now Wimbledon will belong to someone else, maybe just this year, maybe forever.

Either Venus or Serena Williams had been the women's singles winner the last four years—Venus in 2007 and 2008, Serena in 2009 and 2010—and nine of the last 11 years.

Sisters in command. But no longer.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 The Sports Xchange. All Rights Reserved.

Yahoo! Sports: Fish has found peaceful waters

By Art Spander
The Sports Xchange

WIMBLEDON, England — There was the time Mardy Fish sprained ligaments in his foot … while trying to kick a field goal, which isn't exactly the reason most tennis players are forced to withdraw from the French Open.



That was in 2007, two years after Fish had two operations on his left wrist and two years before Fish, a prodigy who became a problem, had arthroscopic surgery on the left knee.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2011 Yahoo! Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Roddick May Never Realize His Dream

By Art Spander

WIMBLEDON, England – Another Wimbledon has ended for Andy Roddick, much too early, and he concedes that the dream never may be realized.

That his career, arbitrarily in decline, unquestionably nearing an end, will finish without the championship to which he came so close.

Three finals for Roddick, over the decade the best of America’s men, three defeats, all to Roger Federer, the last as recently as two years ago when Andy brought it to a dramatic fifth set, only to lose 16-14.

Time is the enemy in sports. Time and timing.

It wasn’t so much Roddick was in the wrong place, Centre Court at the All England Club, competing for the world’s oldest tennis crown. He was up against the wrong person.

What might have been the Andy Roddick Era, after his 2003 U.S. Open victory, instead was transformed into the Roger Federer Era.

Andy kept trying. But in the rear-view mirror it appears that his ’09 run, when he didn’t lose a set at Wimbledon until the final, may have been his last hurrah.

Friday, Roddick was beaten in third round by a player to whom he never had lost in seven previous matches, the lefthander Feliciano Lopez of Spain.

Roddick’s greatest asset has been his serving, but it was Lopez who had more aces, 28 to 23, in winning, 7-6 (2), 7-6 (2), 6-4, and unlike Roddick advancing to the second week of this 125th Wimbledon.

“I got beat,’’ Roddick said candidly and unemotionally. “He came out. He served about as well as someone has.’’

And so Roddick, who will be 29 on August, went out. Goodbye. The thought he never will be a Wimbledon champion is unavoidable.

“Well, sure,’’ conceded Roddick. “You’re human. I mean, of course it does.’’

He has made millions. He is married to a beautiful woman, the model Brooklyn Decker, who wistfully watched from courtside as the 3-hour, 30-minute match lurched to an unhappy conclusion. But without a Wimbledon, it’s fair to say Roddick never will have it all, at least from a career standpoint.

The only satisfaction for Roddick, 10th in the ATP rankings, 8th in the seeding, was he didn’t give away the match. Feliciano took it, although in a matter of speaking Roddick also took it, on the chin.

“He beat me,’’ said Roddick. “It’s easier to take that way. What do you do? You keep moving forward until you decide to stop. At this point, I’ve not decided to stop, so I’ll keep moving forward.’’

The tiebreakers did him in. They weren’t even close. Lopez took chances, and they worked.

“A couple of times I got to his backhand,’’ Roddick explained, “which is where you want to be in a rally against him. He hit some good shots.’’

It’s like a basketball coach saying, "let them shoot from the outside," and then the shots start falling. Good idea. Bad idea.

“He went big on second serves in those tiebreakers and didn’t double (fault) once,’’ said Roddick, almost fatalistic in his acceptance. “I mean, he played pretty high-risk. Normally you get a look at love-15. Today he didn’t dig himself any holes. He was able to cover up some things that are normally his weaknesses.

“I feel like he played as complete a match as he’s played against me.’’

For the first time he played a successful match.  They had met across the years, starting in 2003, and across the globe, from Indian Wells to Dubai to Paris and, only two weeks ago at Queens here in London, the Wimbledon warmup. Roddick had lost a few sets but never a match.

“I beat a couple of great players in Wimbledon the last 10 years,” said Lopez, who will be 30 in a month, “but to beat Andy in this court is very special. I would say maybe the best.

“When you play Andy Roddick here, you never expect to win two straight sets against him. So it’s definitely a great win.’’

And for Roddick a difficult defeat.

“I felt good coming in,’’ he said. “Normally, when you don’t play well at a (Grand) Slam, you don’t feel on top of things. I felt on top of things since I got here. I’ve played worse and gotten further. So, it’s disappointing in that sense.’’

Roddick became a favorite of Wimbledon fans after one of those finals losses to Federer, 2004 or 2005, when in a post-match interview on court he told the crowd, “I threw the kitchen sink at him, but he went to the bathroom and got the tub.’’

When he walked off Centre Court on Friday, he left another reminder, one of the tools of his trade.

“I had a racquet in my hand,’’ Roddick mused, “I figured it was just going to waste like a doorstop or something under the bottom of my foot. I figured a 7-year-old boy would probably get more use out of it than my grass court bottoms.’’