Eurosport - Wed, 24 Jun 19:02:00 2009
Former world number one Ana Ivanovic had to save two match points against unheralded Lucie Hradecka to reach the Wimbledon second round.
Fans clambered into precarious positions to catch a glimpse as the drama unfolded on the intimate court four, where the 2008 French Open champion struggled to contain the ambitious Czech's lethal double-handed backhand in a 5-7 6-2 8-6 victory.
The 26-year-old Hradecka, whose left thigh was strapped, had a determined air about her as she made the 13th seed's shots look as flimsy as the wispy layers of the Serb's skirt.
The Czech pumped her fists in celebration as Ivanovic's backhand went long to hand her the first set on her first appearance in the main draw at Wimbledon.
The 21-year-old Serb, a semi-finalist here in 2007, swapped her racket at 2-2 in the second which seemed to do the trick as she immediately broke and did not drop another game in the set.
Ivanovic, who looked to be tossing the ball slightly out of line before serving, broke in the ninth game of the decider.
She was then serving for the match but Hradecka fired another unreachable backhand to save match point.
After breaking, the Czech then held and earned two match points of her own but Ivanovic smashed her way out of trouble.
Two games later, the Serb looked up to the sky in thanks after a lucky net cord set her up with two more match points and she snatched victory when Hradecka's service return went wide.
Ivanovic, who has slipped from top of the rankings to 12th over the past year after some indifferent performances, will face Italian Sara Errani for a place in the third round.
Defending champion Venus Williams launched her bid for a sixth Wimbledon title with a competitive 6-3 6-2 victory over Swiss teenager Stefanie Voegele.
Venus, bidding for her third straight championship here, mixed fine athleticism and choice shot selection on Centre Court to book a place in the second round against Ukraine's Kateryna Bondarenko in an hour and 15 minutes.
Venus cracked 14 winners as she raced through the opening set in just 32 minutes before the Swiss world number 97 found her form and made more of a game in it in the second.
The American finally broke the resistance of Voegele, who cites her foe's sister Serena as her childhood hero, with a break in the seventh game of the second and she served out for a satisfying victory sealed with a forehand winner.
Williams will face Kateryna Bondarenko in the second round after the Ukrainian beat Latvian qualifier Anastasija Sevastova 6-3 7-6(5).
World number one Dinara Safina struggled to find her grass-court legs before edging past Spain's Lourdes Dominguez Lino 7-5 6-3 in the first round.
The world number one is hoping to break her Grand Slam duck after failing to get past round three in six previous visits to the All England Club, and after a testing start showed signs she can go deep into the tournament.
Dominguez Lino, ranked 72, proved difficult to break down and a late break proved crucial as Safina took the opening set after 55 tight minutes on Court One.
Safina toiled again in the second, wasting her first chance to seal the match serving at 5-2 before breaking again to progress to a second-round berth against Paraguay's Rossanna De Los Rios, who beat former quarter-finalist Nicole Vaidisova 6-4 6-7(5) 6-4.
Fifth seed Svetlana Kuznetsova and Amelie Mauresmo, seeded 17th, booked their places in the second round late in the day with wins over Akiko Morigami and Melinda Czink respectively.
Serbia's Jelena Jankovic overcame a medical timeout to get through her first-round match against Germany's Julia Goerges 6-4 7-6(0) at Wimbledon.
Jankovic, the sixth seed who has never passed the fourth round here, stormed through the opening set in 45 minutes in her first meeting with the 20-year-old German.
The Serb had a medical timeout at the end of the first set for treatment to the soles of her feet and it seemed to hit her rhythm as her German opponent raced to a 5-2 lead.
But Jankovic pulled level and raced away to win the tiebreak 7-0 and set up a second-round clash with Iveta Benesova of the Czech Republic, who beat British wildcard Katie O'Brien 6-2 5-7 6-4.
Another Brit, world number 51 Anne Keothavong, also crashed out of the tournament, suffering a 7-5 6-2 defeat at the hands of Patricia Mayr, while wildcard Georgie Stoop battled hard before narrowly falling 6-7(0) 6-4 4-6 to seventh seed Vera Zvonareva in a clash held over from last night.
British wilcard Elena Baltacha battled through to the second round with an impressive 3-6 6-3 6-4 win over Ukraine's Alona Bondarenko and will next face Belgian Kirsten Flipkens, who put out 30th seed Agnes Szavay 7-5 6-4.
Japanese veteran Kimiko Date Krumm, a 38-year-old veteran who last played Wimbledon in 1996, took the first set from Danish ninth seed Caroline Wozniacki but slipped to a 5-7 6-3 6-1 defeat.
The Japanese player, making a comeback this year, reached the semi-finals in 1996 and when she made her debut in 1989, Wozniacki was still a year away from being born.
Date Krumm, 20 years older than the blonde Dane, needed extensive medical treatment on her injured thigh as the marathon first round tie took its toll.
Wozniacki, who won the Wimbledon warm-up at Eastbourne last week, will play Maria Kirilenko, with the Russian easing past Czech Petra Kvitova 6-4 6-4.
Australian Jelena Dokic, who made her career breakthrough at Wimbledon in 1999 when she defeated top seed Martina Hingis, before her professional and private life went into a spiral, also needed medical attention.
The 26-year-old took the first set off German qualifier Tatjana Malek before losing 3-6, 7-5, 6-2.
Dokic complained of feeling dizzy at the end of the second set and had her blood pressure taken at courtside.
Malek goes on to tackle Australian 18th seed, and French Open semi-finalist, Samantha Stosur, who produced an impressive display to down tricky American Bethanie Mattek-Sands 6-4 6-7(6) 6-2.
China's 19th seed Li Na also booked her place in the second round with a 7-6(5) 6-0 win over Kazakhstan's Galina Voskoboeva and will next play Olga Govortsova, who was a 4-6 6-3 6-4 winner over Tatiana Perebiynis.
But seeds Alize Cornet, Anna Chakvetadze and Sybille Bammer were sent packing, being beaten by Vera Dushevina, Sabine Lisicki and Melanie Oudin respectively.
Comment 13 - 32 of 52
Is this a politics forum or a Tennis forum??
Serbia has caused more wars than any country in the region
As for Kosovons I wish they would all @#$% off back home out of the UK and stop sponging, they don't work nor contribute
Comment 36--"60 Countries and more Don't Think so..Sorry"!!
Ana's nerves are well and truly shot. I take no pleasure in saying this, as I used to enjoy watching her play. But I really don't see her reversing the downward spiral she is in.
and for whole serbes ho think this is parlament and we talk politics i have mesage : go @#$% your self this is sports channel only
btw im serb too
kosovo is part of serbia, it always was it always will be
go ana go nole
lol,.ana ana... 1st round and this.... :(
murray wil win a slam BUT NOT wimbledon. not this year.
MURRAY WILL WIN A SLAM . . .
HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEEE bugger HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE
we share the same hopes Chemical Ali.
@opera.aria: she was voted as most hated player? seriously?? that sucks.
Safina's useless in GS finals, but her game's strong in all other situations. Ivanovic, on the other hand, has experienced a general decay and I'd be surprised to see her bounce back. Hope she does tho.
It is no surprise, again with the composure Ana showed in that match, that on the number 1 WTA discussion site tennisforum she was voted Most Hated Player on WTA. When will she grow up? Can't wait to see her lose early again at Wimbledon.
btw, since when did I became scholkutie2k???
what i mean is..she has the makings of staying long in the number one position. heck, safina's mental game is far worse than hers.
Has the makings of a number one? She's been #1, now she's #12. Her career's over, complete mental collapse.
Ana is more than just a pretty face, she definitely has the makings of a number one player, she just needs to be more consistent. She's been in the finals of 3 slams and eventually won RG. She's also been a semifinalist in wimbly. That proves her potential. The face is just a bonus.
since when did ana change her racket from wilson to yonex?...coach then racket, next may be the outfit. what else is next?
oh no soo unlucky for Lucie Hradecka, and for Ivanovic to be helped by the net cord at WImbledon for 2nd year in a row is celestial injustice, she will be crushed against a top player...if only Lucie hadn't made a fool of herself on that easy break point putaway in the 2nd set :O
British female and male tennis players progressing as usual. I wonder what has become of Keothavong. She has been consistent in wta tours but not GS. Balthacha is pulling off surprises. Great for GB. Wimbledon favourite Andy Murray struggled with a world ranked 76.. Let's hope he won't be packing 2nd round Thursday..
Ivanovic didn't deserve to win. She played defensively. It was boring to watch. Serena and Venus will show to everyone a real tennis.
AGNORONT WEMON-BERGAN THROO LEEK THOT ATS NAT AN. WHERS ER FACKUN MONNARS
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