Wimbledon 1998 Main Page
Other Tennis News
Results
Schedule
Seeded Players
1997 Champions
Wimbledon Singles Champs
American Champs
Multiple Winners
Doubles Winners
Mixed Winners
Wimbledon Records
Wimbledon Flashback
Message Boards
The Fan Zone: Pete Sampras
"You have to respect and appreciate a guy who can both win and show some class for his sport and himself while doing it. here's to hoping Pete keeps winning his way in a sport with way too many want-to-be champions who can't keep their mouth shut."
-- hogsfan
Speak out on the
Tennis Message Boards!

 


Wimbledon Notebook

Novotna dedicates 1st Grand Slam to Mandlikova

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Saturday July 04, 1998 03:16 PM

  Novotna: "Without (Mandlikova) I would never have made this championship." (AP)

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Hana, thanks.

That sums up what 29-year-old Jana Novotna said as she dedicated her Wimbledon title -- her first singles Grand Slam -- to her coach Hana Mandlikova, who won four singles Grand Slams but none at Wimbledon.

"Without her I would never have made this championship," Novotna said of her fellow Czech. "There's no question about it. When we started to work together -- about nine years ago -- she simply made me a better player."

Mandlikova also chided the upstart teens who are grabbing the headline in women's tennis, particularly the American sisters Venus and Serena Williams.

"The young ones will come up," Mandlikova said. "They need a couple of years to develop. They have to grow up into the Grand Slams.

"How can Venus Williams say that she and Serena are going to be No. 1 and win everything. Excuse me, but that's bull. They're going to be great, but at 17 I would never have said something like that."

Serena is 16 and Venus is 18.

Welcomed age spots

In tennis terms, Wimbledon champion Jana Novotna is ancient. At 29 years, 9 months she's the oldest first-time Grand Slam women's singles winner in the Open Era (1968). She surpasses Australian Kerry Melville-Reed, who was 29 years, 4 months when she won the 1976 Australian Open.

The youngest in the Open Era was Martina Hingis (16 years, 4 months) when she claimed the 1997 Australian Open. A year ago at Wimbledon, Hingis became the youngest Wimbledon singles winner of the century.

McCormack's VIP baby

Mark McCormack, who runs the sports management company International Management Group, got a VIP pass for his 6-month-old daughter Mary Elizabeth.

"It was a lovely gesture, now I look forward to her debut as a player," McCormack said. McCormack, 67, listed by Forbes Magazine as one of America's 400 Richest people, is married to Betsy Nagelsen, who is playing women's over-35 doubles this year.

Costly loss for Henman

Britain's Tim Henman missed a chance to collect a $3.3 million bonus from his equipment sponsor when he lost Friday to Pete Sampras in the semifinals at Wimbledon.

If Henman had won the title, he would have cracked the ATP Tour's top 10 for the first time, earning him the bonus from Slazenger.

Henman is ranked 17th and will climb to about 13th next week.

The last player to win the men's singles title at Wimbledon using a Slazenger racket was John Newcombe in 1971.

Venus sighting

Venus Williams lost her mixed doubles semifinal Saturday playing with fellow American Justin Gimelstob. The duo fell 6-4, 7-5 to Mahesh Bhupathi of India and Mirjana Lucic of Croatia.

Sister Serena, teaming with Belarussian Maxim Mirnyi, was to face the Dutch team of Paul Haarhuis and Caroline Vis in a late semifinal Saturday.

Serve and volley

Nine-time Wimbledon singles champion Martina Navratilova -- now 41 -- talking about the two old-timers reaching Saturday's Wimbledon final: "It's fabulous to see the veterans doing it."

Chris Evert, who reached 10 Wimbledon singles finals but won only three: "I've been the runner-up queen of Wimbledon."

Novotna's victory moves her to No. 2 in the WTA Tour ranking, matching her highest ever. Tauziat goes to No. 10, equaling her best.

There have been different winners of all three Grand Slams this year -- Martina Hingis, Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and Novotna. The last time that happened was 1994.

Russian 16-year-old Anna Kournikova, who withdrew from Wimbledon with a thumb injury, will drop out of the WTA top 10 this week, falling to No. 15.

 

Related information
Stories
Novotna-Tauziat Box Score
History awaits at Centre Court: Sampras seeks to continue personal Wimbledon tradition
Sports Illustrated's Inside Tennis with S.L. Price: The service let call may have seen its last Wimbledon. Steffi Graf may have, too
Stats
Wimbledon Results
Multimedia
Click here for the latest audio and video
Message Boards
Celebrate!
Join the Wimbledon fun on the CNN/SI Tennis Message Board!
Click here for more

Search our siteWatch CNN/SI on cable 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call 1-888-53-CNNSI.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



To the top

Copyright © 1999 CNN/SI. A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.