Wimbledon
CNNSI.com
Wimbledon

Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Free e-mail Travel Subscribe SI About Us
  CNNSI.com
  World Sport
Wimbledon
More Tennis News
Results
Player Profiles
Men
Women
Brackets
Men
Women
Wimbledon Channel
Official Store
Almanac
Photo Gallery
• Week One
• Finals

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Video Plus
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore


No sure thing

Ivanisevic's run shows balance of men's game

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Tuesday July 10, 2001 2:08 AM
  Goran Ivanisevic Goran Ivanisevic is the first wild card in the history of Wimbledon to capture the men's championship. AP

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -- The message of Goran Ivanisevic's improbable Wimbledon championship is clear: when it comes to men's tennis, expect surprises.

Pete Sampras lost here for the first time in five years, Andre Agassi squandered a semifinal that he was two points away from winning, and Patrick Rafter did the same in Monday's final.

They were the top three seeded players in the tournament. But in a wacky fortnight, plus one day, it was Ivanisevic, unseeded and unpredictable, who won one of the most thrilling Wimbledon finals ever.

"I can be a little wild on the court," the left-handed Croatian said, "but I'm mentally, actually, very, very well, very good. And I think that's why I won this year."

Ivanisevic completed his climb from wild-card entrant to Wimbledon champ with a 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 2-6, 9-7 victory over Rafter in three hours, one minute.

Even Ivanisevic was shocked at this latest twist in men's tennis.

"I think I'm dreaming," he said. "Somebody is going to wake me up and tell me, 'Man, you didn't win.'"

In a men's tour lacking a dominant player, there have been eight different finalists in the past four Grand Slams. A new pair could emerge at the U.S. Open in September.

One of the most feared servers on the tour, Ivanisevic committed 16 double faults to just four by Rafter on Monday. In the last game, Ivanisevic double-faulted at match point, then lost a second match point after a shaky volley.

So close to becoming a champion, he played like anything but that. Eventually, he had match point for the fourth time and started with a fault.

"I say, 'OK, fourth match point, just put that second serve, doesn't matter where. Maybe he's going to miss,'" Ivanisevic said. "And he did it. I was like, 'Wow, great.' Couldn't believe the ball was going into the net."

Just one more unexpected development in a tournament filled with them.

The reaction of the emotional Ivanisevic, though, wasn't a shock. He fell on his back, rolled on his stomach, then got up with tears in his eyes. He and Rafter hugged at the net, then he climbed into the stands and threw his arms around his father and other supporters.

He didn't strip off his shirt and toss it to the crowd as he had done after winning two earlier matches. But during the last game of those matches Ivanisevic didn't kiss the ball, cross himself or shed tears the way he did Monday.

When the match was over and the title was his for the first time, an unusually lively crowd at Centre Court cheered -- Croatians and Australians honoring their countrymen and all of them applauding a match in which a fierce refusal to lose was one of the strongest weapons for both players.

"He served very well when he had to," said Rafter, who lost to seven-time champion Sampras in last year's final. "This time hurts a little bit more."

Ivanisevic served 27 aces, giving him 213 for the tournament and breaking his own Wimbledon record of 206 set in 1992.

A runner-up for the third time in 1998 but ranked 125th entering this year's tournament, the 29-year-old Ivanisevic said his first Wimbledon championship was the "biggest thing to ever happen to me."

And one of the strangest.

He wasn't expected to go far but ended up as the second unseeded man or woman to win a Wimbledon singles championship. The other was Boris Becker in 1985.

Ivanisevic "hadn't done anything in Grand Slams for the last few years," Rafter said. "Why would anybody give him any hope of coming back and doing what he's done?"

There were other weird sights: a mad rush through the ticket booths for fans to get to their seats before the match started, actor Jack Nicholson in the royal box dressed in a blood red tie, white shirt and dark suit, and a court that stayed dry for the first time in four days.

The men's final was originally scheduled for Sunday. But it was delayed after rain pushed the completion of Ivanisevic's semifinal against Britain's Tim Henman to that day.

That meant that the tournament would be extended a day, and officials met to devise a ticket-selling plan. Instead of the more traditional, well-dressed fans usually seen at Wimbledon, the stands were filled with young Rafter rooters wearing green and yellow wigs, colors associated with Australia, and Ivanisevic partisans, one with the words "Go Goran" written just below her neck.

"It was electric," Rafter said. "It's what we play for."

But he may not be back at Wimbledon. Just 28, he plans to take a break after this year and decide whether to retire.

Ivanisevic faces surgery on his left shoulder after the Tennis Masters tournament in Sydney in November.

He plans to return to Wimbledon next year and won't need a wild-card invitation. He'll be the one playing the first match on Centre Court, a tradition for the defending men's champion.

"I want to experience that," Ivanisevic said. "Whatever I do in my life, wherever I go, I'm going to be always a Wimbledon champion."


 
Related information
Stories
Ivanisevic downs Rafter for first Wimbledon title
Rafter backs away from retirement talk after loss
SI's Jon Wertheim: Ivanisevic rides serve into history
Raucous crowd livens up 'People's Final'
Week at a Glance: Saluting Goran, the fans
CNNSI.com's Wimbledon Coverage
Multimedia
Visit Video Plus for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 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 your cable operator or DirecTV.

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

 

   
CNNSI   Copyright © 2001 CNN/Sports Illustrated. An AOL Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines.