This year, they’re getting rid of the Saturday night women’s final, and moving it to Sunday afternoon.
For some reason, the schedule says that the second Sunday’s play (the women’s singles and men’s doubles finals) starts at noon, even though a separate press release says the women’s singles final starts at 4:30 (so CBS can air it after its 1 PM NFL coverage) - is the men’s doubles final held somewhere other than on the main court?
Women’s final is today (Saturday) starting at 14:00 GMT, (19:00 EST) followed by men’s and women’s doubles and they are all on Centre court.
The Women’s final has never been on a Sunday and rain hasn’t been an issue since the centre court roof was built.
Just as an aside, Murray’s match yesterday peaked at 13.24 million viewers (out of a population of 61 million) and 54% share over all channels. No pressure on Sunday, Andy.
Lisicki was overwhelmed by the occasion, which is too bad. Bartoli was prepared and very steady. Nobody expected to make a second Slam final six years after her first one and she made the most of the opportunity. Lisicki has had other big runs at Wimbledon and I hope she can start to translate that success to other events. She really did have an amazing run regardless of this ending: she beat three major champions (Schiavone, Stosur and Serena) and didn’t play a single opponent ranked outside the top 50. On the other hand Bartoli had a historically easy draw and didn’t play any major winners or an opponent seeded higher than herself; Sloane Stephens (17) was the highest-woman she faced. That’s arguably an unfair measurement since the players in the late rounds are the ones who are playing the best no matter what they’re seeded, but Bartoli was the big beneficiary of the craziness of this tournament. This was also the 47th major she entered and the first she won, and I think they said this makes her the “latest” major winner ever.
Meanwhile the Bryans are off to a really bad start, down 1-5 in the first.
That probably came off more negative than I intended. Bartoli is unique and fun, and if you win, it means you deserve it. She played great and when she saw her opportunity in this tournament she stepped up and took it. I think it’s fair to note the context of that achievement but first and foremost she deserves congratulations. The Bryans dropped the first set but came back to win the next three, the title, and the non-consecutive “Golden Slam.” They’re the first Open Era men’s doubles team to have all four major titles at the same time, and in September they’ll be gunning for the 2013 Grand Slam. Amazing stuff.
I’m going to go ahead and pick Murray tomorrow. I think Djokovic is the superior player if they are both at their best, but I just have a feeling Murray will get it done this time.
Well done to the Bryan Brothers making their golden slam.
& Australians must be heartened that 17 year old Ashleigh Barty was (with Casey Dell’aqua) runner up in the womens doubles. A great result for such a young player.
I suspect he won’t you know. There are enough people in the UK who have never taken to Murray and Novak is very much admired for his tennis and his manner on the court.
Plus, the two of them are good friends and I think that’ll rub off on the crowd.
I can’t choose between them but, should be a cracker.
Can some one tell me who is the guy in the players box , with the beard and dressed in Wimbledon colours ? He an older gentleman and sits by the stairs.