LONDON, June 30 (Xinhua) -- Britain's Andy Murray survived some dicey moments before beating Swiss Stanislas Wawrinka 2-6, 6-3, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 for a place in the quarter-finals in Wimbledon men's singles on Monday.
 |
|
Andy Murray of Britain celebrates scoring during the men's singles fourth round match against Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland at the 2009 Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Britain, on June 29 2009. Andy Murray won 3-2. (Xinhua/Wang Lili) Photo Gallery>>> |
In a match played with the Centre Court roof closed
due to fears of thunderstorm interruptions, Wawrinka got off to a flier by
surging to a 4-0 lead before sealing the opener in 34 minutes.
Third seed Murray levelled the match before a key
break in game seven helped him to the third set and appeared to hand him the
momentum before Wawrinka again refused to lie down and took it to a decider.
Murray broke in game eight of the fifth set and then
held serve in front of an ecstatic crowd and now faces Spanish wildcard Juan
Carlos Ferrero for a place in the semifinals.
"I was surprised we started under the roof...it was
dry outside," Murray said when asked about playing indoors. "It was very heavy
and very humid and I was sweating a lot right from the start. I felt like I had
been in a bath.
"It kind of slowed it down a lot, and I struggled to
serve because it wasn't coming off the strings," he added.
Swiss master Roger Federer began the Centre Court
programme with temperatures soaring to 31 degrees Celsius but retained his cool
to beat Sweden's Robin Soderling, the man he overcome to claim an emotional
French Open title this month.
Federer, who has his eyes on a record 15th grand
slam, may need body armour in the quarterfinals when he meets Croatian ace
machine Ivo Karlovic who blew away Fernando Verdasco in four sets to reach his
first grand slam quarterfinal.
Other quarterfinals will pit Lleyton Hewitt of
Australia against sixth seed Andy Roddick from United States and German Tommy
Haas versus Serb Novak Djokovic.
Women's play continued with Williams sisters'show.
Second seed Serena, beaten in last year's final by Venus, thrashed Slovakia's
Daniela Hantuchova 6-3, 6-1 while Venus was required to play just eight games to
get past sobbing Serb Ana Ivanovic, who quit with a thigh injury after little
more than half an hour.
There is a sense of inevitability about another
Williams family showdown on Saturday. They simply look unstoppable.
"I'm a control freak," added Venus, who now has
Agnieszka Radwanska in her sights after the Pole ended the run of 17-year-old
American Melanie Oudin 6-4, 7-5. "I love controlling. That's how I was taught to
play."
"I don't want to go home. I feel I'm just getting
more serious," added Serena, who belted 28 winners on her way to a quarterfinal
against Belarussian Victoria Azarenka.
World number one Dinara Safina reached the Wimbledon
quarterfinals for the first time where she will play German Sabine Lisicki,
entering the record books in the process by becoming the first player to win a
match under the Centre Court roof.