Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Epic halted at 59-59 in fifth set

Wimbledon Championships
Venue: All England Club, London Date: 21 June - 4 July
Coverage:
Live on BBC One and Two, HD, Red Button, BBC Sport website (UK only), Radio 5 live, 5 live sports extra; live text commentary online and on mobile phones; watch again on BBC iPlayer Full details of BBC coverage

Nicolas Mahut (left) and John Isher
The duo will return to complete their match on Thursday

John Isner and Nicolas Mahut tore up the record books as their epic first-round contest at Wimbledon became the longest in tennis history.

The match was locked at 59-59 in the final set after 10 hours of play when it was suspended because of bad light.

The decision meant that, incredibly, the game would go into a third day, having been suspended at two sets all on Tuesday for the same reason.

The six-hour final set is already longer than any match ever played.

Isner (98) and Mahut (95) have also smashed the record for the most aces - Ivo Karlovic's previous best of 51 against Daniele Bracciali in 2005 looks positively tame by comparison.

The previous longest match was at the French Open in 2004, when Fabrice Santoro beat Arnaud Clement after six hours and 35 minutes.

The longest at Wimbledon was the famous battle between Pancho Gonzales and Charlie Pasarell in 1969, which took five hours 12 minutes and finished 22-24 1-6 16-14 6-3 11-9 to Gonzales.

There was no indication of the drama that was about to unfold when Isner and Mahut resumed on Tuesday afternoon locked at two sets all.

But fans quickly crammed into court 18 - capacity 782 - as word spread about the historic contest and every possible vantage point outside was taken.

Meanwhile, over on Centre Court, Venus Williams took just 25 minutes to wrap up the first set against Ekaterina Makarova.

Mahut from France had his first break points of the entire set at 50-50, but Isner, 25, dug deep into his reserves to save both.

The 6ft 9in American had two match points himself at 33-32 and another at 59-58, all of which Mahut managed to fend off.

Prior to that the set's only break point came with Isner, the number 23 seed, leading 10-9 and a point from victory.

606: DEBATE

Towards the end the umpire's voice was going, rallies were collectors' items and the scoreboard was broken because it couldn't cope with the alien numbers.

Just after 2110 BST, Mahut complained that he was having difficulty seeing the ball and the decision was taken to suspend play.

Initially the crowd, desperate to see the match through to its conclusion, booed and chanted "We want more!" but as the players left they were given a huge standing ovation - a fitting tribute to the two gladiators.

Isner was out on his feet, although he would have been buoyed with the news from the referee's office that his doubles match with Sam Querrey, scheduled to take place on Court 10 had been cancelled.

While Isner was almost delirious, Mahut, 28, looked remarkably fresh, perhaps boosted by the knowledge he had won a match with Britain's Alex Bogdanovic in qualifying 24-22 in the final set.

The winner will play Thiemo De Bakker of the Netherlands in the next round, who was involved in another marathon battle with Santiago Giraldo, before coming through 16-14 in the final set - although that match lasted a mere four hours and six minutes.

The fourth round match with De Bakker is also scheduled to be held on Court 18 on Thursday afternoon, although it may well now be postponed.

In a week of records, Novak Djokovic's first-round match against Olivier Rochus was the latest-ever finish at Wimbledon, while Taylor Dent's 148mph serve against Djokovic in round two was the fastest recorded at the All England club.

After his match against Dent had finished, Djokovic was asked about the Isner-Mahut match and he said all the players were watching it in the locker rooms.

He added: "I'm amazed they could both hold their serve that comfortably all day. It's unbelievable. Maybe they should have agreed to play a tie-break at 50-all!"

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