Bouchard sparkles as Murray reigns supreme

LONDON, (Reuters) – Eugenie Bouchard succeeded where Serena Williams failed as she beat Alize Cornet to reach the last eight of Wimbledon on a rain-hit Monday that produced another display of grass mastery by defending men’s champion Andy Murray.

Frenchwoman Cornet caused a sensation on Saturday by removing five-times champion and pre-tournament favourite Williams, but the fresh-faced Bouchard proved to be made of sterner stuff as she edged to a 7-6(5) 7-5 victory.

“That’s cool. I didn’t know that,” the 20-year-old said of becoming the first Canadian to reach a Wimbledon quarter-final. “Another little historic thing for Canada.”

The match was halted after five games to allow the Centre Court roof to slide shut as more rain hit the championships after Saturday’s lengthy disruptions.

“It was an honour to play under you @WimbledonRoof” Bouchard, the new golden girl of tennis, Tweeted later.

Murray began his fourth-round match against giant South African Kevin Anderson under cloudy skies, building up a commanding lead, but after more rain prompted another roof closure he was given his stiffest examination so far.

The third seed even came within a point of conceding his first set of what has been stress-free tournament for the home favourite before sealing an impressive 6-4 6-3 7-6(6) victory to reach the quarter-finals for a seventh consecutive year.

The 27-year-old is on a semi-final collision course with top seed Novak Djokovic, who eased past Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-3 6-4 7-6(5), but must first negotiate his way past in-form Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov, who beat Argentine Leonardo Mayer in straight sets.

“I knew I was going to get tested at some stage,” Murray, who had arrived in the second week having dropped a mere 19 games, told reporters. “Today I was pushed, especially in the middle part of that second set, then obviously later on in the third there were some tight moments.”

 

WINNING STREAK

Dimitrov will pose a threat to Murray’s 17-match winning streak at Wimbledon (including the 2012 Olympics), especially as he has already beaten the Scot this year.

“My job isn’t over yet,” the 23-year-old warned after continuing his best Wimbledon run.

Djokovic’s match against 14th seed Tsonga, a repeat of their 2011 semi-final, had been given top-billing, but the Serb was at his ruthless best in a scintillating display under the roof to set up a last-eight meeting with Croatia’s Marin Cilic.

The second Monday at the All England Club is traditionally a feast of top names, with the last 16 in both men’s and women’s singles being played, but several third-round matches had been held up by rain at the weekend. Swiss Stanislas Wawrinka, one of the victims of soggy Saturday when his match against Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin was postponed, made up for lost time with a rapid 6-3 6-3 6-4 win completed just before a heavy rain shower arrived.

The Australian Open champion wasted little excess energy against the bespectacled Istomin, but he grumbled about the schedule that leaves him facing three matches in as many days.

“They just say what’s going to be the schedule and that’s it,” Wawrinka said of the decision not to play his third-round match when the rain eventually stopped on Saturday.

“They’re not going to change anything. They don’t listen to the player. They just do what they think is good for them.”

Spain’s Feliciano Lopez also belatedly reached the last 16, beating big-serving American John Isner in a four-set match that predictably included three tiebreaks and 86 aces.

Isner’s defeat left the United States without a representative in the last 16 of the men’s or women’s singles for the first time since 1911 after teenager Madison Keys withdrew injured before resumption of her held-over match against Kazakhstan’s Yaroslava Shvedova.

Shvedova will play last year’s runner-up Sabine Lisicki in the fourth round after the German claimed a stop-go 6-4 3-6 6-1 victory against 11th seed Ana Ivanovic.

Japan’s Kei Nishikori, the 10th seed, completed a 3-6 6-3 4-6 7-6(4) 6-4 third-round victory over Simone Bolelli after their match had been suspended at the weekend.

 

GRIT AND POWER

The defeat of Williams blew a gaping hole in the women’s draw and Canada’s Bouchard exploited it with a performance of style, grit and power against 25th seed Cornet. Having reached the semi-finals at both the Australian Open and French Open this year, Bouchard arrived at Wimbledon with the likes of former men’s champion John McEnroe tipping her to go even further on the slick Wimbledon lawns.

She looked like she would be stretched into a third set when she trailed Cornet 5-3 in the second, but she continued her fearless shot-making with abandon to claw back the deficit.

Serving at 5-6, Cornet tried in vain to hold off the Canadian trailblazer, rescuing one point after a nasty tumble, but finally succumbed when she fired a backhand long.

“I’ve proved to myself I can play on the big stage as well. I’ve played on centre courts of most of the slams; big moments, big matches. I’m proud of the way I can handle it,” the supremely confident Bouchard told reporters

She could now get another crack at Maria Sharapova, who beat her in the French Open semis this month, if the Roland Garros champion beats Germany’s Angelique Kerber in a fourth-round match that fell foul of the rain.