No rain on Federer’s parade

LONDON, (Reuters) – Wimbledon’s usually reliable  weather forecasters got it completely wrong yesterday although  Roger Federer made all the right moves as he breezed into the  second week of the grasscourt championships.

When the All England Club threw its gates open yesterday,  the booming PA system welcomed spectators flocking into the  grounds with the words “there is an increasing risk of heavy  thundery showers as we move through the day”.

The news was greeted with glee by many of the 15,000 Centre  Court ticket holders, who hoped to become the first to see a  competitive match under the multi-million pound roof.

Federer was also keen to test conditions under the new  translucent 1000-tonne concertina structure but had to make do  with playing in glorious sunshine during his 6-3 6-2 6-7 6-1  third round victory over Germany’s Philipp Kohlschreiber.

Despite dropping his first set at this year’s tournament,  the signs looked ominous for anyone harbouring hopes of  preventing the five times former champion from reaching his  seventh successive final in south-west London.

The French Open champion, who is just four wins from a  landmark 15th grand slam title, said it was his “best match of  the tournament so far. I’m excited about the second week.”

Those are not the words Robin Soderling was hoping to hear  and the Swede is now likely to endure a few nightmares as he  gears up for a rematch with the Swiss maestro just three weeks  after their Roland Garros final showdown.

With a lopsided 10-0 losing run against the world number  two, Soderling could use his two days off from Wimbledon to  bargain hunt some cheap flights out of London as his challenge  should end on Monday.

Asked if he could get close to Federer on grass, the Swede   exclaimed: “No!” after beating Nicolas Almagro 7-6 6-4 6-4.

If Federer sees off Soderling, he could run into lanky Ivo  Karlovic in the last eight. The Croat blasted 46 aces to squeeze  past ninth seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 7-6 6-7 7-5 7-6 in the third  round.

Serena Williams also came prepared for a wet day as she  walked out on Court Two wearing her customised white raincoat.

However, the American did not need it as she stormed into  the fourth round with a 6-3 6-4 win over Italy’s Roberta Vinci.

Slender Slovakian Daniela Hantuchova earned a date with the  second-seeded Williams thanks to a 6-4 6-3 win over her best pal  and doubles partner Japan’s Ai Sugiyama.

ANKLE SPRAIN

Fourth seed Elena Dementieva, a semi-finalist last year,  blew away fellow Russian Regina Kulikova 6-1 6-2.

But their compatriot, seventh seed Vera Zvonareva, handed  Frenchwoman Virginie Razzano a walkover after failing to recover  from an ankle sprain.

Other winners on the day included eighth seed Victoria  Azarenka and number 10 Nadia Petrova, who ousted Maria  Sharapova’s conqueror Gisela Dulko 3-6 6-3 6-4.

While those on the outside courts were delighted that heavy  thunder showers did not arrive, fans on Centre Court had hoped  the unpredictable British weather would be true to form.

“It would have been very nice to see it (close). It’s a  wonderful design and a marvellous idea,” said Dianne Isler, who  had travelled from Switzerland to visit Wimbledon.

“It (the roof closing) is one of the reasons I came down  today,” said 22-year-old Nick Reid, who queued for six hours  with his girlfriend to get into the hallowed arena.

“I would have liked to see it shut,” added Reid, as he  clutched a newspaper announcing the death of singer Michael  Jackson on its front page.

Like the rest of the world, Wimbledon was rocked by the  unexpected death of Jackson at the age of 50 on Thursday.

“The things that he did was beyond iconic. Words can’t  express my shock and horror… it’s just terrible, terrible,  terrible thing,” said Williams.

Men’s sixth seed Andy Roddick added on his Twitter page: “Oh  my lord… Michael Jackson died… RIP sad and surreal.  Regardless of what you think of him he was completely  revolutionary and will be missed.”