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Friday, February 10, 2006

Blake Saves First Day for U.S. Davis Cup team



Blake Saves First Day for U.S. Davis Cup team ~~~
©Colette Lewis 2006
La Jolla--

The pressure was squarely on James Blake's shoulders. After an ill Andy Roddick failed to finish off Andre Pavel of Romania in straight sets in Friday's first match, holding match point in the third set tiebreak but falling 6-4 in the fifth, a huge upset was looming. But Blake never gave opponent Victor Hanescu a glimmer of hope, and in the fading light of a cool and sun-splashed day, the American restored his team's confidence with a 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-2 victory.

An appealing aspect of Davis Cup is the opportunity it provides for one player to help another, an aspect of sport that is often wanting in the individualism of tennis. It's doubtful that Andy Roddick would have continued to play in a standard ATP tournament in, as he phrased it, "you pick the city", when a stomach flu rendered him virtually inert in the match's final three sets. Vomiting during changeovers, he often didn't move for a ball, and he frequently seemed oblivious to his surroundings. But he refused to quit, knowing how much his teammates and his country relied on him. Down 5-1 in the fifth, he clawed his way back to 5-4, but on Pavel's third match point, Roddick finally succumbed, despite the spirited urging of the 4,000 plus spectators, who had devoted more than three and a half hours of mental and physical energy to the contest.

Less than fifteen minutes later Blake was on the court, and though there were noticeably fewer fans and those remaining obviously disappointed and deflated, it didn't hamper Blake. Using his forehand and speed, he denied Hanescu any rhythm and the six-foot six-inch Romanian couldn't find a shot to go to when he needed it.

It was more than two hours after the match's completion that Roddick spoke with the press, and he seemed to have recovered sufficiently to both analyze the match and express his determination to play on Sunday. But now, the attention turns to the doubles, as on Saturday the world's top-ranked doubles team, Bob and Mike Bryan, try to erase the memory of their defeat at the hands of Croatia's Mario Ancic and Ivan Ljubicic in last year's first round tie in Carson, a loss that the U.S. couldn't overcome in singles on Sunday.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Did Roddick lose the match because he was ill, or did he become ill because he saw that maybe he couldn't close out the match in three? His style of play is not built for five setters, instead built on an overwhelming early onslaught of forehands and serves, during which the oponent has no time to muster a response. Once the opponent buys some time, however, Roddick would have used up most of his energy reserves and would not be expecting to use Plan B....that is if he had brought one.He is young and strong enough to win many more matches that way, but he will not win Slams without Plan B. And ,overwhelming force is not the same as endurance, where you can maintain the same level three hours in a match. It looks like his close buddies and coaches need to come clean with him.