July 6, 2012
London: Veteran Leander Paes was the lone Indian left in fray at the Wimbledon as he reached the mixed doubles quarterfinals with Elena Vesnina after Rohan Bopanna and Jie Zheng crashed to a straight-set defeat in the last-eight stage of the same event.
July 6, 2012
London: Veteran Leander Paes was the lone Indian left in fray at the Wimbledon as he reached the mixed doubles quarterfinals with Elena Vesnina after Rohan Bopanna and Jie Zheng crashed to a straight-set defeat in the last-eight stage of the same event.
Fourth seeds Paes and Russia's Vesnina staved off a stiff challenge from the Belarusian combination of Max Mirnyi and Victoria Azarenka to win 7-6 (3) 6-3 and enter the quarterfinals.
They will now be up against the Australian-Russian pair of Paul Hanley and Alla Kudryavtseva in the quarterfinals.
However, it was curtains for 10th seeds Bopanna and Zheng, who lost 2-6 5-7 to second-seeded Americans Mike Bryan and Lisa Raymond in just 55 minutes.
Paes, who was at the centre of a massive players' revolt that shook Indian tennis just before the Wimbledon, has a good shot at getting a confidence-boosting title on grass-court just ahead of the Olympics later this month.
Rejected by his first-choice Indian men's doubles partners for the Olympics, the experienced warhorse would be seeking to prove a point as his mixed doubles partner for the big event, Sania Mirza, too had taken pot shots at him before agreeing to partner him.
The players, who had criticised him so heavily, have all crashed out of their respective events in the Wimbledon, leaving Paes as the lone Indian flag bearer at the season's third Grand Slam.
Paes and Vesnina were pushed hard in the match on Thursday but the duo drew from their experience to emerge triumphant.
The first set went on serve and neither of the two teams could earn a break but with a fantastic first serve, the fourth seeds had the slight upper hand which proved decisive in the tie-breaker.
The fact that Paes and Vesnina did not commit a single unforced error also tilted the scale in their favor after an opening battle of 49 minutes.
The Indo-Russian combine was clearly the better of the two pairs in the second set as it converted two break points while saving seven to seal the issue after 43 minutes.
In contrast, Bopanna and Zheng were thoroughly outplayed by their more experienced and higher-ranked rivals.
The 10th seeds were broken thrice in the opening set itself which Bryan and Raymond won in just 21 minutes.
In the second set, which lasted a little over half an hour, break points again proved decisive as Bryan and Raymond converted both the chances they earned to emerge triumphant.