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<title>Wimbledon</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/tags/Wimbledon</link>
<description>New posts about Wimbledon</description>
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<title>Love Means Nothing to a Tennis Player</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Tennis/Love-Means-Nothing-to-a-Tennis-Player.177021</link>
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<![CDATA[<p>It's a game that can be played at any age or ranking starting from three years old all the way up to ninety years old.  It's hard to believe but it's true, ninety year old men and women play tennis at tennis centers all over the world every day.</p>
<p>The premise of the game is one thing; the strategy of playing is another.  When you first start playing you should concentrate on learning the rules, how to hold the racket, and how to hit and serve the ball.  I'll start with the &amp;ldquo;singles&amp;rdquo; game.  Singles play is between two people, we'll call them player one and player two.</p>
<p>To start the game the players decide on who will serve first.  To do this they flip a coin or flip a racket.  Flipping a racket means taking a racket and laying the wide end on the ground and twirling the handle similar to a spinning top.  Let it fall while calling the letter on the tip of the racket.  For instance, if you have a prince racket you'd call a &amp;ldquo;P&amp;rdquo; or a &amp;ldquo;d&amp;rdquo; or if you have a Wilson racket you'd call a &amp;ldquo;W&amp;rdquo; or an &amp;ldquo;M&amp;rdquo;.  The player who calls the right letter gets to choose whether they get to serve or receive in the first game.  The player who looses the call gets to choose which side they want to play on first.  This can be your first strategic move as one side may face the sun, putting your opponent at an early disadvantage.</p>
<p><img src="http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/sportales/2008/07/21/228377_0.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>A tennis court is made up of a singles court (two small boxes and one large box - on each side of the net) and a doubles court (the singles court plus two lanes on either side of the singles court).  The line farthest from the net is called the base line. The start of the game begins when player one serves from the base line.</p>
<p>The first serve must be served from the right side (deuce side) on the outside of the base line (off of the court) and the ball must land in the small box on the left side of the opposing side of the net.  Don't worry, you get two tries.  If you miss on the second try you have lost a point.  The second serve moves player one to the opposite or left side of the baseline (the ad side).  The serve must now be served into the small box on the right side of the opposing side of the net.  Play goes on like so, alternating sides until one player wins the game.</p>
<p>Keeping up with your score takes some practice because points are recorded as Love, which equals zero, Five, which equals one, Fifteen, which equals two, Thirty, which equals three, Forty, which equals four, Deuce, which equals tie, Ad (Advantage) In, which means the person who is serving has the advantage and one more point wins the game in her favor, or Ad (Advantage) Out, which means the opposing player has the advantage and one more point wins the game in his favor.  The tricky part comes when player one has an Ad In but looses the next point.  When this happens the score reverts back to Deuce.  A game can jump from Ad In to Deuce or Ad Out to Deuce many, many times.</p>
<p>So, if player one wins the first point the score is fifteen to love.  If player two wins the next point the score is fifteen to fifteen.  If player one wins the next point the score is thirty to fifteen.  If player one wins the next point the score is forty to fifteen.  If player two wins the next point the score is forty to thirty.  If player two wins the next point the score is deuce.  If player two wins the next point the score is ad out.  If player one wins the next point the score goes back to deuce.  If player one wins the next point the score is ad in.  If player one wins the next point she wins the game.</p>
<p>Deuce is only possible when both players reach forty to forty.  When the score is thirty to thirty or fifteen to fifteen it is not considered deuce.</p>
<p>Players change sides whenever the score equals an odd number.  After the first game, players change sides because the number one is an odd number.  Player two serves as player one did, from the deuce side into the small box, opposing side left.</p>
<p>Play continues until one player has won six games by at least a two game margin.  If player one wins six games and player two has only won four games, player one wins the set but if player one has won six games and player two has won five, play continues.  If player one is successful and wins with a score of seven to five the game is over in player one's favor.  If player two successfully wins and the score reaches six to six a tie breaker must be played.</p>
<p>To play a tie breaker, the opposing player serves from his deuce side.  He only gets one serve.  In a tie breaker the points are counted as one, two, three, etc.  The first player to reach seven is the winner.  Players don't change sides until the total points equal six.  Player two serves starting from the ad side for two serves and the play continues like so until one player reaches seven points.</p>
<p>Games are also counted as one, two, three, etc.  The first player to reach six games, with a two game margin, has won the set.  The match is won when two sets out of three (for women) and three sets out of five (for men) have been won.</p>
<p>This is just to get you started.  There's so much more to tennis.  My only caution, once you start it's hard to stop.  Questions, corrections, or comments?  Let us know.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FLove-Means-Nothing-to-a-Tennis-Player.177021"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FLove-Means-Nothing-to-a-Tennis-Player.177021" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2008 06:59:40 PST</pubDate></item>
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<title>Federer and Nadal: The Story of Two Lions</title>
<link>http://www.sportales.com/Tennis/Federer-and-Nadal-The-Story-of-Two-Lions.162487</link>
<description>
<![CDATA[<p>Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, here is the story of this legends and lions of tennis. Every time they play together a great match is held no matter the surface, country or climate. Here is the story of these two lions.</p>
<h3>Rafael Nadal</h3>
<p>The born in Manacor, Mallorca, a 3 of June of 1986 is considered by the Spanish sports newspaper, Marca, the best Spanish sportsman ever. The left-handed player won his first championship at the age of 8 back home in the Baleares islands. Rafa has won 29 titles ever since he turned pro in 2002, where it stands out the 4 time in arrow Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the ATP Master Series in Monte Carlo, Barcelona, Hamburg, Roma, Indian Wells, Montreal and Madrid. Sponsored by Nike and Babolat, Rafa has won more than 19 million dollars in prizes. Nadal has also beaten tons of records, for example, he is the youngest man ever to win the Davis Cup, first player to win Roland Garros and Wimbledon since Boris Becker, he is the second youngest player to win a Master Series, Rafa is the youngest player to win Monte Carlo since Mats Wilander in 1983 and he is the youngest Spanish player to get in the top ten of the ATP singles chart. Rafael is known for giving 110% on any match, no matter his opponent, and his game is based more in the strength of his shots rather than in the techniques of them.</p>
<h3>Roger Federer</h3>
<p>Born in Basel, Switzerland, an 8 of August of 1981, Roger Federer is considered by colleagues, journalists and former players the best tennis player ever. Federer has won more than 41 million dollars in prizes, ever since he turned pro in 1998. Sponsored by Nike and Wilson, Roger has achieved 7 doubles titles and 55 singles titles, which stands out winning 5 times in a row Wimbledon, the US Open, the Australian Open, the Tennis Masters Cup and the ATP Master Series in Canada, Indian Wells, Madrid, Hamburg, Miami and Cincinnati. Roger is the number 1 player in the ATP charts since the 2 of February of 2004, and since then, no one was able to move him from that position. Roger Federer is known for being a great player with great techniques on which he has the spectacular ability of making the transition from defence to attack in only one shot, so even when this player is cornered, he is able to make a remarkable winning shot.</p>
<p>Together they have played the many spectacular and weird matches ever seen in tennis. An example of this is the 2008 Wimbledon Final, which was the first time Nadal won Wimbledon, on a final that was so intense that tired everyone just by watching it. This final won by Nadal 6-4, 6-4, 6-7, 6-7. 9-7, was the longest final ever played in the lawn of the All England Club lasting a total time of 4 hs 48 min. They also played a unique match called the Battle of the Surfaces, on which half of the court was made out of clay, since it is Nadals strongest surface, and the other half of the court was made out of grass, since it is Federers strongest surface. This peculiar battle was won by Nadal, but the score was only anecdotic. They have played together 18 times, 12 won by Nadal and 6 by Federer, 14 of them were in the final of the championship, and from those 14 finals, Nadal won in 10 times, meanwhile the other 4, Federer won them. Another curious fact is that in 10 of the last 11 matches between them, the player that won the first set was the player that won the match.</p>
<p>Here we may be talking of the best players that ever played tennis. These two are feared by any other player of the tour and playing against them is like receiving a death sentence. Every time they play a great match is held, because they only want one thing, to be the best.</p><a href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FFederer-and-Nadal-The-Story-of-Two-Lions.162487"><img src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?x=&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sportales.com%2FTennis%2FFederer-and-Nadal-The-Story-of-Two-Lions.162487" border="0"/></a>]]></description>
<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 07:58:13 PST</pubDate></item>
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