It feels like 2001 again
2001

2009

Andy Roddick (USA/6) defeated Lleyton Hewitt (AUS) 6-3 6-7 7-6 4-6 6-4
Yes, it really feels like 2001 again. Let’s go back in time. September 6, 2001 on Arthur Ashe Stadium in the 1/4 of the US Open, Lleyton Hewitt (20 years old at the time), number 4 in the world defeated the newbie Andy Roddick (just turned 19), number 18 in the world, on his way to his first Grand Slam title and to the number 1 rank later that year. The match ended after five sets (6-7 6-3 6-4 3-6 6-4), as it did today. But with a different outcome and different players. Today, Andy Roddick (26) has been a confirmed top ten player for seven years and is currently 6th in the world whereas Lleyton Hewitt (28) is recovering from hip surgery with a current ranking of 56th. And this time the American won this thriller in the 1/4 of Wimbledon. There’s another difference though: this victory is less likely to lead Roddick to his second Grand Slam title (after US Open 2003) because Roger Federer (n°2) and Andy Murray (N°3) seem a bit too much for Larry Stefanki’s boy. But who knows ? In New York in 2001, Hewitt had to face Pete Sampras (n° 10 and with 13 Grand Slams in his pocket at the time), Marat Safin (n°3 and defending champion) and Yevgeni Kafelnikov (n°7) on his way to his Graal.
Let’s be honest, he deserves it. At the end of the day, he was probably the best player out there. He served amazingly well (43 aces including some on very important points), his forehand was at its best and his backhand and volley seemed better than usual. Hewitt was less brilliant than against Del Potro but he didn’t give up anything, as we knew he would. He started very badly with two double faults in his first service game, which helped his opponent to break him and cost him the first set. He was a break up in the second before almost dropping the set again. At 2-5 in the tiebreak, he pulled himself together to create one of the most epic moments of the match, eventually taking the tiebreak and second set 12-10. At 6-6 in the third set, the Australian seemed to lose his concentration, lost the tiebreak 7-1 and gave up his serve to find himself down 0-2 in the fourth set.
At this moment, A-Rod seemed on his way to a semifinal clash against Briton (and only hope of a whole people) Andy Murray. But Lleyton Hewitt is only beaten when the last ball is gone and there was no way he’d give Roddick an easy victory. He broke twice and took the set 6-4. Fifth sets are often great tennis moments, epic battles. This one was not different. There were break points on both sides but finally Roddick prevailed. A parameter might have been more important than others: serve. Hewitt’s serve was too weak (59% first serve, 9 double faults) for him to be able to secure his service games. He struggled to keep his serve during the whole match whereas Roddick could fire a big serve at any given moment.
If we were to draw conclusions so far in this tournament, we would say that the old generation is far from dead (also thanks to Tommy Haas (31 years old and former number 2 in the world) who upset world number 4 Novak Djokovic) and even on the contrary: Roddick has been improving his game, especially the strokes that were called weak not so long ago and Hewitt is still on his way up to the top 20 and maybe even better. It’s 2001 all over again !