James ranks a full 90 places below John Isner, who is a one-time top ten player so I for one didn't expect to be late home but how wrong I was. It was a gargantuan battle from the start. The players were never more than a point or two apart in the entire five hours of play.
Ward stayed with Isner through the first set to force a tie-break that he narrowly lost and again lost the second set by a slender margin. He got a second wind in the third set and came out a winner at 6-3. The fourth set ended in a second tie-break but this time Ward won it with points to spare.
Then came the marathon fifth. Thankfully it didn't quite reach the extremes of Isner's match against Nicolas Mahut at Wimbledon a couple of years ago otherwise I'd still be there but it ran on until Isner finally fell to Ward 13-15.
The crowd was delighted and not a little astonished. The pleasure of the victory mitigated to some degree my trudge through the rain all the way to Queen St station where I caught the ten o'clock home.
I got home a few hours earlier today having witnessed another excellent five set match in which the world's best doubles players, the Bryan brothers were mightily discomfited and very nearly dislodged from their perch by Jamie Murray and Dominic Inglot who took them to 9-7 in the final set.
GB need to win only one match out of two tomorrow to progress to the quarter finals and I'll be there rooting for them.
Waiting for play to start |
The Toss |
Serried Snappers |
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