Wimbledon Outlook
This is a year when predictions for the Wimbledon
championships are particularly hard to make.
On the men’s side, Andy Murray’s play has been spotty all
year, and his first round loss at the Aegon championships to a qualifier can
hardly allay concerns about his chances.
He’s had great success at Wimbledon and the crowd will be behind him,
but performance right now is all that counts in sports. Similarly, Novak Djokovic has been very
inconsistent for several months. Roger
Federer started the grass season a little roughly after a 10-week layoff, but
won his 9th Halle tournament very impressively with a win over Sasha
Zverev. Federer has been the best in the
world off of clay this year, but he will turn 36 shortly. Can a man that age best a field of young guns
and veteran greats in seven 5-set matches?
We’ll have to see. Nadal’s play
on clay this year has been awesome, and he has won Wimbledon before. Despite his claims of difficulty on grass, I
believe he is one of the real favorites.
Long shots for this tournament include Milos Raonic, who has
made the final in the past, but who has not elevated his play to his previously
best level since coming back from injury.
Grigor Dimitrov has also had a great year and has a good game for grass. Dominic Thiem is the only guy to handle Nadal
on clay this year, beating Nadal in the Italian Open final, but clay is not
grass. Sasha Zverev’s consistently high
performance (he made the final two years in a row in Halle) bode very well for
him in the long term, though he is not likely to take the Wimbledon title this
year. Nobody wants to play him, that’s
for sure. The Australians: Nick Kyrgios,
Thanasi Kokkinakis and Bernie Tomic, might all be categorized as dangerous
floaters right now.
My pick: Nadal
The women’s side is also wide open. The most consistent players this year have
been Simona Halep and Elina Svitolina, neither of whom has ever won a
major. Serena Williams and Maria
Sharapova will not be playing. Victoria
Azarenka will be back but has had a very long layoff. Kerber and Muguruza have been
inconsistent. Former finalist Bouchard
is nowhere to be seen. Petra Kvitova is
back from a dreadful injury to her left hand (she’s a lefty). She won in the Birmingham warmup and has been
hitting the ball quite well. She has a
great game for grass and has won the tournament twice. If she minimizes her lapses of play during
matches, Karolina Pliskova could take the title. She will get a lot of free points on
serve. Jelena Ostapenko has continued
her strong play after winning the French Open.
I don’t think she will win this tournament, but it is important for her
to do well enough to solidify her position near the very top of the game. Caroline Wozniaki has been playing great
tennis but has never won a major.
Johanna Konta will be on her home court at Wimbledon, but her play has
faltered somewhat over the past few weeks.
My pick: This is a
tough one!! Karolina Pliskova