A new strategy for ageless Agassi



The 33-year-old added a few wrinkles to his game in beating Younes El Aynaoui.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -- It was enough to draw double-takes.
Was that really Andre Agassi charging the net the way a classic grass-courter would? Serve-and-volleying as if he'd done it all his life? And winning the points?
It sure was. Hey, this is one ol' guy quite capable of new tricks.
Adding a wrinkle -- to his game, we mean -- the 33-year-old Agassi moved a step closer to becoming the oldest Wimbledon champion in the Open era by beating Younes El Aynaoui 5-7, 6-4, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4) Saturday to reach the fourth round.
Agassi won the point all 10 times he came in behind his serve, and he was 27-for-30 overall at the net.
"I don't know what got into me out there," Agassi said, smiling. "I probably won't do that again until about 2010."
The first of his eight Grand Slam titles came at the All England Club in 1992, and he could break the Wimbledon record for biggest gap between championships (Bill Tilden won the tournament in 1921 and 1930).
First things first, though.
Looking ahead
Agassi's opponent in the round of 16 will be Mark Philippoussis, a three-time quarterfinalist. The 6-foot-4 Philippoussis can pound serves with the best of 'em, and he compiled 33 aces in beating Radek Stepanek 4-6, 7-6 (7), 6-4, 7-6 (6). The 1998 U.S. Open runner-up was broken once -- in the opening game, when he double-faulted twice.
Also into the fourth round: No. 10 Tim Henman, the lone Briton left; 2002 finalist David Nalbandian; French Open champion Juan Carlos Ferrero; and No. 13 Sebastien Grosjean. Henman faces Nalbandian next. Two seeded players lost: Alexander Popp beat No. 11 Jiri Novak, while Olivier Rochus defeated No. 30 Jarkko Nieminen.
Philippoussis is unseeded after a string of left knee operations.
"I've never doubted my ability," he said. "I've always said: 'If I'm healthy, I'm dangerous.' "
Different strategy
Agassi, at this stage of a major for the 37th time, built his career from the baseline. As he said before Wimbledon: "If I need my volleys to come through for me to win a match, then I'm hoping for a lot out there."
Yet there he was on Centre Court against the 27th-seeded El Aynaoui, serve-and-volleying to end the match's seventh game. He did it again for the last point of the ninth game. He did it, mainly, to counteract El Aynaoui's slice backhand, which slows points and gives the Moroccan a chance to set up his big forehand.
"I wanted him to feel that he can't just get away with something floating up there," Agassi said. "I wasn't going to play a match where I have to constantly execute, while he just sort of hacks it around."
Said El Aynaoui: "I was hoping I could make him volley. But he volleyed well."
Agassi also won 15 of the 20 points with 10 or more strokes.
Strong serving
He lost his serve only once, in the 11th game of the match, and it cost him the opening set. Then he dropped a total of three points on his serve in the second set, which he won by breaking in the final game.
Imagine that: Agassi, the greatest returner of his generation, needed 1 1/2 hours and two full sets to break serve. He did it in style, though, getting to 0-40 by stretching into the doubles alley with an "Uuuhhh!" to flick a forehand return at a tough angle that El Aynaoui put into the net. An errant forehand by El Aynaoui ended the set.
The third-set tiebreaker ended with Agassi smacking a great return, setting up a backhand winner down the line. El Aynaoui's last good chance came leading 6-5 in the fourth, with three set points at 0-40 on Agassi's serve. But Agassi won five straight points, including a second-serve ace.
"That's why Andre is so good," El Aynaoui said. "At the crucial moments, he puts more and more pressure on you."