Wimbledon selects top seeds
Justine Henin and Roger
Federer will open play on Monday.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — The route to the women’s final at Wimbledon is filled with all sorts of obstacles.
Top-seeded Justine Henin, seeking her first Wimbledon title to complete a career Grand Slam, could face two-time champion Serena Williams in the quarterfinals.
Three-time winner Venus Williams could face 2004 champion Maria Sharapova in the fourth round and defending champion Amelie Mauresmo in the semifinals.
There’s also the chance of another all-Williams final, with the sisters winding up in different halves of the draw.
But with Venus Williams seeded No. 23 and Serena Williams No. 7, it will be difficult to set up a repeat of the 2002 and 2003 finals.
“I’m feeling a great deal more belief in myself on grass,” said Henin, coming off her third straight French Open title on clay.
“I must still learn to trust myself more on this surface.”
Seeking fifth straight title
Friday’s draw was kinder to Roger Federer, who is seeking to become the first player to win five straight men’s championships since Bjorn Borg (1976-80).
Federer’s main rivals in his part of the draw are Marat Safin, whom he could face in the third round, James Blake and Dmitry Tursunov. Federer could meet third-seeded Andy Roddick in the semifinals. Federer beat the American in the 2004 and 2005 finals.
Federer will open play on Centre Court on Monday against 85th-ranked Teimuraz Gabashvili of Russia.
French Open champion Rafael Nadal, who lost to Federer in last year’s final, has a more testing path.
The second-seeded Spaniard faces a potentially tricky opener against Mardy Fish of the United States. Fourth-seeded Novak Djokovic, 2002 champion Lleyton Hewitt, 2002 runner-up David Nalbandian and 2006 semifinalist Marcos Baghdatis are all in Nadal’s half of the draw.
Nadal could meet two-time Wimbledon semifinalist Sebastien Grosjean of France in the third round, with Tomas Berdych or veteran Jonas Bjorkman as possible quarterfinal opponents.
All-American matchup
Roddick faces Justin Gimelstob in an all-American first-round matchup and could meet No. 8 Andy Murray in the quarterfinals — if the British player recovers from a wrist injury that has sidelined him since May 15.
Unseeded Tim Henman was drawn to play Carlos Moya in the opening round. While Henman has reached the semifinals at Wimbledon four times, the last was in 2002 and his ranking has slumped to 78 amid poor form and injuries.
Mauresmo beat Henin in last year’s final, and the two meet again Saturday in the final of the Wimbledon warmup at Eastbourne.
Henin, who lost to Venus Williams in the 2001 final, was drawn against Argentine qualifier Jorgelina Cravero in the first round.
Also in the top half of the women’s draw with Henin and Serena Williams are 1997 champion Martina Hingis, Jelena Jankovic and Anna Chakvetadze.
Serena Williams won Wimbledon in 2002 and ’03 and reached the final in ’04. She spent much of 2006 injured and fell to No. 81 in the rankings, but routed Sharapova in the Australian Open final in January for her eighth Grand Slam title.
“Serena is on a great comeback and I don’t think you can underestimate any player in the top 10,” Sharapova said.
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