Tennis Digest

Everything Tennis.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

How doughty Dokic turned it around - Sydney Morning Herald



JELENA DOKIC acknowledges something extraordinary has happened. Eighteen months ago, she was overweight, depressed and had decided she wouldn't touch a racquet professionally again. Four weeks into retirement, a tennis match on the television in her
Source: www.smh.com.au

Australian Open, Melbourne Park - BBC Sport
Oops. A double-fault for Zvonareva is not the best way for her to start this semi-final and she is quickly 0-40 down. Safina looks up for this, angry even, and is quicky a break to the good. Some start. 0445: Right, apologies for the lack of updates
Source: news.bbc.co.uk

Women's Tennis: Colonels win two of three matches - Eastern Progress
Coach Oertel gives his players some advice between matches. Eastern women's tennis pulled double duty on Friday to open up the season. First up for the Colonels was a match against Wright State for lunch and then Xavier for dinner. The Colonels swept
Source: www.easternprogress.com

World Sports - Business World
MELBOURNE â€" A red-hot Serena Williams clawed back from a set down in searing heat yesterday to make her 15 th Grand Slam semifinal, as Spanish sensation Fernando Verdasco booked his first. Serena Williams of the US returns the ball to Svetlana
Source: www.bworld.com.ph

Pro tennis: Spaniards Nadal, Verdasco win through to semis - Grand Forks Herald
MELBOURNE, Australia â€" The way Rafael Nadal sees it, one good thing will come from the first all-Spanish semifinal in a hotly contested Australian Open. A Spaniard will reach the final. After improving one round on each of his previous four trips
Source: www.grandforksherald.com

Tennis Trakker Pro gives match statistics on iPhone - MacNN
Portapple has launched Tennis Trakker Pro , an iPhone and iPod touch application that enables users to track and receive details of tennis matches. When following a tennis match, the program will keep track of the player’s shots, as well as provide
Source: www.macnn.com

The changing face of gaming - Sydney Morning Herald
Mats Wilander and Pat Cash play a Wii Sports tennis match before a crowd at the Australian Open last week. Australians spent nearly $2 billion on video games and consoles in 2008 despite the gloomy economy, a rise of 47 per cent on the previous year
Source: www.smh.com.au


Arabian Proverb
He who has health has hope; and he who has hope has everything.

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