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Friday, 9 September 2011

Video: Roddick US Open Match Epidemic Forces The Courts To Move

Video: Roddick US Open Match Epidemic Forces The Courts To Move
Initially, Andy Roddick has done an excellent job of keeping a cool head. He had discovered a bubble caused by percolation of water near the base by the Court in Louis Armstrong Stadium and listened patiently as the referee Brian Earley tournament promised to solve the problem. Roddick and his opponent, David Ferrer, who was sent on the ground and waited 45 minutes while the officers obtained the right to be safe and dry.
Only Roddick and Ferrer returned to the Court that the U.S. has lost its character. For the realization of the right has yet been set, Roddick went off in Earley, wondering why he and Ferrer was still on the course and how the US Open may allow a match to play in such conditions. Then he left the court, demanding the match be moved.Classic Roddick.
The bubble was caused by the huge amount of rain that fell in New York during the past two days. Roddick and Ferrer were scheduled to play Tuesday night, but had delayed his party more than 40 hours due to bad weather.
When you blow Earley, the discussion moved to the corridor in Armstrong Stadium.
"I know you can not play on consecutive days, but the winner of us have," Roddick broke in Earley. "So at some point, which take precedence over what people see."
When he heard Earley Court suggest 13 to someone on the phone, Roddick interrupted.
"Do the thing," he said. "Let's just go play. Let's play. Thirteen. Let us play."
The match resumed minutes later at the outdoor court. Before his match against Ferrer began, Roddick had not played an open game in the U.S. on the brink of the 23,000-seat Arthur Ashe Stadium in nine years. Court 13 is decidedly small. It has a capacity of 584 fans.

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