And this was just one of those days you have from time
“And this was just one of those days you have from time to time. It’s one match – back to work!”Setting aside partisan concern that Rusedski may now be rocky going into Wimbledon, where he is one of the favourites, it was a treat to see Sargsian bring such marvellous touch to a scene usually dominated by power. “I was a little surprised I was getting so many serves on my racket,” he said “I was expecting more aces I was also surprised how much support I got. A lot of people were pulling for me as well as for Greg.”Signs that Rusedksi might have taken the contest into a third set disappeared after he was unable to convert any of three break points in the eighth game of the second set, netting a backhand return on the first, seeing his opponent save the second with a high forehand volley and failing to keep a backhand in play on the third.It may be of little consolation to Rusedski to know this, but Sargsian confessed that he would need more than three minutes to do Rubik’s Cube at a moment’s notice.
“I haven’t done it for a long time,” he said, “so I would have to go into a room for an hour to refresh my memory.”Lleyton Hewitt, the Australian No 14 seed, advanced to the semi-finals with a 7-5, 6-4 win against the Frenchman Cedric Pioline, the runner-up to Pete Sampras at Wimbledon in 1997. Hewitt’s words in celebration were probably more temperate that those he used while adressing a line judge, for which he received a code violation.Hewitt’s reward for winning is to play Pete Sampras, who defeated Goran Ivanisevic 7-5, 6-4 and goes back to No 1, at least until the end of Wimbledon, equalling Ivan Lendl’s record total of 270 weeks at the top.Results, Digest, page 31. THE REPERCUSSIONS of the Coral Cove positive dope test took another dramatic turn yesterday with the resignation of two key officials of the British Horse Trials Association: Giles Rowsell, chairman of the selectors, and Andy Bathe, the team vet. In a statement last night the BHTA said: “Coral Cove was injected with a substance in a manner contrary to International Equestrian Federation (FEI) regulations.” Asked whether the injection was administered by the team vet, Clarke Willis, managing director of BHTA, said: “That is the implication, but we need corroborative evidence.”
The statement followed a meeting of the BHTA board, which lasted several hours. Bill Henson, a member of the board and director of the Bramham Horse and Hound International Three-Day Event which was proceeding quietly in the dressage arena, emerged to say: “I am absolutely amazed by what I have heard today.
I am shattered at what has gone on.”Polly Phillipps, the rider of Coral Cove, would have liked an inquiry to have been held in December, after the news that the horse’s second urine sample (taken at last year’s World Equestrian Games) had tested positive to salicylic acid above the permitted threshold. Unless Phillipps appeals successfully, Britain has forfeited both Olympic qualification and the bronze medal won at the World Games.”We’ve lost a lot of business,” Phillipps said of her own veterinary practice and her husband’s horse dealing interests. “It seems cruel that we have taken all the flak for it when we have done nothing wrong. It will put me off going on a team again.”Phillipps, who was lying eighth with Coral Cove after yesterday’s dressage was completed, had expected her name to be cleared when the statement eventually emerged.
The exoneration was, however, implied rather than stated.Having foolishly decided to keep news of the positive test under wraps when it emerged last year, the BHTA now find themselves with a saga that is set to run and run. An independent inquiry (as distinct from the one which has just been conducted by the British Equestrian Federation) will now take place.”We need to find out who knew what There are still things that don’t add up,” Willis said. The association will be asking their lawyers to recommend someone outside the sport to chair the next inquiry.Meanwhile, the New Zealander Blyth Tait retained his overnight lead on Welton Envoy at the end of the dressage phase yesterday.Results, Digest, Page 31. SARGIS SARGSIAN, who has been known to solve Rubik’s Cube in three minutes, turned Greg Rusedski inside out in 64 minutes in the quarter- finals of the Stella Artois Championships yesterday.