Crushed. Devastated. Heartbroken. We were achingly close, but the agonising wait goes on. And so Wimbledon ends for us in the way it always must: with a plucky Brit choking back the sobs as he faces the press after a semi-final defeat. Full Article at The Independent
I've invited a few mates around for the afternoon to watch the Wimbledon final on television. The fridge is full of chilled white wine and tubs of low-calorie ice cream. Between games, the camera pans to the spectators. It zooms in on one fan. Full Article at Comment Is Free
WIMBLEDON, England - Perhaps the most remarkable outcome of the 2002-03 "Serena Slam" is that it never came close to happening again. Full Article at 10Connects.com
TOUR DE FRANCE Date: 4 July - 26 July Coverage: BBC Sport website: text commentary of each stage and streamed BBC commentary of the last 90 minutes of each stage available; comme... Full Article at BBC News
Wall-to-wall Andy Murray: that’s been the reality of living in the UK for at least a month. Full Article at Bleacher Report
July 3, 2009 (Louisville, Ky.) – The USA Cycling Masters Road National Championships continued with the women’s 70+ and men’s 50-75+ criterium contests on Friday. Ten more Stars-and-Stripes jerseys were earned on the half-mile sprinter-friendly course. Full Article at Team USA Cycling
The Tim Henman years were agony, but this was worse. Worse because we never really thought Henman had it in him to beat Pete Sampras, Lleyton Hewitt or Goran Ivanisevic when he got to the Wimbledon semi-finals. Full Article at Mirror.co.uk
From the scorching Melbourne summer to the ebullient Parisian spring, from the hallowed lawns of Wimbledon to the unyielding hard courts of Flushing Meadows, Roger Federer might just have earned himself the accolade as the greatest mens tennis player... Full Article at Calcutta Telegraph
The Swiss genius is on the cusp of a great moment in the history of the game London: It is intricate plot development and stunning twists that often make for great sports stories... Full Article at The Hindu
Andy Murray shrugged off his Wimbledon disappointment and immediately set his sights on winning the US Open. The 22-year-old missed out on becoming the first British man in 71 years to reach the final when he was beaten in four sets by Andy Roddick. Full Article at BBC News