Serena seeded 25th for Wimbledon, Federer tops men's list
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[June 27, 2018]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - The spectre of
seven-times Wimbledon champion Serena Williams facing world number
one Simona Halep in the Wimbledon first round was removed on
Wednesday as the American was named as the 25th seed.
Debate has raged over whether the 36-year-old, 23-times Grand Slam
champion, who is down at 183 in the WTA rankings following maternity
leave, should be bumped up into a seeded position.
The decision by the All England Club committee means Williams,
winner in 2016 but absent last year because of pregnancy, will avoid
big names until at least the third round.
Halep is top seed in the women's singles with 2017 champion Garbine
Muguruza at three, while defending men's champion Roger Federer is
number one seed despite Spaniard Rafael Nadal taking over as world
number one this week.
When the seedings committee met on Tuesday, the thorny issue of
whether to break from the current WTA rankings, the usual criteria
for seeding the women's draw, and elevate Williams was top of their
agenda.
It reserves the right to change the women's seedings to "produce a
balanced draw" and Williams, whose protected ranking does not
guarantee a seeding, clearly is a special case.
At the French Open last month, when her ranking was 451, she was not
seeded and came up against Australian 17th seed Ashleigh Barty in
the second round, winning in three sets.
She reached the fourth round before pulling out shortly before her
match against Russian Maria Sharapova.
While many have said Williams, who has played only seven competitive
matches since giving birth to daughter Alexis Olympia last
September, should not be penalized for taking time out to start a
family, others say seeding her is unfair.
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USA's Serena Williams celebrates winning her womens singles final
match against Germany's Angelique Kerber with the trophy
REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth/File Photo
One of them, Slovakian former Australian Open finalist Dominika
Cibulkova, is the player most disadvantaged by the decision to seed
Williams, as she is 32nd in the rankings and would have taken the
last seeded spot.
Cibulkova could now potentially face Halep, or Williams, in the
first round.
"I think it's now right that WTA offers a protected ranking. I think
that's good. But I think this is a little bit of a different story,"
she said at the Eastbourne championships.
"Why should I not be seeded if I have the right to be?
"I think if it was a different player, not her, I think she would
not be seeded. It's just because she won it many times and she's
Serena Williams. So I think that's why."
The men's seeds show a few tweaks from the ATP rankings with
Wimbledon using a formula designed to take into account results on
grasscourts.
Last year's runner-up Marin Cilic is number three seed despite a
world ranking of five, while three-times champion Novak Djokovic is
12th seed -- five spots higher than his ranking.
Apart from Williams, 2016 men's runner-up Milos Raonic is the
biggest riser with a 13th seeding from a ranking of 32.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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