I don't think mine is too bad either so there's not much difference

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I don't think mine is too bad either, so there's not much difference. You just hope you wake up in the morning and see everything the size of a football. If that works out, then you're feeling good."However, as Felgate points out, "It's as simple as being in the draw on Wednesday Then you are three matches from it Getting into the second week is one tournament The next two rounds are another tournament. When you get to the semis you are really performing."And if it goes that far, which Briton can go the distance? Here is Danny Sapsford's opinion: "At the top level you need one weapon Tim has a nice all-round game but no real weapon Greg has."Andrew Longmore talks to Jim Courier, page 4. THE GOOD Ship Lollipop struggled forward yesterday a little shakily but, in the end, safely. Jelena Dokic, the teenager from Australia, reached the fourth round and a collision with Miss Creatine, Mary Pierce, by defeating the Luxembourg girl Anne Kremer 6-7 6-3 6-4 in one hour 53 minutes. It was another fine win for a girl who had to qualify and who stands at 129 in the world rankings, but this was a travesty of a contest to put on Centre Court immediately after the high drama of Boris Becker versus Lleyton Hewitt.

The high temple of tennis is for heroes and heroines of the sport, not wannabes and never-will-bes, and the customers voted with their feet as the atmosphere deflated like a punctured helium balloon. Even the royal box, Terry Wogan included, diplomatically decided it was time for tea in the middle of the second set. Dokic, the 16-year-old qualifier from Australia, had pulled off the biggest upset on the women's side of Wimbledon for years when she overturned Martina Hingis, the world No 1, in the first round last Monday. The score of that sensational occasion, 6-2 6-0, indicated that Dokic has arrived to stay, but perhaps subsequently the enormity of what she had perpetrated that day has sunk in.Her second-round win over Karina Studenikova was shakily achieved (8- 6 in the third set) and yesterday she showed in the most important arena of all that, her stunning backhand notwithstanding, there remains much work to be done. The intensity with which her father and coach, Damir, followed proceedings from the VIP box indicated that this work will certainly be undertaken.Kremer is the best player in Luxembourg which, given the size of the country, is not saying a lot.

She is 35th in the world rankings and at Eastbourne 10 days ago achieved the best win of her career by eliminating Monica Seles from the Direct Line Championships. She is, however, ailing, since her left thigh was heavily strapped and her serve is no more penetrating than Dokic's. This resulted in a farcical start to the match as 25 minutes passed before either player managed to hold serve. It was Kremer who achieved that honour to take a 4-3 lead and for the rest of the first set it was steady-as-you-go on serve for both of them.This took the set into a tie-break which turned into a mini-marathon as the advantage swayed back and forth. Dokic, her long ponytail flying as she scuttled around the baseline, resembled a less svelte version of Anna Kournikova.