Isner–Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships

Wimbledon 2010 first-round match
United States John Isner (23) vs. France Nicolas Mahut (Q)
Set 1 2 3 4 5
United States John Isner 6 3 67 77 70
France Nicolas Mahut 4 6 79 63 68
Date 22–24 June 2010
Tournament Wimbledon
Location London
Previous head-to-head results
Mahut 1–0 Isner[1]
John Isner
Nicolas Mahut

The Isner–Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships is the longest match in tennis history, measured both by time and number of games. In the Men's Singles tournament first round, the American 23rd seed John Isner defeated the French qualifier Nicolas Mahut after 11 hours, 5 minutes of play over three days, with a final score of 6–4, 3–6, 6–7(7–9), 7–6(7–3), 70–68 for a total of 183 games.

The match began at 6:13 pm British Summer Time (17:13 UTC) on Tuesday, 22 June, 2010 on Court 18 at Wimbledon. At 9:07 pm, due to fading light, play was suspended before the start of the fifth set. After resuming on Wednesday, 23 June, at 2:05 pm, the record for longest match was broken at 5:45 pm. The light faded again, and so play was suspended at 9:09 pm, with the final set tied at 59 games all. Play resumed at 3:40 pm on Thursday, 24 June, and Isner won at 4:47 pm, the final set having lasted 8 hours, 11 minutes.

Both players broke numerous Wimbledon and tennis records, including each serving over 100 aces, with the match being referred to as "the endless match".[2] The final set alone was longer than the previous longest match.

Background

The match took place during the 2010 edition of the 13-day Wimbledon Championships, held every June and July. Mahut, who was not ranked high enough to qualify for the tournament automatically, earned his place by winning in the qualifying pre-tournament, where he was seeded 27th. He played three qualification rounds, beating Frank Dancevic 6–3, 6–0, in the first round, then Alex Bogdanovic 3–6, 6–3, 24–22, and finally Stefan Koubek in five sets, 6–7(8), 3–6, 6–3, 6–4, 6–4.[3]

Having played through the qualifying stage, Mahut was drawn against Isner in the first round of Gentlemen's Singles. Their match was scheduled for Court 18.

The match

Details

Copy of the 7-page score card of the Isner–Mahut match

The match started on the tournament's second day. As in all men's Grand Slam matches, the match was played as best of five sets.[4] While in the first four sets of a match a tiebreaker is used to decide a tied set, this does not apply in the fifth set except at the US Open. Thus, in the event of a tie in the fifth set, the players continue to play the set until one of them is leading by two games.

The first four sets passed without significant incident. Isner won the first set 6–4, breaking Mahut's serve in the ninth game of the set after Mahut had twice double faulted. Mahut took the second set 6–3, having broken Isner's serve to love in the second game of the set. The third and fourth sets had no breaks of serve and were both decided by tiebreakers, with Mahut winning the third set tiebreak 9–7, and Isner winning the fourth set tiebreak 7–3, leaving the score at two sets each. At the end of the fourth set, the match was halted due to darkness.[5] Resuming on 23 June, it became the longest match ever. Isner failed to convert four match points on this day, the first when Mahut was serving at 9–10, the second and third when Mahut was serving at 32–33, and the fourth in the last game that they played on 23 June, with Mahut serving at 58–59. Mahut also failed to convert two break points on Isner's serve, at 50–50. The match was suspended for a second time because of darkness on the evening of 23 June at 59–59 in the fifth set despite chants of "We want more, we want more" from the onlooking spectators.[6]

Isner drank a "recovery shake" and took an ice bath. Fellow American Andy Roddick brought take-out food for him and his coach, including "three boxes of pizza, all sorts of chicken and mashed potatoes"; Isner said later that he was so hungry he could have eaten "12 Big Macs",[7] but reported that drinking coconut water helped him rehydrate and avoid the cramping that he had experienced in the past.[8] He slept for less than four hours before arising. Mahut also slept for only a few hours, and had a cold bath and a massage.[7] The next morning, the BBC reported that Mahut had been practicing and Andy Murray informed them that Isner had been on a treadmill before play resumed.

The match was resumed on 24 June, and both players continued to dominate their service games. With Isner serving at 68–68, Mahut went up 0–30, but Isner won 4 points in a row to hold serve. At 68–69, with Mahut serving at 15–15, Mahut netted a drop shot that would likely have won the point. Isner, far back in the court at the time, later said that he would not have had the energy to chase after that shot. At 30–30, Isner passed Mahut at the net with a difficult inside-out forehand from the middle of the court that landed just inside the line. This brought up Isner's fifth match point (his first on 24 June) and his 14th break point of the match, which Isner converted with a down-the-line backhand passing shot. Thus, after 67 minutes of play on the third day of the match, Isner won the deciding final set, 70–68. The entire match over the 3 days lasted 11 hours and 5 minutes. This new world record for the longest match ever was 4 hours and 32 minutes longer than the previous record, the first-round match between Fabrice Santoro and Arnaud Clément at the 2004 French Open, which had lasted 6 hours, 33 minutes.

Officials

The chair umpire throughout the match was the Swedish official Mohamed Lahyani.[9] Lahyani said afterwards that he was so "gripped by the amazing match" that his concentration stayed solid and he did not think about eating or going to the toilet.[10] On the second day of the match, two groups of 14 linespeople and four groups of 28 ballboys and ballgirls were used in a rotation.[11] At the end of the match, Lahyani announced the score incorrectly, accidentally switching the scores of the two tie-break sets.[12]

Failing scoreboard

On the second day of play, the courtside scoreboard stood still at 47–47 and later went dark. IBM programmers said it was only programmed to go to 47–47 but would be fixed by the next day.[11] The online scoreboard at the official website lasted slightly longer: At 50–50 it was reset to 0–0. Users were asked to "please add 50 to the Isner/Mahut game score".[13] An IBM programmer worked on a hotfix for the scoring system until 11:45 pm to accommodate the match's scores for the next day, although it would have again malfunctioned had the match gone beyond 25 more games.[14]

Aftermath

Special recognition

Players pose by the scoreboard after the match

Immediately after the match, both players and the umpire were presented with a crystal bowl and champagne flutes by Tim Henman and Ann Haydon-Jones on behalf of the All England Club, as special recognition of the match. The players were then interviewed on court by John Inverdale, before a photocall for the press alongside one of the two Court 18 scoreboards showing the score.[15] Mahut subsequently donated memorabilia from the match for display at the International Tennis Hall of Fame's Museum in Newport, Rhode Island.[16]

On 14 July, Isner and Mahut were jointly awarded the 2010 ESPY Award for "Best Record-Breaking Performance", beating fellow nominees Roger Federer and Usain Bolt. Isner accepted the award in Los Angeles on behalf of both men.[17]

In addition, the AELTC placed a plaque commemorating the match at Court 18.[18] Time magazine named this match one of the Top 10 Sports Moments of 2010.[19]

Players' subsequent schedules

As the winner, Isner advanced to the second round where he played Thiemo de Bakker on 25 June at 12 pm on Court 5.[20] The match was originally scheduled for 24 June, but it was postponed due to the length of Isner's first-round match against Mahut. De Bakker also had a lengthy first-round match against Santiago Giraldo, winning by a score of 16–14 in the fifth set, but unlike Isner had an additional day off before his second-round match. Isner lost to De Bakker 0–6, 3–6, 2–6 in just 74 minutes. It was the shortest men's Wimbledon match at that point in 2010,[21] and Isner failed to serve a single ace.[22] Isner was visibly exhausted and required medical treatment for neck and shoulder problems throughout the match.[23][24]

Isner was also due to play a doubles match with his partner Sam Querrey on 24 June (against Michał Przysiężny and Dudi Sela), but it was postponed to 25 June. Isner's doubles match was tentatively scheduled as the second match of that day on Court 19 following another men's doubles match; however, they withdrew from the doubles because Isner had a blister on his toe. After being eliminated from the tournament, Isner said, "I'll watch sports, I'll take in the World Cup, I'll go fishing, I'll do whatever. Just anything away from the tennis court."[24]

As for Mahut, his doubles match with partner Arnaud Clément against Colin Fleming and Ken Skupski started late in the evening on 24 June (also on Court 18); the match was suspended after Mahut and Clément lost the first set. On 25 June, Mahut/Clément – Fleming/Skupski was scheduled as the fourth match on Court 18 because Clément had a third-round singles match on Centre Court against Roger Federer.[25] Because the match between Daniel Brands and Victor Hănescu lasted almost 3 hours, 30 minutes and ended around 8:45 pm local time,[26] the doubles match was postponed again; it was re-scheduled as the first match on Court 14 on 26 June.[27] On resumption, Fleming/Skupski defeated Mahut/Clément, 7–6, 6–4, 3–6, 7–6.

The two next met at the 2011 Hopman Cup exhibition in Perth. Isner broke in the opening game to record a win in straight sets.[28] They met again at the 2011 Wimbledon Championships, again in the first round; Isner won "Isner–Mahut II" in straight sets (7–6, 6–2, 7–6), in 2 hours and 3 minutes. The match consisted of 34 games – exactly half the number of games the losing Mahut won in the fifth set alone in their match the previous year.[29]

Reaction

Former players and commentators have called the match historic and unlikely to happen again; many also praised both participants. John McEnroe said, "This is the greatest advertisement for our sport. It makes me proud to be a part of it. We often don't get the respect we deserve in tennis for the athletic demands it places on players, but this should push that respect way up".[30]

Other players, former players, officials, media commentators and fans also praised the behaviour of both players. Roger Federer said of the match, "It's so impressive to see. I mean, I was watching this. I don't know if I was crying or laughing. It was too much".[31] Federer also added, "This is absolutely amazing. [...] This is beyond anything".[31] Novak Djokovic extolled both players, saying, "You have to give them credit, both of them. Whoever wins today, I think both of them are winners".[31]

Sports Illustrated's Jon Wertheim said that the victory might give Isner a self-esteem boost.[32] McEnroe speculated, however, that the match might have shortened Isner and Mahut's careers by six months.[24] A sports surgeon said the players had risked dehydration, hyperthermia, and kidney damage during the long match, and that one or both might suffer "some sort of injury or persistent problem over the next six months [...] shoulder problems, tendonitis, and recurrent knee problems", as well as the inability to "get into a groove" mentally for up to a year.[33]

The chorus of Dan Bern's song about the match concludes with the scores of the five sets: "six-four, three-six, six-seven, seven-six, seventy-sixtyeight". An a cappella performance of "Isner & Mahut" recorded in 2010 appears on Bern's album Live in New York.[34]

Mahut shared his experiences on the match in the book Le match de ma vie (The Match of My Life), which he co-wrote with Philippe Bouin. The book was published in 2011.[35][36]

Records

The match set at least ten tennis records:

The previous record for games played in a match was the 122-game 1973 Davis Cup match in which the United States team of Stan Smith and Erik Van Dillen defeated the Chile team of Patricio Cornejo and Jaime Fillol 7–9, 37–39, 8–6, 6–1, 6–3.[41] The previous record for most games in a singles match was the 112-game 1969 match in which Pancho Gonzales defeated Charlie Pasarell 22–24, 1–6, 16–14, 6–3, 11–9, also in the first round at Wimbledon.[42] The singles record since the introduction of the tie-break was the 2003 Australian Open quarter-final match, in which Andy Roddick and Younes El Aynaoui played 83 games; Roddick won 4–6, 7–6(5), 4–6, 6–4, 21–19.[43]

The previous official record for duration was set at the 2004 French Open when Fabrice Santoro defeated Arnaud Clément 6–4, 6–3, 6–7(5), 3–6, 16–14, in 6 hours, 33 minutes.[44] The unofficial record of 6 hours, 40 minutes, was set on 25 February 2009, when Chris Eaton defeated James Ward 6–3, 6–2, 6–7(3), 2–6, 21–19 in a playoff match to represent the Great Britain Davis Cup team in a 2009 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I second round tie versus Ukraine.[45] Isner–Mahut's fifth set alone lasted some 90 minutes longer than the previous longest match. Indeed, even that portion of the fifth set played on the second day was about half an hour longer than the previous longest match, so it also broke the record for the longest play in a single day.

John Isner served his 79th ace to take the final set to 39–38 with serve.[46] This surpassed Ivo Karlović's 78 aces that he served on 18 September 2009 in a Davis Cup match against Radek Štěpánek.[47] In all, Isner served 113 aces; Mahut also surpassed the previous record with 103 aces. At the 2012 edition of Wimbledon, Serena Williams had a women's record 102 aces for the entire tournament, falling short of both Isner's and Mahut's aces in a single round,

The length of the match exceeded the total playing time of Serena Williams in every round combined in winning the previous year's Ladies Wimbledon title. She played for less than ten hours in the entire tournament.[48]

Plaque on Wimbledon Court No. 18 to commemorate the longest match in tennis history between John Isner and Nicolas Mahut on 22–24 June 2010

Because of tiebreakers which determine set winners for all but the final set at Wimbledon, the French Open and the Australian Open, this record can realistically only be broken with another marathon fifth set in men's or third set in women's play.

Coverage

In the United Kingdom, the match was featured live in part on BBC One, BBC Two and BBC HD, which were all the television channels which the BBC used to cover Wimbledon. The match was broadcast live in its entirety on the BBC Red Button.

Commentating for the BBC during this match were Ronald McIntosh and Mark Cox on the first day, and McIntosh and Greg Rusedski on the second and third days. It was McIntosh's first ever Wimbledon commentary and became the longest continuous commentary for a single match in broadcasting history.[49][50]

In the United States, ESPN and sibling channel ESPN2 telecast the match.

Match statistics

Score

1
32 mins
2
29 mins
3
49 mins
4
64 mins
5
491 mins
United States John Isner (23) 6 3 67 77 70
France Nicolas Mahut (Q) 4 6 79 63 68

Session times

All times in British Summer Time (UTC+1)[51]

Tuesday 22 June 2010
Wednesday 23 June 2010
Thursday 24 June 2010

Detailed statistics

From Wimbledon's official website[39]
Isner Statistic Mahut
361 of 491 = 74% 1st serve % 328 of 489 = 67%
10 Double faults 21
52 Unforced errors 39
292 of 361 = 81% Winning % on 1st serve 284 of 328 = 87%
82 of 130 = 63% Winning % on 2nd serve 101 of 161 = 63%
246 Winners 244
104 of 489 = 21% Receiving points won 117 of 491 = 24%
2 Return Games Won 1
2 of 14 = 14% Break point conversions 1 of 3 = 33%
97 of 144 = 67% Net approaches 111 of 155 = 72%
478 Total points 502
92 Games won 91
113 Aces 103
143 mph Fastest serve speed 128 mph
123 mph Average 1st serve speed 118 mph
112 mph Average 2nd serve speed 101 mph
Total points include double faults by the opponent. Unforced errors include double faults.

References

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  2. "The Match That Wouldn't End: John Isner Finally Defeats Nicolas Mahut In Epic Fifth-Set Wimbledon Marathon, 70–68". SB Nation. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
  3. "Wimbledon 2010 Gentlemen's Qualifying Singles" (PDF). 2010.wimbledon.org. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
  4. "2010 Official Grand Slam Rulebook" (PDF). ITF. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
  5. "The longest game: Men's singles match breaks Wimbledon record by lasting almost TEN hours (and it'll carry on tomorrow)". Daily Mail. London. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  6. "Isner-Mahut epic leaves Wimbledon lost for words | Reuters". In.reuters.com. 24 June 2010. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  7. 1 2 Atkin, Ronald. "Marathon man Isner reveals Roddick's pizza role" wimbledon.org, 24 June 2010.
  8. Pucin, Diane. "Wimbledon: No doubles for John Isner but props for coconut water" Los Angeles Times, 25 June 2010.
  9. Hodgkinson, Mark (4 July 2006). "Murray finds Greek too hot to handle". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  10. Associated Press (24 June 2010). "Lahyani presides over longest match". ESPN.com. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  11. 1 2 John Martin (23 June 2010). "Logistics Are Put to the Test at Wimbledon". The New York Times.
  12. "Isner finally wins marathon match". BBC News. 23 June 2010.
  13. Michael Hurley (23 June 2010). "John Isner and Nicolas Mahut Marathon Match Suspended for Darkness at Wimbledon". NESN.com. New England Sports Network.
  14. Martin, John. "Scoreboard tuneup" The New York Times, 24 June 2010.
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  20. Schedule of Play
  21. "Marathon man John Isner loses short match in Wimbledon". Freep.com. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  22. Match Statistics, Thiemo De Bakker – John Isner.
  23. David Ornstein (2010-06-25). "Wimbledon 2010: John Isner thrashed by Thiemo De Bakker". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2010-06-25.
  24. 1 2 3 Kitson, Robert. "Wimbledon 2010: Marathon man John Isner beaten in double-quick time" The Guardian, 25 June 2010.
  25. "Schedule of Play (Day 5)".
  26. "Match Statistics of Brands-Hanescu match".
  27. "Schedule of Play(Day 6)".
  28. "Hopman Cup 2011 (XXIII) - History - Hyundai Hopman Cup".
  29. The Guardian, Barney (21 June 2011). "Wimbledon 2011: John Isner beats Nicolas Mahut in the abridged version". Retrieved 15 September 2012.
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  33. Mackay, Gordon. "Heroic duo John Isner and Nicolas Mahut now face injury risks" The Scotsman, 25 June 2010.
  34. 16. Isner & Mahut - Dan Bern (with Common Rotation and Paul Kuhn) http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/live-in-new-york/id416172775?ign-mpt=uo%3D4
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  39. 1 2 Wimbledon Official Website Match Statistics
  40. United States Tennis Association. 2010 Year in Review: By The Numbers.
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  46. Newbery, Piers (23 June 2010). "Live – Wimbledon 2010". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
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  48. "Isner vs Mahut Tennis Alternatives: What To Do With 10 Hours". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  49. "Commentator for Wimbledon's longest match was tennis virgin". Metro.co.uk. 25 June 2010. Retrieved 3 December 2010.
  50. "BBC 2012 TV commentators and pundits".
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  52. "2010 Wimbledon Championships Website – Official Site by IBM". Wimbledon.org. 24 June 2010. Retrieved 25 June 2010.
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