Wagers draw attention, but that's all
WIMBLEDON, England -- Wagering on a Wimbledon match soared after a TV commentator pointed out that one of the players was injured.
Odesnik Responds
Wayne Odesnik spoke with Willie Weinbaum of the ESPN Enterprise Unit on his cell phone from a London airport Wednesday. Here's what he had to say about the betting irregularities:
"After the match, I was asked to do press interviews in a small press room. A couple of British reporters brought up the subject. I went to the ATP and the ITF Department of Investigations and told them about it.
"We are working together to get to the bottom of it. I want to clear my name. I will give them any information and told them I'd be happy to help. I'm a young player with my whole career in front of me and I have nothing to hide.
"I know nothing about sports betting.
"He [Melzer] is a great grass-court player as everybody knows. I have no idea about anything else.
"I don't have an injury! I called a trainer after the first set when I felt a tiny something in my hamstring. He put hot cream on it during the changeover -- I didn't even call an inury timeout -- and it went away. The trainer waited a game and asked me and I said it was fine. It didn't affect the outcome of the match.
"I have no injury -- I'm perfectly fine.
"I played a tourney on clay in Italy last week and came to Wimbledon on Saturday. It's my dream to play here. Played last year and had to retire in a match against [Jarkko] Nieminen with a groin injury -- a tear and I was out two months. There was absolutely nothing unusual in my preparation at Wimbledon. I had a massage the day before the match, but plenty of guys do that."
The British bookmaker, Betfair, alerted tennis corruption investigators about unusual betting patterns for the first-round match Tuesday between 109th-ranked Wayne Odesnik of the United States and 30th-ranked Jurgen Melzer of Austria but did not suspect any wrongdoing, spokesman Mark Davies said on Wednesday.
Davies said Betfair received more than six times as many wagers as it would normally receive for such a match. Melzer's odds "shortened significantly," Davies said, after a TV announcer noted shortly before the match that Odesnik had a thigh injury. Melzer won 6-1, 6-4, 6-2.
Betfair received about $980,000 in wagers on the match, Davies said. The average for a first-round match at Wimbledon is less than $163,000.
"It's being reported as potential corruption, but I don't see it that way at all," Davies told The Associated Press. "I doubt that there was any wrongdoing."
Still, Betfair reported the heavy betting to the International Tennis Federation's integrity unit.
"Because of the transparency ... we pass that info on to the Tennis Integrity Unit," Davies said. "Then they can make a judgment. But having heard the commentary on the match, I don't suspect that this is going to turn out to be any kind of corruption story."
The All England Club referred all questions about the betting to the ITF, which refused to comment. The ITF's Tennis Integrity Unit never comments on an ongoing investigation.
"The Integrity Unit is obliged to look at it, but if I were in [unit head] Jeff Rees' shoes, I wouldn't look at it very long," Davies told ESPN.
Tennis increased the attention it pays to allegations of match-fixing and players betting on the sport since Betfair voided all wagers on a 2007 match between fourth-ranked Nikolay Davydenko and 87th-ranked Martin Vassallo Arguello after suspicious betting patterns emerged. The players were cleared by an ATP investigation.
"This is nothing like the Davydenko match," Davies told ESPN.
After Tuesday's betting received widespread coverage in British media, match-fixing was again a hot topic at Wimbledon.
"It has no place in tennis, those kinds of things," Roger Federer said when asked about possible corruption. "But it's hard to control. But I'm sure the ATP and the ITF, we're trying our best to catch those guys, if there are any out there. I think we should have massive bans on those who get caught so they get really scared of doing it."
Information from The Associated Press and Willie Weinbaum of the ESPN Enterprise Unit was used in this report.
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2009 WIMBLEDON
Women's singles: Serena Williams, United States
Men's singles:
Roger Federer, Switzerland
Men's doubles: Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic, Serbia
Women's doubles: Venus and Serena Williams, United States
Mixed doubles: Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany and Mark Knowles, Bahamas
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Day 13
- Federer tops Roddick for record 15th Slam
- Garber: Federer needs OT to win
- Garber: Roddick never loses resolve
- Garber: Federer-Sampras timeline
- Ubha: Top Wimbledon finals
- Photo Gallery: Federer's road to 15
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 13
- Laver: True Grand Slam still possible
- Sampras happy for Federer

- Collins and Reilly on Federer's win

- Former champions reflect on Federer

- Men's final highlight

- Knowles-Groenefeld win mixed doubles
Day 12
- Serena topples Venus for third Wimby title
- Garber: Serena swipes title from Venus
- Ubha: Yankee Doodle Dandy for U.S. tennis
- Ubha: What now for Roddick?
- Writers' roundup: Who will win the final?
- Nestor-Zimonjic win men's doubles
- Williams sisters win doubles
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog
- Bud Collins on Serena's win

- Keys to Serena's victory

- Serena speaks after winning

- Serena on Wimbledon win

- Roddick's Grand Slam drought

Day 11
- Federer, Roddick to meet in final
- Garber: Roddick crushes hopes of British
- Williams sisters reach women's doubles final
- Garber: Unlikely union of Federer-Sampras
- Writers' roundup: Who will win the final?
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 11
- Bodo: Which sister is in better form?
- Federer defeats Haas in three

- Brad Gilbert instant analysis

- Roddick speaks after win

- Digital Serve

- Roddick speaks after win

Day 10
- Williams sisters to meet in final
- Blake, Fish ousted in men's doubles semis
- Ubha: Serena in a fist fight until the end
- Ubha: Drama unfolds in Serena's win
- Garber: England finally embracing Murray
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 10
- Vote: Who will win the Venus-Serena final?
- Serena Williams advances to final

- Mary Joe's take on Serena

- Venus crushed Dementieva

- Serena speaks after epic win

- Ode to Wimbledon

- Men's semifinal preview

- Bud and Ravi preview semifinals

Day 9
- Federer, Haas, Murray, Roddick reach semis
- Garber: Roddick triumphs in five-setter
- Ubha: Women's semifinal preview
- Garber: Wimby semis not enough for Haas
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 9
- Number of Wimbledon flu cases up to 28
- Head racket stringer ready for finals
- Haas upsets Djokovic

- Williams sisters reach doubles semifinals

- Federer rolls over Karlovic

- Roddick defeats Hewitt

- Murray moves on

- Bud's take on Federer

- Women's semifinal preview

- Roddick reaches semifinals

- Reilly on the hopes of Andy Murray

Day 8
- Semis: Williams sisters, Safina, Dementieva
- Garber: Will Safina rise to the occasion?
- Garber: Age is just a number for this trio
- Ubha: Men's quarterfinal preview
- Hewitt isn't ready to act his age
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 8
- Ivanovic told to rest after tearing muscle
- Digital Serve

- Venus, Serena advance

- Comparing the sisters

- Shuffle at the top

- Old school, new school

- Andy Roddick's pursuit

- Day 8 recap

- Serena sails to semis

- Quarterfinal's preview

- Collins on Williams sisters

Day 7
- Women | Men
- Garber: Murray delivers stirring win
- Garber: Federer's results unmatched
- Ubha: Women's quarterfinal preview
- Ubha: Injured Williamses show no ill effects
- Tandon: Wimbledon live blog -- Day 7
- Centre Court roof closes for first time
- Officials downplay swine flu fears
- Evert: Women's 'grunting' out of hand
- Federer feeling good after win

- Williamses, Federer win

- Roddick rolls over Berdych

- Bud and Ravi preview Day 8

- Bud Collins on the thriving Germans

- Murray survives under the roof
