Thrilling Sporting Moments: Road to Glory
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About this ebook
In Thrilling Sporting Moments you'll read about some of the most exciting moments in our sporting history.
Featuring: Lungi Ngidi, Quinton de Kock, Akani Simbine, Faf de Klerk, Ernst van Dyk, Luvo Manyonga, Kevin Anderson, Cheslin Kolbe, Chad le Clos, Percy Tau, Louis Oosthuizen, Lucas Radebe, Josia Thugwane, Bongiwe Msomi, Caster Semenya, Janine van Wyk, Sunette Viljoen, Tatjana Schoenmaker.
Jeremy Daniel
JEREMY DANIEL is an author, screenwriter and musician. He has written extensively for children’s television and theatre, including as head writer for Takalani Sesame. He has also written a book, My Forever Friend. He is the author of the “Road to Glory” series of local sports biographies for younger readers, published by Jonathan Ball Publishers. Back in the day, he was the founding member and bass player for seminal Cape Town indie band, Fetish. He lives in Cape Town with his wife and daughters.
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AB de Villiers: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsSiya Kolisi: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWayde van Niekerk: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCaster Semenya: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPercy Tau: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsChad le Clos: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThrilling Sporting Moments: Road to Glory Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Thrilling Sporting Moments - Jeremy Daniel
INTRODUCTION
Sport is all about thrilling moments. Sometimes, all it takes is a few seconds of inspiration and talent to change the course of sporting history. A kick, a pass, a burst of speed and courage that comes in the right place at the right time is what separates winners from losers.
Great athletes spend their whole careers preparing for when their moments might happen. Nobody can predict them. But, once in a while during a match, out on the track or in the pool, all the elements line up perfectly.
In the latest book in the Road to Glory series, we’re highlighting some of the most thrilling moments in South African sporting history. Perhaps you saw some as they happened and missed others. Each of these thrilling moments counts as something that South African sports fans can be proud of.
Not every one of these moments led to victory; that’s not the way sports works. But they all showcased the athletes performing at the peak of their powers.
What more can a fan ask than that?
CHAPTER 1
KEVIN ANDERSON’S EPIC WIMBLEDON
Why does it always have to be this hard? Kevin muttered to himself as the umpire announced, ‘Game and fourth set to Mr Anderson. That’s two sets all, going into the fifth and final set.’
Kevin walked off the grass, sat down and rehydrated as fast as he could. All around him, the fans were buzzing with excitement. For many people, a trip to watch the Wimbledon semi-finals was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and now that they were here, they were going to enjoy every second of it.
A long, tough fight was exactly what they had come to see.
Sitting on the other side of the umpire’s chair was the American tennis player John Isner. Kevin knew Isner well. They had first competed against each other in college when Kevin had attended the University of Illinois. In 2007, he had been representing the state of Illinois in the championship dual match and lost to Isner, who was representing Georgia.
At the time, it had been the biggest defeat of his career and it had stung badly. But despite that, the men had become friends over the years.
Still, this was no time for friendship. This was the semi-final of the 2018 Wimbledon Championships, and a victory here would catapult the winner to playing the tennis match that every tennis-crazy boy dreamed about – the Wimbledon Men’s Singles Final. It didn’t get bigger than that in tennis, anywhere in the world.
‘Time, gentlemen,’ said the umpire and the crowd cheered. Kevin got to his feet, and immediately felt a heaviness in his legs. With one set to go, he would have to summon every bit of energy he had, to make it through. A few days earlier, he had played a gruelling quarter-final against Roger Federer. The match had lasted four hours until Kevin finally won the last game 13–11 in the fifth set. His legs were still feeling the strain and now here he was, about to start another fifth set.
The ball girl bounced two bright yellow balls to him as he reached the backline, and it was game on again.
Kevin’s serve had always been his biggest weapon and he relied heavily on it to smash opponents. In the early years of his career, some people used to say that it was the only thing he could do. But he had never complained and had worked hard on all aspects of his game to become an all-round player.
Now he was competing to become the first South African to play in a Wimbledon final since Kevin Curren had, in 1985.
He slammed the ball and it ripped past Isner’s racket. 15–0.
Kevin was annoyed that things had reached this point. He had been leading five points to four in the fourth set and had three set points but managed to blow them all and take it to five-all. He was furious with himself then and wondered if the tide had turned and Isner was going to steal the game from him.
Now here they were, with two sets each and everything to play for. As both men served ace after ace, game after game, they pushed each other to their limit.
The lead kept shifting in the final set. Both men were trying to find weaknesses in each other’s games, while hiding their own aches and pains. Kevin could see that Isner’s ankle was sore, and his own legs felt like jelly. Point after point turned into game after game, which turned into hour after hour.
Isner served the ball deep, onto Kevin’s backhand. Kevin whipped his return right down the line, forcing his opponent to scramble a short return. That brought Kevin to the net, and he tried to finish the point with a gentle touch, but he overhit it slightly. Again, Isner managed to get there in time and return it.
Kevin made no mistake on the next shot and finished the point off.
As the game went on, Kevin’s mind began to wander. He found himself thinking about what his dog was up to, or about some chords he had learned on the guitar. His mind drifted back to his school days in Johannesburg when he was known as a star 800-metre runner. He remembered feeling exhausted after those races but honestly, this was much worse.
Kevin forced himself to concentrate but his body was almost operating on autopilot. At one stage it was 8 games each, then 10 each, then they were at 12 and 13 games apiece. Every time one took the lead, the other pulled it back.
It was all about the serve. Both men were expert servers, and they took it in turns to win on their own serve and wait for the other to make a mistake.
They were two hours into the final set when there was a long rally. Kevin was waiting for an opening, when he was forced to sprint to the right, and he slipped and dropped his racket. Isner pounced as Kevin scrambled to his feet. His racket had fallen on his left-hand side, so as the ball approached, he grabbed the racket with his left hand and made a decent return, then flipped it to his strong hand and won the point. The crowd went bananas!
He then flipped the racket to his