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It’s Roger Federer’s world at the moment, and you may or not be happy to be living in it. But as we know around here, there’s more to tennis, and there was more to Wimbledon, than just the winners. If anything, this season has shown us again that one of the gratifications of being a fan of this sport is the stone cold unpredictability of it. The only thing you know for sure is that, with 256 players starting a Slam together, there are going to be stories you didn’t see coming, for better and for worse. Before we forget they ever happened, I give a few of them their ephemeral due here, and over at ESPN.com.

Venus Williams

Her yearly run to the final is getting to seem almost unremarkable. This one was notable mainly for her demolition of world No. 1 Dinara Safina in the semis, the worst mockery of a rankings system I can remember. Then Venus upstaged herself by defending Safina in her press conference. But watching her watch Serena hold up the winner’s dish, I wondered whether Venus had done that herself for the last time in 2008. Her reign must end sometime. A

Elena Dementieva

I can’t believe I never realized that she couldn’t hit a serve to her opponent’s backhand side. Seeing her do it against Serena in the semis was bizarre. For the first time, Dementieva looked like a full-fledged tennis player. An unlucky one, too. A-

Tommy Haas

Haas reminded us that a one-handed backhand and a crisp volley still make for beautiful, electric tennis. If you want to have the latter, you have to have the former. Suddenly I want to see the cranky German do it some more. A-

Lleyton Hewitt

His quarterfinal against Roddick was a calm and quiet classic between “two old married guys,” as the American said. Hewitt took us back to those bygone and not-much-missed days before Federer and Nadal. It’s not a place any of us want to live, but I enjoyed the visit. His feistiness and his never-changing lunchpail style should have more appeal now that he’s officially an elder of the game. A-

Pete Sampras

Nice gesture, suave entrance, blond wife, good jacket, bad sunglasses. A-

Bjorn Borg

Where, exactly, did he get that skin? A-

Rod Laver

The Rocket isn’t going down without a fight. A-

Melanie Oudin

I liked the patience and intelligence, as well as the fist-pumping gusto—she looks like she's practiced it—of this 17-year-old during her win over Jankovic. I hope I see it again soon. B+

Sabine Lisicki

Another heavy hitter throws her hat in the ring. If only she’d closed Dinara out and saved her from facing Venus in the semis. B+

Victoria Azarenka

It’s always eye-opening to see a young sure-shot go toe to toe with Venus or Serena when it matters. Serena showed another one just how much work she has to do yet. B

Andy Murray

The Scot has a problem. The defensive, leg-based game that he devised over the last year is working everywhere but at the majors, where big-hitting opponents have three sets to find their range. I think he felt the pressure more than he might have anticipated—he pressed against both Wawrinka and Roddick. But the real issue is that, despite having superior net skills to Roddick’s, he hit virtually no volleys during their semifinal. He still has to find a way to use everything he’s got. B-

Dinara Safina

I feel bad for her, and she should be commended for toughing out a couple of three-setters when she wasn’t at her best, but the late-Slam breakdowns are getting hard to watch. Pretty soon I won’t even turn it on when she’s playing on the final weekend, just to spare myself the vicarious angst. Like Jankovic, Safina is proof that it’s hard, bordering on impossible, to win your first major late in life. The evidence is building that, improved physique or not, she doesn’t have what it takes. B-

Juan Martin del Potro

He took a step back against Hewitt here, but he understood where he had gone wrong. Next thing to fix: consistency on returns. You get the feeling he’s working on it now. B-

Novak Djokovic

Another thing that’s getting hard to take is watching Djokovic grin and embrace the guy who’s just eliminated him from a tournament. Match to match, it’s hard to tell how motivated the Serb is going to be. C+

Jelena Jankovic

Seeing her up close for the first time since March, I'd say Jankovic looked extremely average all around, even when she was winning. Not much power, not much purpose, a lot of confusion. Maybe this is more than a slump; maybe it's a correction. C

John McEnroe/Ted Robinson

We know Robinson is the Old Faithful of purposeless statistical filler, but why did I once think that McEnroe was selective in his commentary and didn’t just say whatever came into his head? Perhaps it was the absence of Mary Carillo, but Johnny Mac blathered over, under, and around what was otherwise a highly enjoyable final. C-

Federer Fashion, 2009 Edition

Rog, Rog, don’t you know you’re not supposed to go with gold during a recession? Two words come to mind regarding the fashion gimmicks: Just. Stop. F