Wimbledon 2014: Five things to watch
Wimbledon 2014: Five things to watch
Murray and his new coach Amelie Mauresmo quickly dubbed as 'Murresome' is sure to draw a lot of notice at Wimbledon.

Last year's Wimbledon was the most unpredictable in memory.

Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Maria Sharapova - owners of a combined 10 titles at the All England Club - were all gone by the end of the second round. Five-time champion Serena Williams left in the fourth. Add in the record-equaling withdrawals or mid-match retirements because of health problems.

And to cap it all, Andy Murray finally gave Britain the men's champion it had wanted for more than three-quarters of a century.

What might 2014 have in store? Here are five things to watch at Wimbledon, where play begins Monday:

'MURRESMO': The pairing of Murray and his new coach, Amelie Mauresmo, was quickly dubbed "Murresmo," and their partnership is sure to draw a lot of notice. For one thing, Murray won the grass-court Grand Slam tournament - the first British man in 77 years to do so - with Ivan Lendl in his corner a year ago. For another, it's unusual for a top male tennis player to be coached by a woman. But Murray was coached for years by his mother, current British Fed Cup captain Judy, and he said of Mauresmo: "I hope it works out long-term, because I like her."

THE USUAL SUSPECTS: A member of the so-called Big 4 has won each of the last 11 Wimbledon titles - seven for Federer, two for Nadal, and one apiece for Murray and Novak Djokovic - and few would be surprised if someone in that quartet makes it an even dozen. The top-seeded Djokovic, champion in 2011, is a popular pick. Nadal's ninth French Open title was followed quickly by his third consecutive loss on grass; the stuff is rough on his knees. If Federer, now 32 and a father of four, is going to seriously contend for an 18th major title, it figures to come at Wimbledon, because he excels on grass, last year's stunning second-round exit notwithstanding.

SERENA'S REACTION: Williams is ranked No. 1 and seeded No. 1. But she's lost before the quarterfinals at three of the past four majors, including at Wimbledon last year and a second-round exit at the French Open last month. With her best-in-the-women's-game serve and ability to bounce back from setbacks, a strong showing from Williams on the grass wouldn't shock her coach, Patrick Mouratoglou. "She's definitely the kind of person that, when something bad happens to her, is always able to react."

SHARAPOVA'S DECADE: Hard to believe, perhaps, but it's been a decade since Sharapova won Wimbledon at age 17 for her first Grand Slam title. Now she's got five major trophies, but is still stuck on one at the All England Club.

TIME TO MAKE A MARK: Men who might make a breakthrough include Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria, who won a grass-court tuneup title last week, or Canada's big-serving Milos Raonic. Also will be fun to see how a trio of up-and-coming women who took center stage at the French Open fare at Wimbledon: Simona Halep, coming off her first Grand Slam final appearance; Eugenie Bouchard, a semifinalist at the Australian Open and Roland Garros; Garbine Muguruza, who stunned Williams in Paris.

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