Grand Slam Championships

Tennis DVDs

Select your choice of  COMPLETE MATCH DVDs  for only  $10 each 

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CLASSIC MATCHES IN TENNIS HISTORY


2001 Wimbledon Fourth Round — Roger Federer vs. Pete Sampras

Roger Federer, as hard as it might seem to imagine, once played the role of the underdog, fighting against the Goliath that was Pete Sampras. At the time of this match, Sampras was a seven-time Wimbledon Champion while Federer was a 19-year old who had never played on Centre Court. The epic match lasted five sets as the current and future legendary players alternated sets. Young Federer took the first, third and fifth sets, barely outlasting the favorite as a changing of the guard took place.


2008 Wimbledon Final — Roger Federer vs. Rafael Nadal

Nadal dethroned five-time champion Federer by winning the longest-ever Wimbledon men's final in a heart-stopping classic that some consider the greatest match ever. The drama was stoked by the challenges presented by two rain delays. Despite the conditions, the level of play reached by both players was blisteringly high, leading to nerve-wracking tie-breaks and spontaneous eruptions of applause from the appreciative crowd.


2001 US Open Quarterfinal — Andre Agassi vs. Pete Sampras

Perhaps the best match in Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi’s great rivalry, this was an intense quarterfinal slugfest that ended with a final score of 6-7, 7-6, 7-6, 7-6 in favor of Sampras. The match had four tiebreakers and neither player’s serve was broken once throughout the entire contest. The difference between the two players was a total of 10 points. Rated one of the best matches of all-time, this was a case of two of the world’s best players playing at their absolute peak under the nightlights at Flushing Meadows and its enthused fans.


1980 Wimbledon Final — Bjorn Borg vs. John McEnroe

John McEnroe and four-time Wimbledon champion Bjorn Borg battled in the fourth set tiebreaker, a classic in which neither man would give an inch and lasted 22 minutes with 34 played points. McEnroe was finally outclassed in the final set as Borg kicked it up a few notches, losing only three points on his serve en route to winning his fifth consecutive Wimbledon title.


2005 Australian Open Semi-Final — Roger Federer vs. Marat Safin

A focused Marat Safin was a load to handle, as Roger Federer found out in the semifinals of the 2005 Australian Open. Safin had lost only two sets prior to meeting the tournament favorite, Federer. Safin came back from a set down twice in the match and then outlasted Federer in a fourth set tiebreak, and triumphed 9-7 in the fifth set.


1991 US Open Fourth Round — Jimmy Connors vs. Aaron Krickstein

A classic match featuring a crafty veteran against a younger opponent unfolded as 39-year old Jimmy Connors battled 24-year old Aaron Krickstein, the former proving that savvy and experience can be more valuable than youth. Krickstein held one-set leads twice, but then Connors gamely battled back on two occasions to push to a fifth set. Falling behind 5-2 in the final set, it looked like Connors was done, but he fed off the crowd and stormed back to win the final set in a tiebreaker in a four-hour, 41-minute marathon.


2003 Australian Open Quarterfinal — Andy Roddick vs. Younes El Aynaoui

Andy Roddick and Moroccan Younes El Aynaoui engaged in a remarkable five-set battle. Since the Australian Open doesn’t have a regular tiebreaker in place in the fifth set, Roddick and El Aynaoui had to play until one of the two got ahead by two games. It took them 40 games to decide a winner, with a final score of 6-4, 6-7, 6-4, 4-6, 21-19.


2006 US Open Fourth Round — Andre Agassi vs. Marcos Baghdatis

Andre Agassi looked to be nearing the end of an illustrious career when he faced eighth-seeded Marcos Baghdatis. In a tight match, both players showed tremendous heart and guts, as Agassi battled a bad back, and Baghdatis suffered cramps in his right leg. Agassi went ahead 5-4 after eight deuces and then held on to win the final set 7-5.


1984 French Open Final — Ivan Lendl vs. John McEnroe

Ivan Lendl was waiting to break through in a Grand Slam when he met John McEnroe, who hadn’t lost a match all year long. McEnroe dominated the first two sets, but Lendl stayed in the match and took advantage when McEnroe had one of his characteristic blowups, this time aimed at a cameraman. McEnroe then blew another lead in the fourth set and lost the match.


2001 Wimbledon Final — Goran Ivanisevic vs. Patrick Rafter

The crowd was in a constant frenzy as Croatian wildcard Goran Ivanisevic made an improbable run to the finals. Ivanisevic’s battle with Australian Patrick Rafter was a classic, featuring big serves, cool-handed winners, and inexplicable errors in a classic five-setter. After Rafter misfired on Ivanisevic’s final serve, the fans erupted as the Croation collapsed to the ground in tears after achieving his lifelong dream of a Wimbledon Championship.



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