Format The tennis competition at the Olympic Games consisted of a
single elimination tournament. The size of the singles draw, 64, meant that there were six rounds of competition in total, with five in the doubles owing to its smaller draw size of 32. Players reaching the semi-final were assured of an opportunity to compete for a medal, as the two losers in the semi-finals contested a
bronze medal match. Matches were
best-of-3 sets, except for the Men's singles and doubles finals which were
best-of-5 sets. The decisive final set had no
tiebreak.
Calendar Note: ''due to rain delays the Women's Singles schedule was pushed back a day.''
Day 1 On Day 1, the conditions were at a
humidity level of 89%, and ITF commentators felt that this, along with the heat and smog, would result in
fatigue for some players, especially in longer matches. Play did not begin at the scheduled time of 10 a.m., and was delayed until 12.53 p.m., when number eight seed
James Blake began his match against
Chris Guccione on the Centre Court. The Women's Singles competition also commenced. However, play was suspended again at 4.26 p.m., and eventually cancelled for the rest of the day. Only nine matches of the 20 scheduled matches were completed as a consequence of the rain-disrupted sessions. Blake progressed, as did fourth seeded Russian
Nikolay Davydenko, Chilean
Fernando González, Czech
Tomáš Berdych, and Argentine
Guillermo Cañas, who benefited from a retirement from his opponent
Frédéric Niemeyer, who was a set up, and said that he withdrew from the match in order to save himself for his doubles match with
Sydney champion Daniel Nestor (their match eventually took place the following day).
Day 2 On Day 2, humidity levels again proved to be unfavourable for players, with some saying that it was the worst they had ever played in. Play was only mildly interrupted by rain, with three scheduled matches failing to reach their conclusion. Defending champion
Nicolás Massú defeated
Steve Darcis (Belgium), and
Rafael Nadal came through against
Potito Starace (Italy) in three sets, in what the
BBC described as a "tough" match.
Roger Federer, still the top seed, progressed, as did other seeds such as Serb
Novak Djokovic, Argentine
David Nalbandian, Frenchman
Gilles Simon, and Swiss
Stanislas Wawrinka. Former world number one
Lleyton Hewitt came through a testing match against
Jonas Björkman, 7–5, 7–6(2), and
Rafael Arevalo, one of the three players to be invited by the Tripartite Commission, won against
Lee Hyung-taik, in what was his first match against a top 100 player. The highest seed to exit was Spain's
David Ferrer (number five). The number six seed, Britain's
Andy Murray, also lost, playing against
Chinese Taipei representative
Lu Yen-hsun. Along with Ferrer, number fourteen seed
Nicolás Almagro and the unseeded
Tommy Robredo also exited, meaning that three of the four Spanish representatives in the men's singles went out. In the women's singles,
María José Martínez Sánchez became the first player to progress on the day, knocking out
Alicia Molik. Second seed
Jelena Janković won, as did American
Serena Williams, Russian
Elena Dementieva, Slovakian
Daniela Hantuchová, and Frenchwoman
Alizé Cornet amongst others, in their first round matches. Two seeds fell, both to Chinese opponents:
Li Na defeated number three seed
Svetlana Kuznetsova (Russia), and number 11
Ágnes Szávay (Hungary) lost to
Zheng Jie. Afterwards, Zheng, a native of
Sichuan, said the courage shown by the victims of the
earthquake in May 2008 had helped inspire her to victory. Seeds who progressed in the women's singles included Janković (Serbia), the Williams sisters (United States),
Vera Zvonareva (Russia), and
Victoria Azarenka (Belarus). Number ten seed
Daniela Hantuchová (Slovakia), who was being watched by her country's
head of state,
Ivan Gašparovič, lost to rising star
Caroline Wozniacki (Denmark), and the number eight seed
Agnieszka Radwańska (Poland) lost to Italy's Francesca Schiavone. Number thirteen seed
Patty Schnyder (Switzerland) also lost. One of the Chinese hopefuls, Peng, had the President of the
Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG),
Liu Qui, courtside for her match against Alizé Cornet, but she was beaten in two sets. Her compatriot, Zheng, came through another long match. In the doubles, Bahamian
Mark Knowles, a Grand Slam champion and the world number seven coming into the event, was knocked out, partnering
Devin Mullings, by the
Bryan brothers (United States). Mullings came into the Olympic tournament without a doubles ranking, and with a singles ranking of 1017. Other teams progressing including
Martin Damm and
Pavel Vízner (Czech Republic), who defeated Djoković and
Nenad Zimonjić (Serbia). In the women's doubles,
Liezel Huber and
Lindsay Davenport (United States), both former Grand Slam doubles champions, came through. The other American team in the draw, the Williams sisters, came through a tough match against the Czech team of
Iveta Benešová and
Nicole Vaidišová, as did Zheng and Yan against the Slovak team of Hantuchová and
Janette Husárová. The Russian team of
Dinara Safina and
Svetlana Kuznetsova, which combined two top ten singles players, progressed too. ==Ranking points==