A LOOK BACK: Mark Philippoussis’ run to the final at Wimbledon in 2003 after the Aussie’s years of injury hell was one of top level tennis’ most surprising comeback stories
However good the best comeback story of 2023 feels to you, it has nothing on Mark Philippoussis’ SW19 run some 20 years ago.
Big-serving Aussie Philippoussis was just 21 when he made his first Grand Slam final, losing to compatriot Pat Rafter at the 1998 US Open. Around the turn of the century, though, knee issues left him needing not one, not two, but three surgeries.
After three straight quarter-final runs, the Melbourne pro sat out Wimbledon altogether in 2001 – in fact, he sat out all four slams. He was still unseeded when he travelled to South-West London in 2003, but that was no obstacle to the most unlikely of runs.
Philippoussis’ first Wimbledon run after his Flushing Meadows final brought the start of his knee problems. After beating home favourite Greg Rusedski to reach the quarter-finals, dropping just three sets across the first four rounds of the tournament, he became the first player to take a set off top seed Pete Sampras before disaster struck.