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The Telegraph India (Free subscription) | 06/30/2008
At the end of a windy, sun-lit first week when seeded players fell like autumn leaves, only 16 gentlemen and 16 ladies are left in the Wimbledon draw. Amongst the casualties were Ana Ivanovic (No. 1), Maria Sharapova in the ladies and Novak Djokovic (No. 3), Nikolay Davydenko (No. 4), Andy Roddick (No. 6), and David Nalbandian (No. 7) amongst the men.
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The Telegraph India (Free subscription) | 06/27/2008
Two days of brilliant sunshine with no rain breaks have taken Wimbledon 2008 to the second round. Most of the chaff has been removed from the draw, but the threshing continues. Inevitably, some grain has fallen with the husk. Six of the 32 seeds are out ' notably No.4 Nikolay Davydenko of Russia who was defeated by B. Becker of Germany.
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Moscow Times (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Nikolay Davydenko said an on-court conversation with his wife, Irina, may have accidentally triggered the betting scandal which has plagued him since last year.
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Sify (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Nikolay Davydenko said an on-court conversation with his wife Irina may have accidentally triggered the betting scandal which has plagued him since last year.
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The Washington Times (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) | Nikolay Davydenko suspects he inadvertently became ensnared in a betting scandal by talking too loudly to his wife during a tournament in Poland last year.
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Beale Street Beat (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Andy Murray won his first round match at Wimbledon today. Can he get to the quarterfinals? Wimbledon is in full bloom and I see that our favorite player here at Tennis Diary, Benjamin Becker, took Nikolay Davydenko out in straight sets in the first round. With Becker’s huge serve, that’s a match he should win [...]
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The Irish Times (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
MORE THAN a few in Wimbledon wondered what was going through Nikolay Davydenko's head as he bowed out in the first round 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to Germany's Benjamin Becker yesterday.
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Reuters UK (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
LONDON (Reuters) - Nikolay Davydenko said an on-court conversation with his wife Irina may have accidentally triggered the betting scandal which has plagued him since last year.
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The Herald (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Nikolay Davydenko fears he may have inadvertently become implicated in a sports betting scandal by speaking too loudly to his wife in Russian during a small tournament in Poland last year.
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The Telegraph (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Fourth seed can focus on betting case after Becker lives up to his name, writes Kaz Mochlinski.
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News.com.au (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
RAFAEL Nadal, Maria Sharapova and Venus Williams have moved into the Wimbledon second round but men's fourth seed Nikolay Davydenko crashed to a limp defeat.
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Times Online (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Nikolay Davydenko said dasvidania to Wimbledon at the first-round stage for the fifth time in his career yesterday as a largely unloved world No 4, whose life has been turned upside down in the past ten months because of a match he did not complete. Those who prefer their Russians to have graduated from the Marat Safin school of the slightly wild and menacing will not be sorry to see the android-like...
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Fox News (Free subscription) | 06/25/2008
Nikolay Davydenko suspects he inadvertently became ensnared in a betting scandal by talking too loudly to his wife during a tournament in Poland last year. Davydenko spoke at length about the ongoing match-fixing investigation after his 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 loss to Benjamin Becker on Tuesday - the fifth time in seven years he has lost in the first round at Wimbledon. Davydenko, seeded fourth, said he had...
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Daily Mail (Free subscription) | 06/24/2008
Nikolay Davydenko, at the centre of a match-fixing probe, provided a new theory about his claims of innocence as he became the highest-profile tournament casualty so far.
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Daily Mail (Free subscription) | 06/24/2008
Nikolay Davydenko, the man at the centre of a huge match-fixing investigation, provided a new theory about his claims of innocence as he became the highest-profile tournament casualty so far.