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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Williams sisters sowed their seeds

Associated Press

LONDON — Despite a season of injuries, defeats and tumbling rankings, Serena and Venus Williams are still the players to beat at Wimbledon.

The sisters received a break from the All England Club on Wednesday when they were seeded way above their current rankings in recognition of their Wimbledon credentials and grass-court prowess.

Two-time defending champion Serena, ranked No. 10, was given the top seeding. Former two-time winner Venus, ranked eighth, was seeded No. 3.

Russia’s Anastasia Myskina, the French Open champion who is ranked No. 3, is seeded second for Wimbledon, which begins Monday.

Thursday’s draw will determine whether the Williams sisters could meet for a third straight year in the final. Serena beat Venus in the last two.

Without top-ranked Justine Henin-Hardenne and No. 2 Kim Clijsters, Serena was listed seven places above her ranking — the biggest jump ever in the women’s seedings at Wimbledon.

“She is the defending champion and she has a great record of grass-court tennis — it’s obviously one of her better surfaces,” Wimbledon referee Alan Mills said.

“It’s the same for Venus,” he added. “We are basically thinking in terms of the grass courts and the records of the players. That’s why we went with that.”

The seedings were more straightforward for the men, with the top four following the rankings.

Defending champion and top-ranked Roger Federer is No. 1, followed by Andy Roddick. Guillermo Coria, who lost in the French Open final, is No. 3, with 2002 Wimbledon runner-up David Nalbandian at No. 4.

Britain’s Tim Henman was bumped up from sixth in the rankings to No. 5 in the seedings. Spain’s Juan Carlos Ferrero dropped from fifth to sixth.

Lleyton Hewitt, the 2002 champion, was seeded at No. 7 — three places above his ranking. Andre Agassi, the 1992 champion who is ranked No. 9, pulled out Tuesday with a hip injury.

Goran Ivanisevic, the 2001 champion, and Greg Rusedski are unseeded after long layoffs.

The women’s field is wide open after last week’s withdrawals of Henin-Hardenne (viral illness) and Clijsters (wrist injury).

Amelie Mauresmo is seeded No. 4, followed by Lindsay Davenport, French Open runner-up Elena Dementieva and Jennifer Capriati.