LONDON (Reuters) - On a gloriously sunny afternoon at Wimbledon, Serena Williams strode onto court in a trenchcoat.
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With the sun beating down on Centre Court, defending champion Roger Federer appeared in a cardigan. All that was missing was his pipe and slippers.
"Game, Set and Mac, Miss Williams," the Daily Express decided on Tuesday after the 26-year-old former champion grabbed all the headlines with the most eye-catching outfit on day one.
Williams made a stuttering start before overcoming Estonia's Kaia Kanepi -- but reporters afterwards were more interested in her outfit than her tennis.
Was it a Sixties retro look? Can you tell us about the fabric? Is it lightweight or porous? No question was too trivial.
Federer, seeking his sixth Wimbledon title in a row, swapped his white blazer for a Great Gatsby-style cardigan which also had reporters seeking fashion tips.
It felt more like a day on the catwalk than the opening of the world's most famous tennis tournament -- but fashion has always been an integral part of Wimbledon with its strictly enforced "predominantly white" dress code for players.
After last year's rain-soaked Wimbledon, spectators blinked in amazement at the sunny start to the 2008 tournament and Serena Williams joked about her outfit "I don't think it's going to keep the rain away but we can always hope."
"I absolutely love trench coats. I live in Florida. I probably have more coats than anybody," she said.
But she admitted "It doesn't really add up" to live in the sunshine state and have that many coats.
Waxing lyrical about her warm-up attire, she said "it's ladylike and I'm very ladylike. It goes perfect with my personality and everything else. It's perfect for me."
Donning a cardigan can be a cutting edge fashion statement -- Soccer player and style icon David Beckham has started wearing them -- but, as The Independent newspaper warned on Tuesday
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