
Sky's the limit: Joint inspires Aussie Wimbledon launch
The 19-year-old US-born prodigy Joint, popular among her new-found Australian mates, gave them all a boost on the weekend before Wimbledon by winning her first grass-court title at the prestigious curtain-raiser at Eastbourne.
The vastly experienced Tomljanovic, twice a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, and Talia Gibson, who has a high-profile shot at four-time grand slam champ Naomi Osaka, lead the opening-day Aussie challenge on a baking hot Monday at the All England Club.
Joint won't make her Wimbledon bow until Tuesday against 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova, and Tomljanovic thinks the break will be key for her.
After her first title win in Morocco on clay five weeks ago, Joint then had to jet straight from Rabat to Paris for the French Open and didn't look anywhere near her best as Tomljanovic defeated her.
"I think it'll help her this time, because she'll have learned a bit from that quick turnaround in Paris. And you'd take a final or a title before a slam any day of the week, even if it's a quick turnaround," Tomljanovic said.
"I think the sky's the limit for her. Tennis is in a place where you can't really put numbers on people, especially how well she's been doing at such a young age.
"She seems not to be fazed by anything, she's such a cool person. She's different, which I like. When you spend time with her, she's quiet, then she'll come out with, like, a really funny joke out of nowhere.
"On court she's quick, and there's not really many holes in her game."
Tomljanovic faces former French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, who Joint defeated on the way to her Eastbourne crown, and reckoned she'd be picking the youngster's brains about how to play her on grass.
Meanwhile, 21-year-old Gibson still can't quite believe she'll be making her own Wimbledon debut after saving a match point in her final round of qualifying as she gets ready to face Osaka, who's returning after a maternity break.
It's potentially a golden opportunity for the Perth player because 27-year-old Osaka has had inconsistent results since coming back following the birth of her daughter Shai in July 2023.
"It was very exciting to see that I'm coming up against her,'' Gibson said.
"It would be very easy to get a bit nervous and get too caught up in the name of who's down the other end, but I think it's going to be an amazing experience.
"It's been really great to watch Naomi play when I was growing up. She's definitely an inspiration."
Leading the men's charge will be 20th seed Alexei Popyrin, looking forward to his first "tennis Ashes'' battle at Wimbledon against British wildcard Arthur Fery.
"He's a good player, like all the Brits, they grow up on grass, know how to play on the surface, and I've heard his dad may be a member of this club, so he knows the place inside out," Popyrin said.
"He'll have the home crowd on his side, so that will also be a little bit of a challenge, but I'm feeling good and I'm ready to go."
AUSTRALIANS IN ACTION ON DAY ONE OF WIMBLEDON
(Prefix number denotes seeding) (WC = wildcard) (Q = qualifier)
MEN
(20) Alexei Popyrin v (WC) Arthur Fery (GBR)
Jordan Thompson v Vit Kopriva (CZE)
Chris O'Connell v (Q) Adrian Mannarino (FRA)
James Duckworth v (25) Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN)
WOMEN
Olivia Gadecki v Greet Minnen (BEL)
Kim Birrell v (22) Donna Vekic (CRO)
Ajla Tomljanovic v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS)
Talia Gibson (Q) v Naomi Osaka (JPN)
Ajla Tomljanovic has declared the sky's the limit for Australia's new tennis shooting star Maya Joint.
The 19-year-old US-born prodigy Joint, popular among her new-found Australian mates, gave them all a boost on the weekend before Wimbledon by winning her first grass-court title at the prestigious curtain-raiser at Eastbourne.
The vastly experienced Tomljanovic, twice a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, and Talia Gibson, who has a high-profile shot at four-time grand slam champ Naomi Osaka, lead the opening-day Aussie challenge on a baking hot Monday at the All England Club.
Joint won't make her Wimbledon bow until Tuesday against 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova, and Tomljanovic thinks the break will be key for her.
After her first title win in Morocco on clay five weeks ago, Joint then had to jet straight from Rabat to Paris for the French Open and didn't look anywhere near her best as Tomljanovic defeated her.
"I think it'll help her this time, because she'll have learned a bit from that quick turnaround in Paris. And you'd take a final or a title before a slam any day of the week, even if it's a quick turnaround," Tomljanovic said.
"I think the sky's the limit for her. Tennis is in a place where you can't really put numbers on people, especially how well she's been doing at such a young age.
"She seems not to be fazed by anything, she's such a cool person. She's different, which I like. When you spend time with her, she's quiet, then she'll come out with, like, a really funny joke out of nowhere.
"On court she's quick, and there's not really many holes in her game."
Tomljanovic faces former French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, who Joint defeated on the way to her Eastbourne crown, and reckoned she'd be picking the youngster's brains about how to play her on grass.
Meanwhile, 21-year-old Gibson still can't quite believe she'll be making her own Wimbledon debut after saving a match point in her final round of qualifying as she gets ready to face Osaka, who's returning after a maternity break.
It's potentially a golden opportunity for the Perth player because 27-year-old Osaka has had inconsistent results since coming back following the birth of her daughter Shai in July 2023.
"It was very exciting to see that I'm coming up against her,'' Gibson said.
"It would be very easy to get a bit nervous and get too caught up in the name of who's down the other end, but I think it's going to be an amazing experience.
"It's been really great to watch Naomi play when I was growing up. She's definitely an inspiration."
Leading the men's charge will be 20th seed Alexei Popyrin, looking forward to his first "tennis Ashes'' battle at Wimbledon against British wildcard Arthur Fery.
"He's a good player, like all the Brits, they grow up on grass, know how to play on the surface, and I've heard his dad may be a member of this club, so he knows the place inside out," Popyrin said.
"He'll have the home crowd on his side, so that will also be a little bit of a challenge, but I'm feeling good and I'm ready to go."
AUSTRALIANS IN ACTION ON DAY ONE OF WIMBLEDON
(Prefix number denotes seeding) (WC = wildcard) (Q = qualifier)
MEN
(20) Alexei Popyrin v (WC) Arthur Fery (GBR)
Jordan Thompson v Vit Kopriva (CZE)
Chris O'Connell v (Q) Adrian Mannarino (FRA)
James Duckworth v (25) Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN)
WOMEN
Olivia Gadecki v Greet Minnen (BEL)
Kim Birrell v (22) Donna Vekic (CRO)
Ajla Tomljanovic v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS)
Talia Gibson (Q) v Naomi Osaka (JPN)
Ajla Tomljanovic has declared the sky's the limit for Australia's new tennis shooting star Maya Joint.
The 19-year-old US-born prodigy Joint, popular among her new-found Australian mates, gave them all a boost on the weekend before Wimbledon by winning her first grass-court title at the prestigious curtain-raiser at Eastbourne.
The vastly experienced Tomljanovic, twice a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, and Talia Gibson, who has a high-profile shot at four-time grand slam champ Naomi Osaka, lead the opening-day Aussie challenge on a baking hot Monday at the All England Club.
Joint won't make her Wimbledon bow until Tuesday against 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova, and Tomljanovic thinks the break will be key for her.
After her first title win in Morocco on clay five weeks ago, Joint then had to jet straight from Rabat to Paris for the French Open and didn't look anywhere near her best as Tomljanovic defeated her.
"I think it'll help her this time, because she'll have learned a bit from that quick turnaround in Paris. And you'd take a final or a title before a slam any day of the week, even if it's a quick turnaround," Tomljanovic said.
"I think the sky's the limit for her. Tennis is in a place where you can't really put numbers on people, especially how well she's been doing at such a young age.
"She seems not to be fazed by anything, she's such a cool person. She's different, which I like. When you spend time with her, she's quiet, then she'll come out with, like, a really funny joke out of nowhere.
"On court she's quick, and there's not really many holes in her game."
Tomljanovic faces former French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, who Joint defeated on the way to her Eastbourne crown, and reckoned she'd be picking the youngster's brains about how to play her on grass.
Meanwhile, 21-year-old Gibson still can't quite believe she'll be making her own Wimbledon debut after saving a match point in her final round of qualifying as she gets ready to face Osaka, who's returning after a maternity break.
It's potentially a golden opportunity for the Perth player because 27-year-old Osaka has had inconsistent results since coming back following the birth of her daughter Shai in July 2023.
"It was very exciting to see that I'm coming up against her,'' Gibson said.
"It would be very easy to get a bit nervous and get too caught up in the name of who's down the other end, but I think it's going to be an amazing experience.
"It's been really great to watch Naomi play when I was growing up. She's definitely an inspiration."
Leading the men's charge will be 20th seed Alexei Popyrin, looking forward to his first "tennis Ashes'' battle at Wimbledon against British wildcard Arthur Fery.
"He's a good player, like all the Brits, they grow up on grass, know how to play on the surface, and I've heard his dad may be a member of this club, so he knows the place inside out," Popyrin said.
"He'll have the home crowd on his side, so that will also be a little bit of a challenge, but I'm feeling good and I'm ready to go."
AUSTRALIANS IN ACTION ON DAY ONE OF WIMBLEDON
(Prefix number denotes seeding) (WC = wildcard) (Q = qualifier)
MEN
(20) Alexei Popyrin v (WC) Arthur Fery (GBR)
Jordan Thompson v Vit Kopriva (CZE)
Chris O'Connell v (Q) Adrian Mannarino (FRA)
James Duckworth v (25) Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN)
WOMEN
Olivia Gadecki v Greet Minnen (BEL)
Kim Birrell v (22) Donna Vekic (CRO)
Ajla Tomljanovic v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS)
Talia Gibson (Q) v Naomi Osaka (JPN)
Ajla Tomljanovic has declared the sky's the limit for Australia's new tennis shooting star Maya Joint.
The 19-year-old US-born prodigy Joint, popular among her new-found Australian mates, gave them all a boost on the weekend before Wimbledon by winning her first grass-court title at the prestigious curtain-raiser at Eastbourne.
The vastly experienced Tomljanovic, twice a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, and Talia Gibson, who has a high-profile shot at four-time grand slam champ Naomi Osaka, lead the opening-day Aussie challenge on a baking hot Monday at the All England Club.
Joint won't make her Wimbledon bow until Tuesday against 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova, and Tomljanovic thinks the break will be key for her.
After her first title win in Morocco on clay five weeks ago, Joint then had to jet straight from Rabat to Paris for the French Open and didn't look anywhere near her best as Tomljanovic defeated her.
"I think it'll help her this time, because she'll have learned a bit from that quick turnaround in Paris. And you'd take a final or a title before a slam any day of the week, even if it's a quick turnaround," Tomljanovic said.
"I think the sky's the limit for her. Tennis is in a place where you can't really put numbers on people, especially how well she's been doing at such a young age.
"She seems not to be fazed by anything, she's such a cool person. She's different, which I like. When you spend time with her, she's quiet, then she'll come out with, like, a really funny joke out of nowhere.
"On court she's quick, and there's not really many holes in her game."
Tomljanovic faces former French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, who Joint defeated on the way to her Eastbourne crown, and reckoned she'd be picking the youngster's brains about how to play her on grass.
Meanwhile, 21-year-old Gibson still can't quite believe she'll be making her own Wimbledon debut after saving a match point in her final round of qualifying as she gets ready to face Osaka, who's returning after a maternity break.
It's potentially a golden opportunity for the Perth player because 27-year-old Osaka has had inconsistent results since coming back following the birth of her daughter Shai in July 2023.
"It was very exciting to see that I'm coming up against her,'' Gibson said.
"It would be very easy to get a bit nervous and get too caught up in the name of who's down the other end, but I think it's going to be an amazing experience.
"It's been really great to watch Naomi play when I was growing up. She's definitely an inspiration."
Leading the men's charge will be 20th seed Alexei Popyrin, looking forward to his first "tennis Ashes'' battle at Wimbledon against British wildcard Arthur Fery.
"He's a good player, like all the Brits, they grow up on grass, know how to play on the surface, and I've heard his dad may be a member of this club, so he knows the place inside out," Popyrin said.
"He'll have the home crowd on his side, so that will also be a little bit of a challenge, but I'm feeling good and I'm ready to go."
AUSTRALIANS IN ACTION ON DAY ONE OF WIMBLEDON
(Prefix number denotes seeding) (WC = wildcard) (Q = qualifier)
MEN
(20) Alexei Popyrin v (WC) Arthur Fery (GBR)
Jordan Thompson v Vit Kopriva (CZE)
Chris O'Connell v (Q) Adrian Mannarino (FRA)
James Duckworth v (25) Felix Auger-Aliassime (CAN)
WOMEN
Olivia Gadecki v Greet Minnen (BEL)
Kim Birrell v (22) Donna Vekic (CRO)
Ajla Tomljanovic v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS)
Talia Gibson (Q) v Naomi Osaka (JPN)

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Sydney Morning Herald
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The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
Alex Johnston has scored 209 NRL tries. We mapped every single one of them
Never the biggest. Often not even the fastest. And by many measures of a modern winger, which he freely acknowledges, not the best. Nonetheless, Alex Johnston sits on the precipice of rugby league history. Three four-pointers shy of equalling Ken Irvine's all-time Australian record of 212 tries, it is not a matter of if Johnston breaks new ground. Or even when, with two games against the Dragons and Roosters to come this season. The Rabbitohs flyer turns 31 in January and is on South Sydney's books for another two years. His try-scoring feats are really a matter of just how far will he go – and how much further can he extend one of rugby league's more astounding numbers? Particularly when you break down exactly how he's got to this very point – 209 tries and counting. Johnston makes no bones about playing outside the best left edge of the past five years. He knows Cody Walker and Latrell Mitchell have put plenty of his tries on a platter, and told the Herald exactly that this week. 'I love playing with 'T-Mitt' [Mitchell],' Johnston said. 'Cody Walker has given me most of my tries, but Trell would be the second most.' The boot of Adam Reynolds and the brute force of Greg Inglis are more than handy options to call upon as well. Burgess brothers Sam and George, Manly enforcer Nathan Brown and now-Rabbitohs staffer John Sutton have all leant a hand over the years as well. Johnston's place atop rugby league's greatest try-scorers is assured. Immortals in waiting, premiership-winners, Origin and Kangaroos champions all lie in his wake. Between them, the top 11 (Matt Sing and Hazem El Masri rank equal 10th on 159 tries) try-scorers in history have crossed the line no less than 1960 times. And as to how far can Johnston go? Champion Data has pegged his average try-scoring haul at 17.2 tries per season, or almost nine tries from every 10 games he has played. Injuries have curtailed that rate in the past two seasons. But Johnston has a new two-year deal with Souths that will see him through 2026 and 2027. And it's hard to imagine the likes of Walker, Mitchell, Cameron Murray and the like playing any less than they have in the past 18 months – so a yearly haul of 12-14 tries to match his past two seasons seems a fair, if conservative, stab. As reported by this masthead, Johnston has a clause in his new Rabbitohs deal to negotiate at any time with the incoming PNG franchise for 2028, by which point Johnston will be 33. If he's still playing, the smart money is it will be for the NRL's newest side. Adding another 20-30 tries by the time retirement calls feels like a reasonable estimate, so too a new high-water mark of 230-240 tries. And as for who could eventually take the record from him? Daniel Tupou (182 tries and 34 years old) and Josh Addo-Carr (153 tries, 30) are his closest contemporaries, but time is against them. Titans flyer Alofiana Khan-Pereira is the only current player who can trump Johnston's strike-rate. But he's struggled for a game this year at the wooden spooners too. Ronaldo Mulitalo's record surprises a little, with both he and Xavier Coates in with a shot if they keep playing and scoring for another decade. As we mention Tupou, the once baby giraffe who came to truly dominate the airways and left wing for the Roosters, he and Johnston have been the game's most consistent try-scorers of the past decade. Tupou's hat-trick against Canterbury took him past Steve 'Beaver' Menzies into fourth on the all-time list just last week, and he will play on into his 15th season at Moore Park. The double century beckons. Looking at Johnston's year-on-year record, it effectively boils down to this: if he's on the paddock, he's scoring tries. The 2018 campaign – when Souths played a preliminary final under Anthony Seibold and Johnston played the entire year at fullback – is the only season when Johnston was fit and didn't finish with a bagful of tries. The 2021 and 2022 seasons are particular, record-breaking outliers (no-one else scored 30 tries in back-to-back seasons) for Johnston thanks to the introduction of set restarts and attacking players like Walker and Mitchell running riot. Lastly, spare a thought for the Tigers – who always seem to feature in these types of statistics from the past decade, for obvious reasons. Johnston's 20 tries against the joint-venture make them his favourite rival, closely followed by Parramatta and the Roosters (18 apiece). The Rabbitohs won't play finals this year, and are doing well to dodge the wooden spoon. But Johnston securing his share of rugby league history against the Tricolours would go down a treat on the cardinal and myrtle side of Anzac Parade.