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Australia's Jordan Thompson reaches Wimbledon's last 16 for first time in career

Australia's Jordan Thompson reaches Wimbledon's last 16 for first time in career

Jordan Thompson's run at Wimbledon has continued with the wounded warrior storming into the fourth round of his favourite event for the first time in his career.
Still harbouring a debilitating back injury that had him protesting after his two previous courageous five-set wins that even "snails move faster", Thompson looked in much better nick when he showed he had too much grass-court nous for Italian Luciano Darderi in their third-round clash, prevailing 6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.
It booked the battling Thompson his first last-16 appearance at Wimbledon in his ninth attempt and only the second fourth-round date of his grand slam career, matching his US Open performance of last year and 2020.
He is the first Australian to reach the fourth round at the grass-court slam this year, with both Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina having the chance to join him when they play on Saturday night (AEST).
In the amphitheatre of Court 18, the 31-year-old also managed to bypass the sort of nerve-shredding drama of his previous two matches, which he won in five-set slogs, this time nipping Darderi's attempted comeback in the bud after the Italian had taken the third set.
That raised the prospect that marathon man Thompson might be dragged into a seventh career five-setter at Wimbledon — he has won five and lost just one — only for him to reassert his quality against the 23-year-old Darderi, whose two wins at Wimbledon this year doubled his career tally of grass-court victories.
He will be relieved to have won in seven minutes under three hours to avoid any more pressure on his back, especially with a daunting last-16 outing awaiting against in-form fifth seed Taylor Fritz, who defeated Spain's 26th seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-4, 6-3, 6-7 (5-7), 6-1.
Earlier, Rinky Hijikata's daydream of pulling off the greatest of Wimbledon escapes against American big-hitter Ben Shelton lasted less than a minute when the pair resumed their controversially suspended late-evening match.
Hijikata had got the unexpected chance to live to fight another day after saving three match points and then being reprieved by a controversial postponement of play amid farcical scenes as darkness descended.
But when the match resumed on No.2 Court in afternoon sunshine with 10th seed Shelton serving for the match, everyone could see the funny side once he won all four points in just 55 seconds, including three booming aces, to complete the straightforward 6-2, 7-5, 6-3 victory in two hours 12 minutes.
"Last night's experience was bizarre … but that was probably an absolute clinic on how to serve out a match if you've got one game to go," Hijikata said.
"Yeah, credit to him. It's not easy to come out and serve out a match when you have a bit of pressure and you've had the night off. I thought it was a bloody good effort by him."
AAP
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