logo
Khachanov, Hurkacz advance in Den Bosch, Samsonova stunned by qualifier

Khachanov, Hurkacz advance in Den Bosch, Samsonova stunned by qualifier

Reuters2 days ago

June 11 (Reuters) - Poland's Hubert Hurkacz and Russia's Karen Khachanov made winning starts to their Libema Open campaigns in Den Bosch, Netherlands on Wednesday, while top seed Liudmila Samsonova suffered a shock loss to Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine.
In her first appearance in a WTA Tour main draw, world number 231 Branstine sealed a breakthrough 6-4 5-7 6-1 win over defending champion Samsonova.
Their match had been halted on Tuesday due to darkness at one set apiece, but Branstine returned to dominate the decider, not facing a single break point while converting two of her four break opportunities.
Branstine, who was born in California and represented the United States until 2017, will next face fellow qualifier Elena-Gabriela Ruse of Romania.
Fifth seed Hubert Hurkacz overcame a back issue, requiring two medical timeouts, to defeat Spain's Roberto Bautista Agut 7-6(2) 6-4 and book his spot in the second round.
The 28-year-old Pole will next take on 22-year-old Estonian Mark Lajal, who beat Serbia's Laslo Djere 6-2 6-4.
"It's my first time here and I'm really loving it," said Hurkacz.
"It's always nice to play on grass. Obviously, the end was a little bit tricky, but hopefully I will be better for tomorrow. My back hurts a bit, but I will do some work with the physio later."
Khachanov, the third seed, prevailed in a third-set tiebreak to claim a hard-fought 6-3, 5-7, 7-6(4) victory over American Mackenzie McDonald and reach the quarter-finals.
The Russian will play Canadian Gabriel Diallo, who saved two match points to overcome sixth seed Jordan Thompson 4-6 6-1 7-5.
Britain's Dan Evans came from a set down to defeat Australian Rinky Hijikata 3-6 6-4 6-3 and Greece's Maria Sakkari eased past Dutch wildcard Anouk Koevermans 6-3 6-4.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Has Emma Raducanu found a love match with dashing fellow-teenage protege she has known since she was six?
Has Emma Raducanu found a love match with dashing fellow-teenage protege she has known since she was six?

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Has Emma Raducanu found a love match with dashing fellow-teenage protege she has known since she was six?

Tennis fans wondering how Emma Raducanu blazed back to British No 1 ranking at Queen's this week should take a look at her support team. Roaring her on as she reached the quarter-finals was not just her coach Nick Cavaday and agent Thomas Houchin, but a dashing former tennis protege close to her heart, Benjamin Heynold. He and Raducanu, 22, have known each other since the age of six and have represented Team GB together. Heynold, 24, is a student at the the University of North Carolina in the US and friends suggest that his long friendship with Emma may have turned to romance. Raducanu split up with her Harrow-educated boyfriend, Carlo Agostinelli, last year. Agostinelli, a former head boy of pricey private school Harrow, is the son of tycoon Robert Agostinelli, the co-founder and chairman of private equity firm Rhone Group. The tennis star's year-long whirlwind romance with him was said to have been her most serious relationship yet. She previously revealed that she wasn't allowed to date while growing up in Bromley, South East London, which made her resent her strict her parents, Ion and Renee Raducanu. 'My parents were very much against [boyfriends] as it interfered with training,' she told The Times. 'When I was younger I wasn't even allowed to hang out with my girl friends. 'A lot of the time I was very resentful. 'But it made me very confident and comfortable in my own company, which is also a big strength.' Having changed coaches seven times in the space of four years as she tried to recapture the form that saw her win a Grand Slam at the 2021 US Open, perhaps Benjamin is her ace? Heynold watched on as Raducanu bowed out in the Queen's quarter-finals with a 6-2 6-4 loss to Chinese first-seed Qinwen Zheng. Raducanu, who officially supplants Katie Boulter as British number one on Monday, planned for next week's Berlin Open to be the next step on her quest to secure seeding at Wimbledon, but required an off-court medical time out before the second set concerning her ongoing back issues. The 22-year-old was the last Briton standing in this new WTA 500 event, the first time women's tennis had been played at Queen's since 1973. 'I'm not overly concerned that it's something serious, but I know it's something that's very annoying and needs proper and careful management,' said Raducanu, who revealed she had been taped up for stability and took some painkillers. Quizzed about whether she was a fitness doubt for Wimbledon, she replied: 'Well, I don't know. Like it's been lingering for the last few weeks, and I have had, like, back issues before. I think it's just a vulnerability of mine. I know I need to take good care of it.' The new British number one confirmed coach Mark Petchey will be able to join her should the Berlin plan go ahead, but does not know if former coach Nick Cavaday, who stepped back in January due to ill health, will also be on the trip after joining her in London this week. Raducanu conceded that making the seeding cut for Wimbledon 'obviously helps' when it comes to swerving difficult draws in the early rounds, but added: 'I think maybe my goals have slightly shifted from being seeded to actually improving my game. 'When I play those top players, making it closer and feeling more competitive rather than just feeling, 'OK, I maybe get to the third round of a slam but then lose comfortably to one of the top'.

Former Wimbledon champion reveals she's been cycling to Queen's on LIME BIKE after her car was stolen
Former Wimbledon champion reveals she's been cycling to Queen's on LIME BIKE after her car was stolen

The Sun

time4 hours ago

  • The Sun

Former Wimbledon champion reveals she's been cycling to Queen's on LIME BIKE after her car was stolen

HEATHER WATSON has been using an electric Lime bike to travel to a new tennis event in south-west London – after being driven mad by a stolen car saga. A first WTA tournament at Queen's Club in Baron's Court since 1973 works well for Watson because it is only a 10-minute cycle ride from her flat. 4 4 4 4 While some of her rivals will jump in official cars to and from the venue, the British No.7 prefers two wheels instead, a much greener mode of transportation. Her preference are the green-and-white Lime bikes, which can reach a top speed of 15mph and are easily accessible for anyone living in the capital. Watson – who won the Wimbledon mixed doubles title with Finn Henri Kontinen in 2016 – had her car stolen in the summer of 2023. The Guernsey-born ace's Range Rover was nicked from an underground car park at her West London home on the night she belatedly celebrated her 31st birthday with friends. It happened in the week before the grass-court season started and at the time, she said she was pulling her hair out dealing with a time-consuming insurance company. A tracking company told her the vehicle was gone and though it was eventually found by police – and taken to a Charlton car pound – her problems only started when it came to the 'ball-ache' of dealing with the insurance detail. On Thursday afternoon, qualifier Watson was on her bike out of the premises as she lost 6-4 6-2 to former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina. After that defeat, she revealed to the media why she was shunning cars, saying: '(Bikes) are my means of transport. JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS 'Since my car was stolen, and it's just been the bane of my life, I'm in the process of selling it. 'Still such a pain. Don't get a car. That's my advice. I'm a Lime biker through and through. 'It'll be the first time seeing him' - Olympic star Heather Watson reveals plans to watch Scottish footie hero boyfriend 'Rain or shine, I'm on my bike, that's how I get to the NTC (National Tennis Centre) every day. 'That's how I got home yesterday from the site because it takes ten minutes. 'I love cycling, and I feel like it's kind of a type of meditation for me, as well. 'I just really enjoy being out in the fresh air cycling. It's a great warmup, about 20 minutes from where I live to the NTC, so it's perfect for me. 'I won't be getting another car. I'm a cyclist. They used to drive me crazy, but now I'm one of them, and I have a different perspective. 'How was my car stolen? Oh, I won't bore you, but a couple years ago it got stolen. 'And it's just been breaking down ever since. Insurance? Biggest scam ever. They just try and rinse you. 'Yeah, disaster. I get discriminated against because I'm an athlete. So your prices are already….forget the cars. Not forever, but for now.' The England Test team took up the mode of .

Emma Raducanu not ‘overly concerned' about ongoing back issue after Queen's exit
Emma Raducanu not ‘overly concerned' about ongoing back issue after Queen's exit

The Independent

time5 hours ago

  • The Independent

Emma Raducanu not ‘overly concerned' about ongoing back issue after Queen's exit

Emma Raducanu insisted she is not 'overly concerned' about her ongoing back issues but conceded she may need to re-think her next steps after bowing out in the Queen's quarter-finals with a 6-2 6-4 loss to Chinese first-seed Qinwen Zheng. Raducanu, who officially supplants Katie Boulter as British number one on Monday, planned for next week's Berlin Open to be the next step on her quest to secure seeding at Wimbledon, but required an off-court medical time out before the second set. The 22-year-old was the last Briton standing in this new WTA 500 event, the first time women's tennis had been played at Queen's since 1973. 'I'm not overly concerned that it's something serious, but I know it's something that's very annoying and needs proper and careful management,' said Raducanu, who revealed she had been taped up for stability and took some painkillers. Quizzed about whether she was a fitness doubt for Wimbledon, she replied: 'Well, I don't know. Like it's been lingering for the last few weeks, and I have had, like, back issues before. I think it's just a vulnerability of mine. I know I need to take good care of it.' Raducanu faced her toughest test yet in the world number five and Olympic champion Zheng, who opened the match with a double fault and conceded the next point before bouncing back to hold. The home favourite saved three break points to hold the fourth game and the set remained on serve until a topsy-turvy sixth, when Zheng sealed the first break of the afternoon at the fourth time of asking. The Chinese competitor then saved two break points to hold before breaking the Briton once more to wrap up the first set. Zheng initially struggled with her serve, but came back from a double break down in the second set, eventually forcing Raducanu to serve to stay in the match. Zheng quickly went 40-0 up in the 10th game, but three successive missed service returns left open the door for Raducanu to come back into the contest, ultimately clinching her place in the semi-finals when the Briton's return went long. Raducanu also endured three interruptions during her service games – twice for problems with Zheng's racket, and another so Zheng could swap her shoes, pauses the Briton admitted were not 'necessarily ideal.' The new British number one confirmed coach Mark Petchey will be able to join her should the Berlin plan go ahead, but does not know if former coach Nick Cavaday, who stepped back in January due to ill health, will also be on the trip after joining her in London this week. Raducanu conceded that making the seeding cut for Wimbledon 'obviously helps' when it comes to swerving difficult draws in the early rounds, but added: 'I think maybe my goals have slightly shifted from being seeded to actually improving my game. 'When I play those top players, making it closer and feeling more competitive rather than just feeling, 'OK, I maybe get to the third round of a slam but then lose comfortably to one of the top'. 'I think I'd rather have a more competitive match, even if that means losing first round, second round. I think that, to be honest, is how I feel right now.' Saturday's first semi-final will see Germany's Tatjana Maria take on second seed Madison Keys, while Zheng will play American Amanda Anisimova.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store