logo
Bublik falls to Munar in Wimbledon opener

Bublik falls to Munar in Wimbledon opener

CNA6 hours ago
LONDON :Wimbledon dark horse Alexander Bublik's bubble was burst in the opening round of the Grand Slam when the Kazakh was dragged into a battle by Spaniard Jaume Munar and beaten 6-4 3-6 4-6 7-6(5) 6-2 on a piercingly hot Tuesday.
Bublik, fresh from capturing his second Halle title last month, cut a frustrated figure towards the end of a lacklustre opening set against Munar on Court 14 where he surrendered his serve two times and barely dipped into his bag of tricks.
Having swapped his headband for a cap to shield himself from the heat, Bublik appeared a player transformed in the next set as he quickly found his range and erased the deficit after forcing Munar into a backhand error on set point.
The big crowds braving conditions on the outside court to catch the Kazakh trickster had to settle for a more workmanlike display early in the third set as Bublik fought back from 1-3 down before offering glimpses of his drop-shot brilliance.
With his tail up after securing the third set, 28th seed Bublik raced ahead in the fourth and was serving for the match at 5-4 before Munar clawed back to make it two sets apiece via the tiebreak.
Munar capitalised from there as the world number 55 took control of the match with an early break in the decider and sent his opponent tumbling out with minimum fuss.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

F1 talks up Silverstone's 'forever' future before Starmer meeting
F1 talks up Silverstone's 'forever' future before Starmer meeting

CNA

time20 minutes ago

  • CNA

F1 talks up Silverstone's 'forever' future before Starmer meeting

LONDON :Silverstone circuit could stay on the Formula One calendar forever with no real rival to host the British Grand Prix, the sport's chief executive Stefano Domenicali said on Tuesday ahead of this weekend's race. The Italian told reporters he could not imagine a championship without Britain, home to seven of the 10 teams, but there was also no chance of the country having more than one race. "I do believe that... Silverstone has the right characteristics to stay forever in the calendar," said Domenicali, who will visit Downing Street on Wednesday with some drivers and team bosses to meet Prime Minister Keir Starmer. "There's no other places where you can develop such a huge event in the UK. I don't see any other places, to be honest." Silverstone hosted the first world championship race in 1950 and has a contract until 2034. Last year it hosted the biggest crowd of any event on the calendar with 480,000 spectators. Miami and Austria's Red Bull Ring have the longest deals, both running to 2041, and Domenicali saw no reason why Silverstone could not join them although the circuit management had yet to seek an extension. The meeting at Downing Street is billed as an informal celebration of the 75th anniversary of the first F1 championship race at Silverstone, but it is also a chance to raise issues the sport wants addressed. Domenicali said he would highlight how much the "F1 ecosystem" contributes to Britain as the beating heart of a global sport, and the risk of losing that primacy due to restrictions on staff and movement. Formula One figures calculate the sport brings 12 billion pounds ($16.48 billion) annually to the UK economy with 6,000 people directly employed and a further 41,000 working in a supply chain of 4,500 companies. The Italian said visa issues post-Brexit had affected the deployment of staff from race to race around Europe, while costly and time-consuming paperwork had complicated logistics and made it harder to draw up the race calendar. "It is impossible to think in the short term that the teams will move out from the UK because of this limitation but the teams will organise themselves maybe in a different way," he warned. "What we are asking is not to change the decision that your country has taken, because it's not our mandate and our role, but to facilitate things that are having a burden on the economical side. ($1 = 0.7281 pounds)

Second seed Coco Gauff knocked out of Wimbledon in first round
Second seed Coco Gauff knocked out of Wimbledon in first round

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Second seed Coco Gauff knocked out of Wimbledon in first round

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Coco Gauff of the US (left) congratulates Ukraine's Dayana Yastremska on winning their first-round match. LONDON - American second seed Coco Gauff suffered a stunning Wimbledon defeat as the French Open champion was beaten 7-6 (7/3), 6-1 by Ukranian world number 42 Dayana Yastremska on July 1. Gauff was expected to make a strong run at the All England Club after her triumph at Roland Garros in June. But instead of building on her success on the Paris clay, the 21-year-old endured her earliest Grand Slam exit since another first-round loss at Wimbledon in 2023. Yastremska powered to victory in 78 minutes on Court One, with Gauff joining third seed Jessica Pegula and fifth seed Zheng Qinwen as high-profile departures from the tournament on July 1. Gauff, a two-time Grand Slam champion, has failed to get past the fourth round in each of her six visits to Wimbledon. She paid the price for an unusually error-strewn display featuring nine double-faults, 29 unforced errors and just six winners. Yastremska has previously claimed she has an allergy to grass, but the 25-year-old's shock success against Gauff extended an impressive recent run on the surface. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Seniors can claim $800 SG60 vouchers from July 1; adults to get $600 in vouchers from July 22 Singapore NSman, 30, dies in hospital after collapsing outside Maju Camp Asia Thai PM's suspension could spell end of Shinawatra clan's era of political dominance Singapore Judge rejects woman's claim that she owns 99% of Bukit Timah condo mostly paid for by ex-boyfriend Singapore 'He fought till the end': Man who survived acid attack as a baby dies of cancer at 26 Singapore Trial opens for 3 women who allegedly organised procession outside Istana Business Do not overcommit to a single solution in a multi-polar world, says ex-foreign minister George Yeo Singapore 1MDB saga: Standard Chartered Bank disputes $3.4 billion claim by liquidators in Singapore Known as one of the more glamourous players on the women's tour for her high-profile Instagram modelling, Yastremska made the Nottingham final and the Eastbourne quarter-finals in June. 'It was a great match today. I was really on fire, even my nails have fire on them,' Yastremska said. 'Playing Coco is special. These courts are made for the greatest players so I'm very grateful to play here. 'It's really unexpected. I love playing on grass. I feel this year we are kind of friends. I hope the road can continue for me.' AFP

Kvitova bids farewell to the place that turned her from a 'nobody to somebody'
Kvitova bids farewell to the place that turned her from a 'nobody to somebody'

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

Kvitova bids farewell to the place that turned her from a 'nobody to somebody'

LONDON :It has been 14 years, or 5,113 days to be precise, since a beaming Petra Kvitova saw her name being added in gold print to the famed green honours board at Wimbledon moments after she had held aloft the Venus Rosewater Dish for the first time. Yet on Tuesday, after she signed off on her 17-year Wimbledon adventure with a first-round 6-3 6-1 defeat by American 10th seed Emma Navarro, the Czech wasted little time in giving a vivid blow-by-blow account of that magical fortnight. "I do remember very clearly what happened out there. I do remember (the semis) with Vika (Victoria Azarenka) was three sets. It was always big battles to play with her," said the 35-year-old Kvitova, who gave birth to her son during last year's Wimbledon fortnight. "To be honest, I don't know where the (6-3 6-4) performance came from in that final (against Maria Sharapova). I was very grateful that it came in the right moment, that I served it out for the match. That was something which I will never be able to describe because it was such a surprise. "I do remember the happiness I had when I was holding the trophy. I do remember my English wasn't in a good place either, so I was more nervous for the press conferences than for the matches." On Tuesday, she proved that her English had also come a long way as she charmed the Court One crowd with her farewell speech and even announced her own press conference to the world's media. "I will miss Wimbledon, I will miss tennis, I will miss you fans but I am ready for the next chapter of life as well," the 2011 and 2014 champion told the crowd after receiving a standing ovation. "I can't wait to be back as a member." There really is no place like Wimbledon for Kvitova - it is the only Grand Slam stage where she has won titles and it also where she got engaged to her coach, and now husband, Jiri Vanek in 2022. "This place holds the best memories I could wish for. I never dreamed of winning Wimbledon and I did it twice so this is something very special," she added. "I was lucky to have a beautiful court in my last match, which happened on the Court One, which I do have a lot of memories, as well. Even (as) I left, it was very, very special, emotional and happy place for me." While the popular Czech can look forward to returning to her "happy place" for years to come without the pressure of being a player, few can forget the horrendous injury she suffered in her racket-holding left hand after being attacked with a knife during a break-in at her home in 2016. With nerves severed, medical specialists gave her only a 10 per cent chance of playing competitively again but five months later she was back on the WTA Tour. While she never managed to recapture her Wimbledon glory days, failing to go beyond the last 16 in seven subsequent appearances, she did contest the 2019 Australian Open final. After returning from a maternity break, she has won only one match, which made her decide that her body had had enough and that she would call it a day after this year's U.S. Open. "The second (Wimbledon) title was the best. That was... satisfying, proving that I can play well and I'm a good player," she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store