
'Props to the Moms': Bencic Reaches Her First Wimbledon Quarterfinal on Ninth Attempt
Bencic, who had lost in the fourth round on three previous occasions, failed to convert five match points while serving at 5–3 in the second set. But on the sixth one, Alexandrova sent a forehand long on No. 1 Court. 'For you guys, it was entertaining,' Bencic said about that marathon game at 5–3 where Alexandrova finally converted her fourth break point to stay in the match. 'For me, it was a big stress.'
The 28-year-old Bencic's best result at a Grand Slam was reaching the semifinals at the 2019 US Open, where she also reached the quarters on two other occasions. The Tokyo Olympic champion, playing at Wimbledon for the ninth time, had not been into the last eight at any of the other three majors until now. 'I always got stuck in the fourth round (at Wimbledon),' Bencic said in an on-court interview. 'So it was so important for me today to be able to kind of break through to the quarterfinal.'
Bencic missed last year's grass-court Grand Slam tournament while she was on maternity leave, having given birth to her first child – a daughter named Bella – in April 2024. She said traveling with a child on tour is still relatively easy while Bella is so young, but that she's spending a lot more time taking pictures when she's at tournaments. 'I'm juggling it like every mom does,' Bencic said. 'So props to the moms.'
Bencic will play the winner between seventh-seeded Mirra Andreeva and No. 10 Emma Navarro, who were playing on Centre Court later. Navarro beat defending champion Barbora Krejcikova in the previous round, ensuring there will be a first-time winner of the women's tournament this year. Also later, No. 8 Iga Swiatek was playing Clara Tauson, and No. 19 Liudmila Samsonova faced Jessica Bouzas Maneiro.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
6 hours ago
- Arab News
Crawley's last-over ‘theatrics' against India spark time-wasting row at Lord's
LONDON: England and India accused each other of sharp practice after Zak Crawley's conduct at Lord's on Saturday drew an angry reaction from visiting captain Shubman Gill. For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport


Al Arabiya
8 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Mia Pohankova of Slovakia Wins Wimbledon Junior Title by Beating American Julieta Pareja
Mia Pohankova of Slovakia won the Wimbledon juniors title on Saturday by beating sixth-seeded Julieta Pareja of the United States 6-3, 6-1. The 16-year-old Pohankova broke her opponent six times on No. 1 Court to secure her first junior Grand Slam title. She is the second Slovakian in a row to win the title after Renata Jamrichova last year. 'It's an incredible moment because Renata won last year and two Slovak girls won two consecutive years,' Pohankova said. 'Unbelievable for Slovakian tennis.' In the boys doubles final Oskari Paldanius of Finland and Alan Wazny of Poland beat Oliver Bonding of Britain and Jagger Leach of the US 5-7, 7-6 (6), 10-5 after a Champions tiebreaker. Leach is the son of Lindsay Davenport, who won the Wimbledon women's singles title in 1999. In the boys final on Sunday, sixth-seeded Ivan Ivanov of Bulgaria will take on American qualifier Ronit Karki.


Arab News
8 hours ago
- Arab News
What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Stoic Mindset'
Author: Mark Tuitert Olympic champion speed skater Mark Tuitert merges ancient philosophy with modern resilience in 'The Stoic Mindset,' published in 2024. The guide transcends typical self-help tropes, offering strategies to transform adversity into strength through the principles of Stoicism. This ancient philosophy provides a tool kit for staying calm, focused, and strong in the face of life's chaos. Emerging in Ancient Greece and later popularized in Rome, it is less about dusty theories and more about how to live well. Tuitert's narrative begins with his own crucible: the pressure-cooker world of elite athletics, where injuries and setbacks threatened his career. His discovery of Stoicism became his mental armor. The book meticulously unpacks core tenets, focusing on actionable responses, reframing obstacles as opportunities, and cultivating 'amor fati' (love of fate). What resonates most is Tuitert's rejection of passive acceptance. Instead, he advocates active resilience, using journaling, mindfulness, and preemptive adversity training to fortify mental agility. His chapter on failure dissects how embracing vulnerability fuels growth, illustrated by his comeback from a career-threatening injury to clinch gold at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. Tuitert's prose is refreshingly pragmatic. He avoids academic jargon, grounding Seneca and Marcus Aurelius' wisdom in relatable anecdotes — from navigating corporate burnout to parenting challenges. His emphasis on practice over theory stands out as well. Some may criticize the athletic parallels as niche, but Tuitert universalizes them deftly. While examining Tuitert's practical Stoicism, I happened to contrast his Olympic-forged resilience with Nietzsche's fiery critique of Stoic detachment, revealing how one stabilizes storms while the other ignites revolutions. I found that Tuitert seeks mastery through emotional discipline, whereas Nietzsche champions vitality through embracing chaos. In an era of digital overload and anxiety, 'The Stoic Mindset' is a tactical manifesto for clarity. Tuitert's genius lies in making a 2,000-year-old philosophy feel urgently contemporary, proving that true victory is not avoiding storms but learning to dance in the rain.