logo
Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

Perth Now6 hours ago

Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament.
The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals.
"We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment."
Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes.
"He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian.
"But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well."
But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier.
It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago.
That was by retirement after the Italian pulled out but here he was beaten fair and square, with Bublik using his huge serve and swashbuckling shotmaking to continue the best month of his career.
Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2).
With agencies

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle
Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament. The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals. "We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment." Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes. "He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian. "But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well." But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier. It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago. Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2). With agencies Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament. The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals. "We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment." Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes. "He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian. "But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well." But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier. It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago. Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2). With agencies Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament. The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals. "We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment." Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes. "He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian. "But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well." But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier. It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago. Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2). With agencies Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament. The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals. "We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment." Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes. "He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian. "But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well." But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier. It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago. Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2). With agencies

Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle
Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

Perth Now

time6 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Bublik sprinkles magic on grass to sink Sinner in Halle

Alexander Bublik has built on his shock Roland Garros run, sprinkling some of that clay-court magic on the grass courts of Halle as he earned the biggest win of his career over world No.1 Jannik Sinner at the pre-Wimbledon German tournament. The enigmatic but immensely talented Kazakh Bublik, who reached the quarter-finals of the French Open before being beaten by Sinner, gained his revenge with a 3-6 6-3 6-4 triumph to reach the quarter-finals. "We are tennis players and we try to win every match we play but it is a special one," Bublik said afterwards. "I had never beaten a number one in the world. It is an accomplishment." Continuing his dazzling form from Paris where he included Australian No.1 Alex de Minaur among his victims, Bublik fired 36 winners, including 15 aces, to overpower the top seed and earn a sensational win after two hours and four minutes. "He is an unbelievable player and I was not thinking that I could beat him," said Bublik, who is the first player since last August other than Carlos Alcaraz to defeat the Italian. "But I had a few chances and executed them well. I kept serving. I had better chances than at Roland Garros. I stayed there, tried to return as much and serve aces, so the ball doesn't come back and it worked really well." But it was another tough loss for Sinner, in his first tournament since his heartbreaking five-and-a-half hour defeat by Alcaraz in the French Open final 11 days earlier. It was a meeting of the last two champions of the event, with Bublik's only previous win over Sinner coming on the same stage two years ago. That was by retirement after the Italian pulled out but here he was beaten fair and square, with Bublik using his huge serve and swashbuckling shotmaking to continue the best month of his career. Second seed Alexander Zverev was also pushed all the way but survived a final-set tie-break to defeat Italy's Lorenzo Sonego 3-6 6-4 7-6 (7-2). With agencies

Emma Raducanu stalker's scary Wimbledon act before security stepped in
Emma Raducanu stalker's scary Wimbledon act before security stepped in

News.com.au

time6 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Emma Raducanu stalker's scary Wimbledon act before security stepped in

British tennis star Emma Raducanu's stalker horror has continued after the same man was caught trying to apply for Wimbledon tickets. The All England Lawn Tennis Club's security system had red flagged the man's name after the tennis star reported him to her team. It comes after the horror incident that saw Raducanu, who 'couldn't see the ball through tears', hide in fear from her stalker at the Dubai Tennis Championship in February. An All England Club source told The Sun that the man who followed Raducanu to four countries had applied for the ballot last year before the Dubai stalking incident. Watch footage of the Dubai incident below After the incident the club removed his name from the ballot for the tournament starting June 30. He reportedly didn't try to apply for a ticket once he was given a restraining order. Raducanu suffered an apparent panic attack in Dubai earlier in the year after spotting a man in the crowd during her second-round match with Karolina Muchova. The same man had previously followed her to separate tournaments across the globe in Singapore, Abu Dhabi and Doha. British star Raducanu hid herself behind the umpire's chair after spotting the individual in the crowd displaying 'fixated behaviour'. Raducanu's reaction sparked concern among spectators, before the man was removed from the crowd and taken from the stands to be detained by local police. It was revealed he had also given Raducanu a letter and asked for a photo in a coffee shop at the player hotel the day before, which reportedly left her unnerved. The US Open champion reported the man to her team but the information was not passed on to the Women's Tennis Association until the following day. The Dubai Tournament was also not notified of the individual's presence or Raducanu's concerns until the following day. He was handed a restraining order from the Dubai police and his name was circulated among tennis authorities. 'I saw him in the first game of the match and I was like, 'I don't know how I'm going to finish',' Raducanu told reporters at the time. 'I literally couldn't see the ball through tears. I could barely breathe. 'I was like, 'I need to just take a breather'.' Wimbledon security is routinely reviewed with roughly 1,000 people working in security at the Championships. As well as the screening around the ballot, which caught Raducanu's stalker out, there are checks and balances employed to screen those in the queue. Anyone who gains entry to the championship has to be registered with Wimbledon and hand over personal information. Raducanu's stalker was never named publicly by the authorities following the incident in Dubai. The tennis star's horror experience has shone a spotlight on the issues faced by female tennis players. The grand slam winner has had a hellish stalking experience before, revealing in 2022 that she was 'constantly looking over her shoulder' after stalker Amrit Magar, 35, walked 37 kilometres to her home in South East London. Magar had a five-year restraining order put in place after stealing her dad's shoe and leaving gifts and notes for the young tennis star.

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