
Boulter and Raducanu out of Queen's doubles
Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter's doubles partnership at Queen's came to an end after two matches with defeat in the quarter-finals.The Britons lost 6-2 7-5 to top seeds Lyudmyla Kichenok and Erin Routliffe in front of a packed court one at Queen's Club in London.
They were outclassed in the first set as Ukraine's Kichenok and New Zealand's Routliffe, who have won three Grand Slam doubles titles between them, raced to a 4-1 lead before taking the set with another break three games later.Raducanu and Boulter came from 4-1 down to level at 4-4 in the second set.Their best chance to turn the match around came in the following game, but they failed to convert four break points.Despite saving three match points three games later, they succumbed to defeat.Raducanu faces Rebecca Sramkova in the last 16 of the singles on Thursday and Boulter takes on fifth seed Diana Shnaider.Raducanu can replace Boulter as British number one if she equals Boulter's results at Queen's, which is hosting a women's tournament for the first time in 52 years.Boulter has held the position for two years since she took over when 2021 US Open champion Raducanu slipped down the rankings following injury and inconsistent form.

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


Times
19 minutes ago
- Times
Padel is the UK's new obsession. Meet the companies making it happen
Like many of the UK's growing ranks of padel devotees, Sammy Arora, 24, was hooked from his first swing of the racket. It was seven years ago, and he was sharing a court with his family, 'who hadn't really played sports before' but still managed a decent rally. As the Aroras found, padel is easy to pick up, regardless of age or fitness. Often described as tennis with walls — which the ball can bounce off — it is the UK's fastest-growing sport. It wasn't until Arora's university days in Durham, where he wrote his dissertation on the potential growth of padel, that he began to mould his passion for the sport into a business idea. 'I spoke to my dad and he said, 'It's a great opportunity, you've got to do it.'' • Explore the Sunday Times 100 — interviews, company profiles and more His father, Bobby Arora, knows a good business opportunity when he sees one: he is a multimillionaire who made his fortune from building the budget retailer B&M. He put up the majority of the £450,000 Sammy needed to open his first Pure Padel club in Cheshire, with three courts and a shop. 'I managed to balance my last year of uni and starting the business', Arora says. 'My first site opened in October 2023, about five months after I graduated.' Now, just over two years since sitting his finals (he got a 2:1), Arora is among the entrepreneurs feeding the craze for padel in the UK. It has drawn 400,000 players at last count, David Beckham and Stormzy among them. The Lawn Tennis Association, the sport's governing body, says there are now 893 padel courts at 300 venues across Britain. These courts can be indoors, often in converted warehouses; or outdoors, either exposed to the elements or covered by a giant canopy. Arora is hedging his bets and creating a mix because 'no one really knows' which will prove the most popular in the long run. Pure Padel now has five clubs, with another seven planned this year. His father continues to finance the business, having so far invested £1.4 million together with other friends and family, some of whom also assist in running the venture. Sammy's uncle, Simon Arora, B&M's former chief executive, is 'helping on the legal leases and land deals'. Paul McDonald, the retailer's former chief financial officer, is 'helping with the company finances'. • The No 1 networking spot now? The padel court The result, so far, has been sales of £1.6 million in the eight months to the end of March 2025. The young company hasn't yet achieved the propulsion to make it on to the main Sunday Times 100 table. But it is one of a growing number of padel startups — our Ones to Watch — that have flourished in parallel with padel's growth in the UK. When Michael Gradon started another of our promising future stars, the club operator Game4Padel, in 2019 'most people hadn't even heard of the sport' and thought it was a 'mad idea', he says. But Gradon, 66, had already caught the bug, having played padel in Spain, home to 5.5 million players. 'We managed to persuade Andy Murray to come in as a small investor,' says Gradon, a former Wimbledon board member. Other investors, including the footballers Virgil van Dijk and Jamie Vardy, have since handed the business more than £10 million, for a valuation of £27 million. Game4Padel now runs 21 padel clubs in the UK and four overseas, and generated sales of £2.4 million last year. It plans to open about ten more clubs this year, but Gradon notes the UK is still far behind countries like Spain. 'We're still in the very early stages of the boom,' he says. Operators including Game4Padel sometimes pair their padel offering with pickleball, another fast-growing racket sport, played on a smaller court with a slower ball. But whereas padel courts can cost about £160,000 to build when an overhead canopy is included, a tennis court — or even indoor badminton courts — can be easily converted to pickleball. It just requires a lower net and some lines, meaning local groups of players can improvise with existing facilities. Yet finding business success with padel isn't easy. As well as the expense of building courts, planning permission and building regulations can mean projects take years to bring to fruition. Then there is the noise: complaints from nearby residents about the noise of hard shots add to the challenges of site selection. But that hasn't stopped enthusiasts rushing headlong into the market. Gradon likens it to a 'gold rush'. Paul Regan, whose company, Pro Padel Courts, has six years' experience in installing courts, says clueless construction companies are flooding the market, some of which 'cut corners on groundworks which fail, and courts have fallen down'. A serial entrepreneur, Regan expects his company to build about 100 courts this year, almost doubling its present tally. He thinks this will lift sales beyond the £900,000 his company served up in the 12 months to February. Regan, who is also a former tennis coach, is in little doubt that padel will 'overtake tennis very quickly' in the UK. Part of the appeal is the social aspect of the game. Operators like Pure Padel and The Padel Club are opening bars and cafés alongside courts. Also, as Arora says, compared with sports like tennis, 'it's a lot more informal, you can wear trackie bottoms'. • Meet the padel addicts spending £100 a week Pure Padel, Game4Padel and the like — others among our Ones to Watch include Padel4All and Smash Padel — are up against more established businesses that have turned their attention to the sport. Slazenger Padel Clubs, backed by Frasers Group, and the five-a-side football provider Powerleague are spending millions to roll out courts. Foreign operators are making inroads too. The Denmark-headquartered Rocket has four clubs in the UK, having sold its suite of clubs in Sweden and Norway to focus on the UK market. The race is on to spread padel across the UK, and profit from the fruits of its popularity. But for now padel entrepreneurs see no end in sight to Britain's appetite for the game.


Times
31 minutes ago
- Times
Montirex
R ank 18 Annual sales growth over three years 144.03% Sportswear brand Best friends since attending primary school together, Daniel Yuen, 27, and Kieran Riddell-Austin, 29, launched their sportswear brand in 2019 to fill a gap in the market for an affordable, stylish alternative to the big labels. Helped by distribution deals with the retailers Footasylum and JD Sports, the duo — who still own 100 per cent of the business — grew sales to £76.7 million in 2024. They expect to almost double this to £130 million this year as they take the Liverpool-based business to Europe. Explore the Sunday Times 100 — interviews, company profiles and more


Times
31 minutes ago
- Times
Two Circles
Rank 92 Annual sales growth over three years 60.46% Sports marketing agency Appearing on this league table for the fourth year in a row, this digital agency uses data to build relationships with sports fans. Since starting in 2011, it has built a roster of clients including the Premier League and Wimbledon's tennis championships. Under its co-founder and chief executive, Gareth Balch, 42, the company more than doubled sales to £152.3 million last year when the private equity firm Charterhouse acquired a majority stake; the deal reportedly valued Two Circles at about £250 million. Liv Garfield, 49, the chief executive of Severn Trent, became chairwoman soon after. Explore the Sunday Times 100 — interviews, company profiles and more