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Fantastic four put Aussie Wimbledon show back on track

Fantastic four put Aussie Wimbledon show back on track

The Advertiser10 hours ago
Australia's Wimbledon challenge has been reinvigorated after a disastrous opening day, with the national No.1s Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina leading a four-win revival.
On another sweltering day in London on Tuesday, the pair raced into the second round by early afternoon and were joined by Aleksandar Vukic and Rinky Hijikata.
Seven Australians had lost in Monday's calamitous start, with only an injured Jordan Thompson battling through, but there'll now be five in the last-64 draw.
Sixteenth seed Kasatkina became the first and only one of the seven Aussie women to progress with her 7-5 6-3 victory over Colombian Emiliana Arango.
Beaten in three matches on grass this season, she laboured against the world No.76, revealing she'd been so nervous in her first Wimbledon appearance since switching allegiance to Australia that she vomited outside just before entering Court 14.
"A lot of people saw it five metres from the court. I vomit, so just before entering the court, yes, the little accident happened, like, completely out of nerves," Kasatkina explained.
She dished up 11 double faults and 38 unforced errors against Arango, but the South American contributed to her own defeat, making 39 errors of her own.
De Minaur was far more authoritative in his first grand slam outing since taking a break after his shock second-round exit at the French Open, beating Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-2) in two hours 25 minutes.
Even a delay while an unwell ball boy was replaced, just before he was to serve to stay in the third set at 5-6, didn't faze the 11th seed.
De Minaur's form was sharp enough, given his lack of match practice on grass.
"It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything. There was some really good tennis, some tough moments, which I played through," said de Minaur, thrilled to have his family watching from courtside.
"At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off. So overall, quite happy."
The chances of an all-Sydney second-round meeting were extinguished, though, after Adam Walton, having battled back from two sets down, lost 6-3 7-6 (8-6) 4-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who will face de Minaur for the first time.
Vukic beat Chinese Taipei's Chun-Hsin Tseng 6-3 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7-5) in just over three hours, setting up a daunting meeting with world No.1 Jannik Sinner, who defeated Italian compatriot Luca Nardi 6-4 6-3 6-0.
It will be the second year running Vukic has drawn a big gun in the last 64 after impressing while losing to champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024.
"I've really nothing to lose," Vukic said. "He'll be the one feeling the pressure. If there's a surface to play him on it's probably this one because it is a bit more random, so more upsets can happen. Hopefully, I can be one of those."
Sinner agreed that "he has has nothing to lose, things won't be easy for me", while adding: "Australian tennis is in a good spot, they have some good players."
Hijikata was delighted with his crushing 6-3 6-1 6-1 win over 34-year-old Belgian veteran David Goffin.
"It's pretty rare to have a match like that where it's all smooth sailing, and maybe a little unexpected, considering I feel I haven't been practising that well," said the first-time Wimbledon match-winner.
Next he'll face Ben Shelton, the American 10th seed who proved a younger, superior mirror image of Alex Bolt, defeating the Murray Bridge qualifier 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-4).
Beyond Kasatkina's win, it was a chastening day for the Australian women's challenge, with the biggest disappointment being 19-year-old new Eastbourne champion Maya Joint's fairly routine 6-3 6-2 defeat to a teak-tough first-round opponent, Russian 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova.
It was deja vu for Joint, who had won the Morocco Open in Rabat the weekend before losing in the first round at Roland Garros.
"It's something I hope to get used to, but it was a lot different from the last time when I was coming from Morocco," the teenager said. "I obviously expected to do a bit better, but Liudmila played really well."
Priscilla Hon went down 6-2 7-5 to Russian 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova, while fellow debutant, Sydney's James McCabe, was well beaten 6-1 6-4 6-3 by Hungary's world No.58 Fabian Marozsan, after he'd arrived later than he had hoped for his match after his car got stuck in a traffic jam.
Australia's Wimbledon challenge has been reinvigorated after a disastrous opening day, with the national No.1s Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina leading a four-win revival.
On another sweltering day in London on Tuesday, the pair raced into the second round by early afternoon and were joined by Aleksandar Vukic and Rinky Hijikata.
Seven Australians had lost in Monday's calamitous start, with only an injured Jordan Thompson battling through, but there'll now be five in the last-64 draw.
Sixteenth seed Kasatkina became the first and only one of the seven Aussie women to progress with her 7-5 6-3 victory over Colombian Emiliana Arango.
Beaten in three matches on grass this season, she laboured against the world No.76, revealing she'd been so nervous in her first Wimbledon appearance since switching allegiance to Australia that she vomited outside just before entering Court 14.
"A lot of people saw it five metres from the court. I vomit, so just before entering the court, yes, the little accident happened, like, completely out of nerves," Kasatkina explained.
She dished up 11 double faults and 38 unforced errors against Arango, but the South American contributed to her own defeat, making 39 errors of her own.
De Minaur was far more authoritative in his first grand slam outing since taking a break after his shock second-round exit at the French Open, beating Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-2) in two hours 25 minutes.
Even a delay while an unwell ball boy was replaced, just before he was to serve to stay in the third set at 5-6, didn't faze the 11th seed.
De Minaur's form was sharp enough, given his lack of match practice on grass.
"It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything. There was some really good tennis, some tough moments, which I played through," said de Minaur, thrilled to have his family watching from courtside.
"At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off. So overall, quite happy."
The chances of an all-Sydney second-round meeting were extinguished, though, after Adam Walton, having battled back from two sets down, lost 6-3 7-6 (8-6) 4-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who will face de Minaur for the first time.
Vukic beat Chinese Taipei's Chun-Hsin Tseng 6-3 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7-5) in just over three hours, setting up a daunting meeting with world No.1 Jannik Sinner, who defeated Italian compatriot Luca Nardi 6-4 6-3 6-0.
It will be the second year running Vukic has drawn a big gun in the last 64 after impressing while losing to champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024.
"I've really nothing to lose," Vukic said. "He'll be the one feeling the pressure. If there's a surface to play him on it's probably this one because it is a bit more random, so more upsets can happen. Hopefully, I can be one of those."
Sinner agreed that "he has has nothing to lose, things won't be easy for me", while adding: "Australian tennis is in a good spot, they have some good players."
Hijikata was delighted with his crushing 6-3 6-1 6-1 win over 34-year-old Belgian veteran David Goffin.
"It's pretty rare to have a match like that where it's all smooth sailing, and maybe a little unexpected, considering I feel I haven't been practising that well," said the first-time Wimbledon match-winner.
Next he'll face Ben Shelton, the American 10th seed who proved a younger, superior mirror image of Alex Bolt, defeating the Murray Bridge qualifier 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-4).
Beyond Kasatkina's win, it was a chastening day for the Australian women's challenge, with the biggest disappointment being 19-year-old new Eastbourne champion Maya Joint's fairly routine 6-3 6-2 defeat to a teak-tough first-round opponent, Russian 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova.
It was deja vu for Joint, who had won the Morocco Open in Rabat the weekend before losing in the first round at Roland Garros.
"It's something I hope to get used to, but it was a lot different from the last time when I was coming from Morocco," the teenager said. "I obviously expected to do a bit better, but Liudmila played really well."
Priscilla Hon went down 6-2 7-5 to Russian 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova, while fellow debutant, Sydney's James McCabe, was well beaten 6-1 6-4 6-3 by Hungary's world No.58 Fabian Marozsan, after he'd arrived later than he had hoped for his match after his car got stuck in a traffic jam.
Australia's Wimbledon challenge has been reinvigorated after a disastrous opening day, with the national No.1s Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina leading a four-win revival.
On another sweltering day in London on Tuesday, the pair raced into the second round by early afternoon and were joined by Aleksandar Vukic and Rinky Hijikata.
Seven Australians had lost in Monday's calamitous start, with only an injured Jordan Thompson battling through, but there'll now be five in the last-64 draw.
Sixteenth seed Kasatkina became the first and only one of the seven Aussie women to progress with her 7-5 6-3 victory over Colombian Emiliana Arango.
Beaten in three matches on grass this season, she laboured against the world No.76, revealing she'd been so nervous in her first Wimbledon appearance since switching allegiance to Australia that she vomited outside just before entering Court 14.
"A lot of people saw it five metres from the court. I vomit, so just before entering the court, yes, the little accident happened, like, completely out of nerves," Kasatkina explained.
She dished up 11 double faults and 38 unforced errors against Arango, but the South American contributed to her own defeat, making 39 errors of her own.
De Minaur was far more authoritative in his first grand slam outing since taking a break after his shock second-round exit at the French Open, beating Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-2) in two hours 25 minutes.
Even a delay while an unwell ball boy was replaced, just before he was to serve to stay in the third set at 5-6, didn't faze the 11th seed.
De Minaur's form was sharp enough, given his lack of match practice on grass.
"It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything. There was some really good tennis, some tough moments, which I played through," said de Minaur, thrilled to have his family watching from courtside.
"At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off. So overall, quite happy."
The chances of an all-Sydney second-round meeting were extinguished, though, after Adam Walton, having battled back from two sets down, lost 6-3 7-6 (8-6) 4-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who will face de Minaur for the first time.
Vukic beat Chinese Taipei's Chun-Hsin Tseng 6-3 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7-5) in just over three hours, setting up a daunting meeting with world No.1 Jannik Sinner, who defeated Italian compatriot Luca Nardi 6-4 6-3 6-0.
It will be the second year running Vukic has drawn a big gun in the last 64 after impressing while losing to champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024.
"I've really nothing to lose," Vukic said. "He'll be the one feeling the pressure. If there's a surface to play him on it's probably this one because it is a bit more random, so more upsets can happen. Hopefully, I can be one of those."
Sinner agreed that "he has has nothing to lose, things won't be easy for me", while adding: "Australian tennis is in a good spot, they have some good players."
Hijikata was delighted with his crushing 6-3 6-1 6-1 win over 34-year-old Belgian veteran David Goffin.
"It's pretty rare to have a match like that where it's all smooth sailing, and maybe a little unexpected, considering I feel I haven't been practising that well," said the first-time Wimbledon match-winner.
Next he'll face Ben Shelton, the American 10th seed who proved a younger, superior mirror image of Alex Bolt, defeating the Murray Bridge qualifier 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-4).
Beyond Kasatkina's win, it was a chastening day for the Australian women's challenge, with the biggest disappointment being 19-year-old new Eastbourne champion Maya Joint's fairly routine 6-3 6-2 defeat to a teak-tough first-round opponent, Russian 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova.
It was deja vu for Joint, who had won the Morocco Open in Rabat the weekend before losing in the first round at Roland Garros.
"It's something I hope to get used to, but it was a lot different from the last time when I was coming from Morocco," the teenager said. "I obviously expected to do a bit better, but Liudmila played really well."
Priscilla Hon went down 6-2 7-5 to Russian 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova, while fellow debutant, Sydney's James McCabe, was well beaten 6-1 6-4 6-3 by Hungary's world No.58 Fabian Marozsan, after he'd arrived later than he had hoped for his match after his car got stuck in a traffic jam.
Australia's Wimbledon challenge has been reinvigorated after a disastrous opening day, with the national No.1s Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina leading a four-win revival.
On another sweltering day in London on Tuesday, the pair raced into the second round by early afternoon and were joined by Aleksandar Vukic and Rinky Hijikata.
Seven Australians had lost in Monday's calamitous start, with only an injured Jordan Thompson battling through, but there'll now be five in the last-64 draw.
Sixteenth seed Kasatkina became the first and only one of the seven Aussie women to progress with her 7-5 6-3 victory over Colombian Emiliana Arango.
Beaten in three matches on grass this season, she laboured against the world No.76, revealing she'd been so nervous in her first Wimbledon appearance since switching allegiance to Australia that she vomited outside just before entering Court 14.
"A lot of people saw it five metres from the court. I vomit, so just before entering the court, yes, the little accident happened, like, completely out of nerves," Kasatkina explained.
She dished up 11 double faults and 38 unforced errors against Arango, but the South American contributed to her own defeat, making 39 errors of her own.
De Minaur was far more authoritative in his first grand slam outing since taking a break after his shock second-round exit at the French Open, beating Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-2) in two hours 25 minutes.
Even a delay while an unwell ball boy was replaced, just before he was to serve to stay in the third set at 5-6, didn't faze the 11th seed.
De Minaur's form was sharp enough, given his lack of match practice on grass.
"It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything. There was some really good tennis, some tough moments, which I played through," said de Minaur, thrilled to have his family watching from courtside.
"At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off. So overall, quite happy."
The chances of an all-Sydney second-round meeting were extinguished, though, after Adam Walton, having battled back from two sets down, lost 6-3 7-6 (8-6) 4-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who will face de Minaur for the first time.
Vukic beat Chinese Taipei's Chun-Hsin Tseng 6-3 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7-5) in just over three hours, setting up a daunting meeting with world No.1 Jannik Sinner, who defeated Italian compatriot Luca Nardi 6-4 6-3 6-0.
It will be the second year running Vukic has drawn a big gun in the last 64 after impressing while losing to champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024.
"I've really nothing to lose," Vukic said. "He'll be the one feeling the pressure. If there's a surface to play him on it's probably this one because it is a bit more random, so more upsets can happen. Hopefully, I can be one of those."
Sinner agreed that "he has has nothing to lose, things won't be easy for me", while adding: "Australian tennis is in a good spot, they have some good players."
Hijikata was delighted with his crushing 6-3 6-1 6-1 win over 34-year-old Belgian veteran David Goffin.
"It's pretty rare to have a match like that where it's all smooth sailing, and maybe a little unexpected, considering I feel I haven't been practising that well," said the first-time Wimbledon match-winner.
Next he'll face Ben Shelton, the American 10th seed who proved a younger, superior mirror image of Alex Bolt, defeating the Murray Bridge qualifier 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-4).
Beyond Kasatkina's win, it was a chastening day for the Australian women's challenge, with the biggest disappointment being 19-year-old new Eastbourne champion Maya Joint's fairly routine 6-3 6-2 defeat to a teak-tough first-round opponent, Russian 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova.
It was deja vu for Joint, who had won the Morocco Open in Rabat the weekend before losing in the first round at Roland Garros.
"It's something I hope to get used to, but it was a lot different from the last time when I was coming from Morocco," the teenager said. "I obviously expected to do a bit better, but Liudmila played really well."
Priscilla Hon went down 6-2 7-5 to Russian 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova, while fellow debutant, Sydney's James McCabe, was well beaten 6-1 6-4 6-3 by Hungary's world No.58 Fabian Marozsan, after he'd arrived later than he had hoped for his match after his car got stuck in a traffic jam.
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Wallabies look to reignite star centre combination
Wallabies look to reignite star centre combination

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Wallabies look to reignite star centre combination

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Alex de Minaur in distressing ball boy scene during Wimbledon victory
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time2 hours ago

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The match official climbed down from his chair to request for medical personnel to attend to the ball boy. 'Someone has been removed from court for feeling dizzy and is spending some time in the shade,' commentator Katherine Downes said on the BBC. 'The umpire is just calling up to ask for a replacement and somebody to come and give assistance to the member of staff.' De Minaur didn't have any troubles closing out the match, but he said in his post match press conference he had to 'lift my level' to keep progressing in the tournament. 'It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything,' de Minaur said, as reported by NCA NewsWire. 'At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off, so overall, quite happy with the performance.' Even Australia's Alex de Minaur felt the heat. 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Mundine says Cricket Australia is 'out of sync with what the people want' after it drops all matches on Australia Day again
Mundine says Cricket Australia is 'out of sync with what the people want' after it drops all matches on Australia Day again

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Cricket Australia is once again under fire for quietly scrapping any fixtures on Australia Day with one of the country's most prominent Indigenous leaders Warren Mundine demanding an open explanation to the public. For the second year in a row – and just the second time in 31 years – there will be no cricket on January 26, despite it being a major public holiday and a key date in the summer calendar. The Big Bash League final will be played the night before, on Sunday 25 January, while the men's national team will not be in the country, with many players set to appear in the BBL finals ahead of international T20 commitments. Speaking to Sky Mundine has slammed the sporting body's decision as 'really bizarre', saying Australians deserved answers as to why the game will once again go silent on the January 26 public holiday. 'I just think what they are doing is bizarre. What is the reason they have given for this,' Mundine said. 'It's really pathetic and the public who follow the team, who follow cricket, who love the sport, and pay their good money to watch it, deserve to know, so, if anything, Cricket Australia should come out and give a reason why they won't play on Australia Day.' Mundine said if the decision was politically motivated, then the organisation should no longer carry the country's name. 'My view with Cricket Australia, and a lot of other sporting bodies around the country is that they can really out of sync with what the people want,' he said. 'They want to see their national team playing and if they aren't willing to do that on Australia Day, then I advise that they take the name Australia out of the team.' He added: 'We all want to know what their problem is because cricket is our national game, and we all love it, and we want to celebrate all these cultures together on Australia Day, so, by snubbing it … it's just really bizarre and I don't understand it at all.' Cricket Australia has previously defended similar decisions as being about 'respect', after consulting with Indigenous representatives about how to navigate January 26. In 2021, it dropped the term 'Australia Day' from all promotional material — a move that drew public rebuke from then-Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Indigenous Australian cricketer Ashleigh Gardner has also been vocal about her discomfort playing on January 26, calling it a 'day of hurt and mourning' for Indigenous Australians. Captain Pat Cummins has separately suggested Australia should find 'a more appropriate date' to celebrate the national holiday. But critics argue Cricket Australia is being subservient to inner-city activists and abandoning its role as a unifying national symbol. 'You can look at it in two ways, and it's all going to come down to their reasoning for why they are not playing,' he said. 'I understand that as an organisation they must do what's best for the sport, that means what's best for the fans. 'But if this is down to a political reason, you have to assume that they must hate Australia. So, they need to come out and be clear to the public why they are doing this.' This isn't the first time the former ALP president has called out the direction taken by national institutions on January 26. In 2024 he told Sky News Australia that bodies like Cricket Australia were guilty of 'hatred of Australians and hatred of Australia'. 'There's one thing I will not tolerate, and that is the bigotry and the hatred of organisations like Cricket Australia, like Woolworths and all these corporations who look at Australian people as knuckle draggers, as bigots and dreadful stuff,' he said at the time. 'More than 67 per cent of Australians want it to remain on the January 26 … but I'm just sick and tired of this annual attack on the values of this country.' The scheduling move has also prompted political commentary, with NSW Premier Chris Minns earlier this year urging Cricket Australia to rethink its approach. Cricket Australia has said little publicly as of now, but last year explained a similar decision as being in fans' best interests due to a clash with the Australian Open men's tennis final - a clash that won't exist this time around.

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