
Martina Navratilova names Wimbledon 'favourite' ranked outside the world top 10
A number of top stars have suffered early exits in SW19 with second-seed Coco Gauff and world No.3 Jessica Pegula crashing out in the first round.
Fifth-seed Zheng Qinwen and ninth-seed Paula Badosa lost their opening matches too – while world No.4 Jasmine Paolini, last year's runner-up, was dumped out in the second round.
Navratilova feels the bottom half of the draw is now 'wide open' and with 11th-seed Elena Rybakina becoming the new favourite to land the trophy.
The Russian-born Kazakhstani star, previously ranked world No.3, won Wimbledon in 2022 – the only Grand Slam triumph of her career to date.
Rybakina reached the Wimbledon semi-finals in 2024 and the year before that she enjoyed a run to the quarter-finals in south west London.
'The bottom half, the top seed now is Mirra Andreeva who's seeded seventh and even if you don't pay attention to the draw and you don't look ahead, you know you're in the top half or bottom half depending on when you play,' Navratilova said.
'So all these players know that two, three and five (seeds) are gone. Pegula, Gauff and Qinwen Zheng gone.
'So you know there is a massive opportunity for you to get through. There is a big hole in the draw.
'That whole bottom half is wide open and maybe Rybakina's the favourite now even though she's only seeded 11th. She has obviously had the best results here in the past.'
Rybakina, who has won nine titles across the WTA Tour to date, has defeated Elina Avanesyan and Maria Sakkari at this year's Championships. More Trending
The 26-year-old is back in action on Saturday when she faces 23rd-seed Clara Tauson in the third round at the All England Club.
There are still a number of higher-ranked players left in the women's singles draw including top-seed Aryna Sabalenka.
Madison Keys, Mirra Andreeva, Iga Świątek and Emma Navarro – all seededabove Rybakina – are still fighting for the Venus Rosewater Dish as well.
MORE: TV fans all say the same thing as the soaps are taken off air
MORE: Nick Kyrgios calls for huge rule change at Wimbledon to 'make everyone happy'
MORE: Wimbledon star held back from umpire as crowd boo 'embarrassing' decision
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Super Sonay! Emma Raducanu's great childhood rival - and daughter of kebab shop owner - steps out of her shadow with a big win
They grew up as tennis rivals, fiercely playing against each other at the National Tennis Centre in 2011 as nine-year-olds. But breakout star Sonay Kartal looks to be finally stepping out from under the shadow of her famous friend Emma Raducanu as she soared into the last 16 at SW19 for the first time yesterday. The 23-year-old wildcard eased past French qualifier Diane Parry with a flawless straight set 6-4, 6-2 victory. Meanwhile British No 1 Ms Raducanu was in action against number one seed Aryna Sabalenka on Centre Court last night. She was again cheered on by former tennis prodigy Benjamin Heynold, 24, with rumours of a possible romance between the pair continuing to spread. Ms Kartal said it was an 'honour' to be one of three Britons still standing at Wimbledon – despite a record start at SW19 for the nation with 23 home players – after Cameron Norrie also booked his place in the fourth round by defeating Mattia Bellucci in straight sets. Coming from humble beginnings in Brighton where her parents ran a kebab shop, rising star Ms Kartal is now on the brink of becoming a millionaire. If she makes the quarter finals she will have clocked up £400,000 in prize money – she has already pocketed £240,000 by making the fourth round, bringing her total career earnings to £972,000. Ms Kartal, who is 5ft 4in tall, vowed to come out swinging in her next match against the World No 50, Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, tomorrow. Talking about how she would handle the pressure, Ms Kartal said: 'I enjoy it. I think it's an honour. Obviously, you've got a lot of attention on you, it means you're doing good things. 'I feel like I'm going to go out on the court in the next round kind of with nothing to lose at the minute. 'I'm going to go swinging. I think the pressure that I'll feel is the pressure I will be putting on myself just wanting to perform as best as I can.' Ms Kartal said her 'closest family' was in her box on Court One cheering her on while her 'club members that I've known since I was six' were in the stands. 'That was super special,' she said. 'I couldn't necessarily see them, but I could hear a lot of familiar voices in the crowd, which was definitely nice.' Born in Sidcup, Kent, to Clare and Muharrem Kartal, she had a modest upbringing in Brighton where her father owned two Turkish restaurants. She started playing when she was six by following her brother to a training session after an invitation from a coach who ate in their father's restaurant. Earlier this week the player spoke out about how her family could not afford a full-time coach and that she was forced to go to some of the tournaments herself while her coaches undercharged her to help out. The British No 3 said: 'Obviously tennis is super expensive. When I was growing up, I kind of did quite a lot of tournaments on my own because I couldn't afford to pay a coach week in, week out. 'My coaches back in the day, they would charge me I guess the lowest fee and would try to help me out as much as possible.' While Ms Raducanu was riding high after her US Open win, Ms Kartal had little support until she received LTA backing aged 19 which meant she received Pro Scholarship Programme funding. Ms Kartal has previously said that she sees her former rival as an inspiration. 'I grew up playing Emma, so it proves to me that the dream of making it in tennis is not too far away,' she said. The British hopeful also saw her career blighted by injuries in her teenage years – a wrist problem from the ages of 14 to 17 left her struggling to pick up a racket, which was followed by two abdominal tears. Speaking about the difficulties of those years, Ms Kartal said last night: 'It was a bit hit or miss. I was injured for a few years on and off. I kind of never really got consistent. 'I was still playing at the club I'm at today down in Brighton. I was playing national events, the LTA events, doing the nationals for each age group. 'Then I would just go missing a little bit because I'd have an injury or something like that. So it was never consistent.' Ms Kartal's success this week has seen her rankings soar – this time last year she was just inside the top 300 in the world but now she sits in 51st place, and is likely to rise further. As well as being applauded for her impressive run at SW19, Ms Kartal, who has 14 tattoos, is also being hailed as a trendsetter with her throwback 70s baggy Adidas kit. After her win yesterday, she invited fans to make suggestions for designs her 15th tattoo to mark her impressive run. 'If people want to send me their ideas, I will most likely pick one of them and will probably chuck it on somewhere,' she said.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Wimbledon recap: Injury-hampered Jordan Thompson creates history - but Rinky Hijikata's dream is over
Jordan Thompson's impressive Wimbledon march has continued, with the wounded warrior storming into the fourth round for the first time in his career. Ominously, he then declared: 'I'm not anywhere near 100 per cent - but I'm still fighting my a** off every point.' Harbouring a debilitating back injury that made him moan after his two previous courageous five-set wins that even 'snails move faster', Thompson looked in sharper nick on Friday as he beat Italian Luciano Darderi 6-4 6-4 3-6 6-3 in their third-round showdown. It booked the battling 'Tommo' his first last-16 appearance at Wimbledon at the ninth attempt, and only the second fourth-round date of his Grand Slam career, matching his US Open performance of last year and 2020. Thompson believes he can prevail in a mouth-watering last-16 clash on Sunday with in-form fifth seed Taylor Fritz, the big-serving American he beat on the grass at Queen's Club last year. 'It's a pathetic outlook if I go out there thinking I can't win. I won last time on grass, but very different grass, in different circumstances,' the 31-year-old from Sydney said post-match. 'So, you know, it'll be a new day.' On the eve of the Championships, the injury-plagued Thompson wasn't sure he would be fit to play because of the painful sacroiliac joint problem in his back. He has also battled on in the doubles, so as not to let down partner Pierre-Hugues Herbert. Thompson is the first Australian to reach the fourth round at the grass-court slam this year, with both Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina having the chance to join him on Saturday. Elsewhere, Rinky Hijikata's daydream of pulling off the greatest of Wimbledon escapes against Ben Shelton lasted less than a minute when the pair resumed their match that was suspended controversially with the 10th seed about to serve for the match. When the match resumed on No.2 Court in the Friday afternoon sunshine, everyone could see the funny side once Shelton won all four points in just 55 seconds, including three booming aces, to complete the 6-2 7-5 6-4 victory in two hours and 12 minutes. Sydneysider Hijikata, who had been unable to dent the two-time grand slam semi-finalist's delivery all match, couldn't help but grin ruefully.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Tearful Emma Raducanu hits out at AI line calling after Wimbledon exit
The questionable serve earned a short sitting duck of a return from Raducanu, which Sabalenka then banged away with a forehand winner to move to 30-0. She eventually held serve in that game, which was an important stage in her comeback from an early deficit. 'That call was, like, for sure out,' said Raducanu in her press conference after the match. 'It's kind of disappointing, the tournament here, that the calls can be so wrong, but for the most part they've been OK. It's just, like, I've had a few in my other matches, too, that have been very wrong. So yeah, I don't know. Hopefully, they can fix that.' To Raducanu's mind, this is not a Wimbledon-specific issue. Asked if she had experienced similar issues at other events with ELC, she replied: 'Yes, I think so.' Sabalenka said: 'Emma played such incredible tennis and she pushed me really hard to get this win. 'I had to fight for every point to get this win.' Raducanu's comments followed hard on the heels of similar claims from Jack Draper, her fellow British No 1, who also felt that certain calls had been wrong during his Thursday-night loss to Marin Cilic. 'I don't think it's 100 per cent accurate, in all honesty,' he said after his third second-round exit. 'A couple of the ones today, it showed a mark on the court. There's no way the chalk would have showed.'