logo
Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter beaten in the doubles at Queen's

Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter beaten in the doubles at Queen's

Glasgow Timesa day ago

The duo, who have been bestowed the portmanteau 'Boultercanu', earlier this week described the 'spontaneous' nature of their decision to pair up ahead of this tournament.
After booking their place with a straight-sets opening victory over Wu Fang-Hsien and Jiang Xinyu on Monday, they faced a much tougher test in the top-seeded doubles pair.
Emma Raducanu (left) and Katie Boulter discuss tactics (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
It was a third-ever doubles match for 2021 US Open champion Raducanu, who at one point clashed rackets with British number one Boulter as the played together for just the second time.
Boulter battled through her grass court singles season opener to claim a 7-6 (4) 1-6 6-4 victory over Australian qualifier Ajla Tomljanovic on Tuesday, and the first-serve issues that plagued her in that gritty battle seemed to remain somewhat unresolved when she double-faulted to open the second game.
The Britons' task was made even trickier after they were broken by the top seeds, but were getting a better read on the ball by the time they claimed their first win of the set to make it 3-1.
But they could not find the response they needed to their increasingly-clever opponents – particularly the prowess of Kiwi Routliffe – and were unable to dig their way out after Raducanu opened the set-decider with a double-fault of her own.
Their opponents swiftly claimed the first game of the second set to hold before Boulter and Raducanu – after an amusing pause to remove an insect crawling along the baseline with a towel – made it 1-1.
Katie Boulter and Emma Raducanu were knocked out of the doubles (Adam Davy/PA)
The Britons' serve – this time Raducanu's – was broken again early on in the set.
Kichenok and Routliffe began to cruise a bit more and, far more vocal in their communication, looked the more organised pair, though Boulter and Raducanu were still all smiles, and received an especially encouraging round of applause as they took the court again at 4-1 down.
The British pair looked to be growing into the contest, breaking back for the first time in the match to reduce the deficit to 4-3 before drawing level.
They nearly made it three games in a row, but their rivals recovered from 40-0 to secure the hold, eliciting the first real groan from a section of the home support.
Boulter and Raducanu were given a gift when Routliffe was deemed to have doubled-faulted – briefly challenging the umpire – with the set level at 5-5, but they could not take advantage.
The 'Boultercanu' doubles dream, at least for now, ended as the serving Raducanu could not force a tiebreak and the Kiwi-Ukrainian pair booked their place in the semis with another break.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What's on Thomas Frank's to-do list after taking charge at Tottenham?
What's on Thomas Frank's to-do list after taking charge at Tottenham?

South Wales Argus

time34 minutes ago

  • South Wales Argus

What's on Thomas Frank's to-do list after taking charge at Tottenham?

Frank has left Brentford after an impressive seven-year spell and replaces Ange Postecoglou, who was dismissed two weeks after Europa League success following a 17th-placed finish in the Premier League. Here, the PA news agency takes a look at the key early issues facing Frank at Spurs. Stabilise dressing room Gaffer, where to thank you for bringing me to this wonderful club that I now call my home. Your instant belief in me to not only sign me but make me the clubs vice captain & part of the leadership group from the get go is something I'll always be thankful for.… — James Maddison (@Madders10) June 7, 2025 The volume of tributes paid to Postecoglou and the emotion behind them showed the strong connection built by the Australian in the Tottenham dressing room. Captain Son Heung-min hailed him as a 'legend forever', James Maddison was one of many to state how much they learned from him and Micky van de Ven admitted his dismissal was 'strange'. More than a dozen of the squad expressed their gratitude to the Europa League-winning boss, which leaves Frank in a tricky position. However, the man-management of the Danish coach is one of his strongest skills and he will back himself to quickly win over a group hungry for more success. Frank did also previously try sign Archie Gray and Brennan Johnson at Brentford. Make call on senior figures Spurs chairman Daniel Levy insisted in March the club 'cannot spend what we do not have' in reference to criticism from supporters. It hinted at sales being required to boost the transfer budget, but Europa League glory and subsequent Champions League qualification will bring in a vast amount of revenue. Nevertheless, captain Son is entering the final 12 months of his deal and with renewed interest from Saudi Pro League clubs, a departure could occur if a significant offer is made, PA understands. Cristian Romero also continues to be tracked by LaLiga teams but the World Cup winner would command a hefty price tag. Frank will be involved in discussions over the pair in addition to others and may have a tricky choice – does he keep two of Postecoglou's leadership group or start his tenure by moving them on? Insist on experienced signings Archie Gray made 46 appearances for Tottenham during his debut season despite only turning 19 in March (Nick Potts/PA) No matter who does depart, Frank would be minded to demand more experienced players are recruited this summer by technical director Johan Lange, who worked with the former Brentford boss at Lyngby. Postecoglou regularly fielded teenagers during Tottenham's Premier League campaign and even though Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall developed enormously, they would benefit from more senior figures around them. Son and Ben Davies are currently the oldest in the squad at the age of 32. One of Postecoglou's parting messages was to urge players with Champions League pedigree to be signed. Win over doubters with quick start We are delighted to announce the appointment of Thomas Frank as our new Head Coach on a contract that runs until 2028. Welcome, Thomas! 🤍 — Tottenham Hotspur (@SpursOfficial) June 12, 2025 Frank has earned this opportunity by ensuring Brentford punch above their weight in the Premier League. Whilst most Spurs fans have reacted positively to his appointment, plenty also would have been happy for Postecoglou to get his wish of season three. It is no secret that Frank has made slow starts in his previous two managerial jobs – requiring nine games to achieve a maiden win in charge of Brondby and losing eight of his first 10 with Brentford. A repeat at Tottenham could see him suffer the same fate as Nuno Espirito Santo and be sacked before December. The best way for Frank to silence any doubters and escape Postecoglou's shadow will be early victories and his debut fixture offers up an excellent opportunity. If Frank can guide Spurs to a shock UEFA Super Cup triumph over Paris St Germain on August 13, it would win him a first trophy and show to the world he means business.

Rory McIlroy fades fast as Oakmont brings best to their knees
Rory McIlroy fades fast as Oakmont brings best to their knees

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Rory McIlroy fades fast as Oakmont brings best to their knees

For a couple of hours all the talk of Oakmont's terrors seemed overstated and this near mythical beast by the Allegheny River looked about as dangerous as a stuffed fish on a marble plinth. The reputation has been well-earned, though, and by the end of the first day at a sun-baked US Open, players were using words like brutal and bloodbath, and Rory McIlroy's promising start had faded into more anti-climax. After a bogey-free first nine, he dropped six shots, finished at four over par and was not in the mood for discussing it afterwards. The frustration was palpable as he again walked past journalists shaking his head. For the fifth consecutive round at the majors, the man who inspired post-Augusta paeans had scribes sheathing their pens. Scottie Scheffler was just starting out on his own troubled path at that point, and JJ Spaun was talking into a camera after setting the clubhouse lead with a round of 66, some eight shots clear of McIlroy. It was very much a round of two halves for McIlroy. After all the talk about having to replace his 'non-conforming' driver at last month's US PGA Championship and his own questions about motivation, he began with the requisite calm and control. Playing the easier back nine first, he was able to open with an iron off the tee and on his third felt able to bludgeon a 392-yard drive down the middle. The ensuing eagle chance went awry but he was two under in three holes. The toughest course in the world? Pah. But as the day lengthened, that 'ugly old brute' of a course got under the skin and scraped the scabbing from weakness. Tiger Woods had warned that there is no faking it here, and it duly provided a true test of technique, strategy and psyche. It is a course where you need to make putts from inside ten feet to stay afloat and, significantly, McIlroy missed three from within seven feet after the turn. And then came his penultimate hole, the much-vaunted long par-three measuring 279 yards and due to get longer. He missed the green right and needed two swipes to get out of the dense rough. That double bogey was the final blight on a day of dwindling promise. One of the keys to winning here is damage limitation and the 4th hole, McIlroy's 13th, was a little odyssey. It took some time to locate his ball and, deep in trouble, McIlroy ignored caddie Harry Diamond's suggestion to take a drop. He could only hack his ball some 20 yards forward and the next shot was even worse, his relatively serene progress in danger of unravelling in one, disastrous hole. In fairness to McIlroy, he then managed to get up and down from 180 yards for what was a bonus bogey, but he had started to creak. It will be no consolation that he was better than his playing partners. Shane Lowry, who started the final round of the 2016 US Open here four shots clear, was nine over, despite an eagle from 160 yards, and Justin Rose was only two shots better. It meant a trio with a combined seven majors finished at a collective 20 over par. Pretty beastly, that. Although 23 of the past 24 US Open winners have been within four shots of the lead after the opening round, McIlroy was in good company in the trauma ward. Tommy Fleetwood and Matt Fitzpatrick were among those on the same score, while Gary Woodland, the 2019 champion, was another whose flying start segued into an Icarus descent after six dropped shots in six holes. Bryson DeChambeau, the defending champion, was alongside him at three over par after struggling with his putter, but predicted that could be the winning score if the rain holds off over the ­weekend. The sun and breeze sapped the course of any lingering moisture, and anyone finishing under par had cause for a panoramic smile. Bob MacIntyre, the pride of Oban, was one of those ­delighted to walk away at even par. 'You shoot four level-par rounds, you're walking away with a medal and a trophy,' he said. 'That's up there in the top ten rounds I've played. It's just so hard. Honestly, every shot you're on a knife edge. I felt I played beautifully and I drove it as good as I can drive the golf ball.' His excitement with a 70 shows the scale of this challenge. Belgium's Ryder Cup hopeful Thomas Detry, one of the select bunch in the red numbers, warned that it could even become 'a bloodbath' if the wind starts to blow harder. The rough is part of it, but the speed and slopes of the greens provide a potent combination. So Spaun deserved huge credit, as did Thriston Lawrence who was only a shot behind with Kim Si-woo , another stroke adrift. Spaun, beaten by McIlroy in the play-off at The Players in March, chipped in for a birdie on his opening hole and that set the tone for a scrambling round. 'I rode that momentum through the day,' he said. As for McIlroy, he does not need to rewind very far for proof that he can overcome first-round deflation. At the Masters he was written off by many after making two double bogeys down the first-round stretch. Opportunities for salvage streaks are scarcer at Oakmont, though, and his first task is to make the cut. Failure to do so would spawn more enquiries about how he can rekindle his fire after achieving his career goal. Even Scheffler said the post-major comedown last month left him feeling like he had been hit by a bus due to the heightened emotion. He probably felt something similar after a string of early bogeys had him fighting fire and rarely-seen foible. Patrick Reed was another suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune with his 286-yard albatross from the fourth fairway straddled by bogeys. For all the suspicion that McIlroy needs time to regather his mojo, he hates the thought that anyone might think he is not up for golf's hardest tests and, indeed, after three missed cuts at the US Open, he has not been out of the top ten for six years. But Oakmont is tougher than the rest. John Bodenhamer, the USGA's chief championships officer, said with a tinge of sadism that part of the place's appeal is psychological. 'Oakmont is relentless,' he said. 'It's a grind and there are limited opportunities to catch up when you are behind.' They will all try to keep on hanging on today.

Rory McIlroy chewed up by course that's like rabid tiger as he suffers back-nine meltdown to trail early US Open leader JJ Spaun by six shots
Rory McIlroy chewed up by course that's like rabid tiger as he suffers back-nine meltdown to trail early US Open leader JJ Spaun by six shots

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Rory McIlroy chewed up by course that's like rabid tiger as he suffers back-nine meltdown to trail early US Open leader JJ Spaun by six shots

First, he tickled the belly of the beast and then he was introduced to its teeth. If nothing else comes from Rory McIlroy's trip to the US Open, at least he will have a battle story to tell about Oakmont. Will that be shared with the media? We have to wait on that, because for the fifth major round in succession he bolted without saying a word. But given the tribulations of his opening 74, and indeed his mood of late, that snub was no great shock. More surprising was the meltdown on his back nine, which launched McIlroy from two-under-par and one off the lead at the turn to four-over by the close, six shots behind leader JJ Spaun. Such a journey from contention to cold shoulders was a messy tale of duffed chips and missed putts, amplified by a new driver that behaved as badly as its recent predecessors. Even for this place, and for all we have raved about its reputation, a return of four bogeys and a double from those inward nine holes was a nasty way to end an afternoon. JJ Spaun had a superb opening round at Oakmont and finished up at four under par With a face like thunder, McIlroy then walked straight past the microphones, presumably in need of a lie down and the sort of inspiration that pulsed through Spaun. It was Spaun who McIlroy defeated in a play-off to win the Players' Championship three months ago, in what became an important staging post in his journey towards Masters glory. Here, it was Spaun who proved the toughest course in major golf can be navigated without loss of blood as he emerged from the first wave of tee times to set the target at four-under. The world No 25 did not drop a shot in his 66. To contextualise the feat, the last time a US Open was played at Oakmont, in 2016, there was only one bogey-free round among the 443 completed. That belonged to Dustin Johnson, the eventual winner, and so Spaun's first-round accomplishment warrants great recognition, particularly for the manner in which he missed six greens and scrambled to make par each time. Does Spaun's score and a number of other sub-par rounds mean Oakmont is playing slightly easier than normal? It is like trying to identify differences between a rabid tiger and an angry one. For instance, Bryson DeChambeau, the defending champion, laboured to a 73 and needed three shots to escape greenside rough at the 12th. Scottie Scheffler? He was among the late starters and found himself two-over through 10 holes. Shane Lowry, tipped to win by many this week and playing alongside McIlroy, had a rough day. He benefited from a chip-in par on the 17th and an eagle from the fairway on the third and yet still signed for a 79. Lowry's round was proof of Oakmont's many challenges — despite hitting 10 of 14 fairways, thereby avoiding too much extra time in the five-inch rough, he was still trending towards a missed cut, battered by his failure to find greens and an inability to thrive with the putter. When one tripwire is navigated on this course, a dozen more await your next step. Lowry's exasperation was best shown when he yanked an on-course microphone from the ground and hurled it as he approached the turn. The third member of the group, Justin Rose, who has been runner-up in two of the previous three majors, shot 77 — combined, he, Lowry and McIlroy were 20-over. So make no mistake, even in sedate weather, Oakmont is a brute. Just ask Matt Vogt, an American amateur who qualified with a good yarn to tell, for he is a former caddie here and these days works as a dentist. He needed 82 shots — you can make your own gags about pulling teeth. Of the British interests among the earlier starters, Robert MacIntyre had the best of it. He closed with a bogey, but after hitting 11 of 14 fairways in a level-par 70 he was well placed. McIlroy? Not nearly so much, which only extends the gloom of his post-Masters lull. Starting on the 10th, he opened well with a 30-footer for birdie on the 11th and another stroke followed when he reached the par-five 12th in two. At that stage, his game from the tee was showing a degree of improvement after switching to his fourth driver configuration in the space of three starts. By the turn, he was also showing plenty of grit, which was necessary because the latest driver had gone cold. He had hit only two fairways, but was saving pars. Alas, it unravelled spectacularly. On the first hole, his 10th, he three-putted back to one-under and on the par five fourth, the easiest on the card, he drove miles off line to the right, which was his pattern for the day. Buried in long grass, McIlroy ignored the advice of caddie Harry Diamond, who suggested a penalty drop in a better spot, and instead hacked into the grassy face of a bunker. The third shot then travelled barely 15 yards and eventually a 32-footer dropped for a six. It could have been worse. Difficulties in the sand on the sixth brought McIlroy back to one-over, a three-putt at the next extended the rut and the final indignity came on the eighth, an excessively long par three of 300 yards. Taking aim with a three wood, he sliced it into the deep stuff on the right, duffed his pitch and required another three to get down. The story of his post-Masters revival might have to wait for a kinder location.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store