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Wimbledon Jabeur-Vondrousova for a royal premiere

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Wimbledon Jabeur-Vondrousova for a royal premiere

(Wimbledon) It is therefore at Wimbledon, in the temple of tennis, that the Tunisian Ons Jabeur or the Czech Marketa Vondrousova will win this dreamed-of first Grand Slam title on Saturday.

The experience

Both have already reached the final of a Major: at Roland-Garros in 2019 for Vondrousova, at Wimbledon and at the United States Open last year for Jabeur.

Since her final, the Czech has had surgery on her left wrist twice (2019 and 2022) so that she has missed two editions of Wimbledon (2020 and 2022). Fourteenth in the world at its highest after Roland-Garros 2019, it briefly emerged from the top 100 at the end of last season and plays in London as 42e.

If she reached the 1/8 finals on hard court at the Australian Open and the United States Open, her results on the London turf were much less brilliant: in four appearances, she only reached once the second round (2021) without going beyond.

At 24, Vondrousova has only won one title on the circuit (Biel 2017). What could be better than Wimbledon to win a second?

Opposite, there will be Jabeur, the first Arab player to have reached the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam tournament (Australia 2020), the first Arab player to have played in the final at Wimbledon (2022).

The Tunisian, currently 6e world player after reaching 2e WTA rank in June 2022, is also the first player to chain two Wimbledon finals since Serena Williams (2018-2019).

Above all, her touch game works miracles on the grass (she won two of her four titles there, Birmingham 2021 and Berlin 2022): no player has won more than her 28 victories on this surface since 2021 and the last to to have won that many in three years is Maria Sharapova (2004-06).

“I have more experience (than last year), I know how to better manage the different situations during the match,” she underlines.

“I also think I’m hitting better, I have more confidence in my shots. As for my service, it is improving,” she adds.

The facts prove her right: she is the third player to have scored the most aces since the start of the tournament (29) behind Elena Rybakina (33) and Aryna Sabalenka (45)… two players she beat in the quarterfinals then in halves.

The course

Jabeur can claim to have successively beaten four Grand Slam winners: Bianca Andreescu (United States Open 2019), Petra Kvitova (Wimbledon 2011 and 2014), Elena Rybakina (Wimbledon 2022) and Aryna Sabalenka (Australia 2023).

“I want my journey to be rewarded […] So I’m going to go all out and I hope this time it will pass, ”launched the Tunisian.

Vondrousova snuck in by dismissing a priori superior players like Veronika Kudermetova (12e), Donna Vekic (21e), and Jessica Pegula (4e), before putting an abrupt end to the epic of the Ukrainian Elina Svitolina, semi-finalist 2019.

“I beat Kudermetova and Vekic, who are very good on grass. So I thought, ‘OK, maybe I’ll get better and I can do something here,’” she says.

State of mind

After having mastered two ultra powerful and right-handed players like her (Rybakina and Sabalenka), Jabeur will this time face an opponent whose game is more comparable to hers (Vondrousova likes to do drop shots and slices), but left-handed

“I will try to take my revenge. I haven’t beaten her this year”, announces Jabeur in reference to her two defeats against Vondrousova at the Australian Open and then at Indian Wells.

“We will both be hungry for victory,” she adds.

For her part, the Czech recognizes that what is happening to her “is crazy”.

“But anything is possible in tennis,” she notes.

For the final, she will also have a moral reinforcement of weight in the stands in the person of her husband, obliged until then to stay at home to keep the cat.

“We messaged the cat sitter and he’s coming home,” she said.

Source: lapresse

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Australian Open Naomi Osaka advances to second round

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Australian Open Naomi Osaka advances to second round

(Melbourne) The ex-no 1 world Naomi Osaka (current 17e in the WTA rankings) qualified Tuesday in three sets for the second round of the Australian Open.

Crowned in Melbourne in 2019 and 2021, the Japanese won 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 against the Croatian Antonia Ruzic (65e).

The four-time Grand Slam winner will play in the next round against Romanian Sorana Cirstea (41e), who started the last Australian Open of her career at age 35 by eliminating the German Eva Lys (39e).

Entering the court with a white parasol, a wide-brimmed hat and a long white train, Osaka started the match with her feet on the ground to quickly lead 3-0.

Ruzic recovered to 3-3 before again losing three games in a row and the first set.

The Croatian responded in the second round, winning by the same score.

In the decisive set, Osaka broke from the start to break away at 2-0, but Ruzic came back to her level again before taking her throw in to lead 4-3, service to follow.

This time it was the Japanese who held on to get back to 4-4, before inflicting a shutout then a new break on Ruzic to seal her qualification with a final winning backhand, after almost 2 hours 30 minutes of fighting.

Osaka played her first Grand Slam match on Tuesday since her semi-final at the United States Open in September, her best run in a major tournament since she returned to the circuit in early 2024 after the birth of her first child.

Source: lapresse

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Australian Open Jannik Sinner wins after retirement in the first round

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Australian Open Jannik Sinner wins after retirement in the first round

(Melbourne) World No.2 Jannik Sinner, double title holder, benefited on Tuesday from the retirement of Frenchman Hugo Gaston (93e), injured his abdominals, to qualify for the second round of the Australian Open.

The 24-year-old Italian was leading 6-2, 6-1 when Gaston threw in the towel.

“It’s the abs that have given up a little. I felt the pain in the middle of the first round. I called the doctor immediately at the end of the first round to get an anti-inflammatory,” explained the Frenchman who suddenly felt “like a little stab”.

He fell during the first round after returning a drop shot from Sinner, but he assured that the injury and the fall were not linked.

On the other hand, the pain in his abdominals bothered him a lot “on serve and on high balls”.

“I saw that he was not serving at a very high speed, especially in the second set,” commented Jannik Sinner in his post-match interview on Central.

“I am very happy to qualify, to return to this place that I particularly cherish […]but that’s not the way I wanted to win this match,” added the world No.2.

Sinner’s next opponent will be Croatian Dino Prizmic (127e) or the Australian James Duckworth (88e).

For his first official match of the season, the four-time Grand Slam tournament winner took a little time to settle down, notably having to save three break points in the first game.

But once he managed to take Gaston’s serve in the particularly tight sixth game, Sinner unfolded, winning the next seven games. A few moments after snatching his only game in a one-sided second round, the Frenchman informed his opponent that he was giving up, after a little over an hour of match.

“Giving up pisses me off a bit,” Gaston commented. But hey, on the other hand I can’t afford to play at 50%, even 100%, to beat Sinner…”

Undefeated since his retirement at the beginning of October in the third round of the Masters 1000 in Shanghai, the world No.2 scored a sixteenth victory in a row on Tuesday and joined Carlos Alcaraz (1) in the second round of the Australian Open.er), Alexander Zverev (3e) and Novak Djokovic (4e).

“I felt very well prepared, we worked a lot physically and on the court” during the offseason, said Sinner, who skipped the Davis Cup finals in Bologna in November to have an additional week of preparation for the 2026 season.

For his part, Lorenzo Musetti, seeded fifth, progressed due to the retirement of Raphaël Collignon of Belgium in the fourth round.

The score was 4-6, 7-6 (3), 7-5 and 3-2. The nature of the injury has not been released.

Shelton hits hard

The 23-year-old American Ben Shelton inherited probably the worst draw, in the person of the first ATP player not to have been seeded, the Frenchman Ugo Humbert.

But last year’s semi-finalist, who made his name by reaching the quarter-finals in Melbourne in 2023 despite never having left the United States, was uncompromising and won 6-3, 7-6 (7/2), 7-6 (7/5).

PHOTO MARTIN KEEP, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Ben Shelton

“It’s always difficult to face Humbert in the first round, but I remained very calm, very focused on my game and I played better and better,” he stressed with satisfaction.

He will play in the second round against the Australian Dane Sweeny (182e).

Monfils eliminated in the first round of his last tournament in Australia

Gaël Monfils, who will end his career at the end of the season, was eliminated Tuesday in the first round of his last Australian Open by the inexperienced Australian Dane Sweeny (182e world) 6-7 (3/7), 7-5, 6-4, 7-5.

The 39-year-old Frenchman plays his 23e and final season. Ex-world No.6 currently 110ehe was playing his 20e Australian major since his first participation in 2005. He has reached the quarter-finals twice, in 2016 and 2022.


PHOTO PAUL CROCK, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Gaël Monfils

“My journey began here in 2003 (in qualifying, Editor’s note). We are in 2026 and it is the finish line, but thank you all for accompanying me, you were great,” he told the audience from the court while generally only the winner of the matches, before the final, speaks on the field.

“I fought four hours again today, but this guy (Sweeny) is very strong. I wish him good luck,” he added to his winner.

For the latter, the victory is particularly beautiful, because in addition to having beaten one of the great names in tennis of the last twenty years, he offered himself his first victory in a Grand Slam tournament.

“It’s like I’m in a series… it’s incredible,” he commented. Before the match started, his goal was “win or lose, enjoy the chance to be there.”

As usual, the most popular French player since Yannick Noah spared no effort. And despite the encouragement of the public – in particular from a group of French people – the youth of his opponent (24 years old) visibly prevailed, as Monfils appeared so tired.

Broken one last time to be down 6-5 in the fourth set and the Australian’s service to follow, Monfils failed to reverse the situation.

“You’re here, you played your 20are Australian Open and you have entered a very closed circle: you are six players from the Open era (since the 1969 edition) to have reached this bar,” tournament director Craig Tiley told him, who came to greet him on the court.

“We want to thank you for your career, your attitude and the way you taught us how to play this wonderful game. Well done,” added Tiley.

Monfils’ last match in Melbourne, greeted by a hearty ovation from the public with “thank you Gaël” sung in the stands, lasted 3 hours 51 minutes.

Source: lapresse

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Sinner advanced to the second round of the Australian Open due to his opponent’s refusal, Dimitrov lost to Makhach

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Sinner advanced to the second round of the Australian Open due to his opponent’s refusal, Dimitrov lost to Makhach

The second racket of the world, Italian Jannik Sinner, reached the second round of the Grand Slam tournament in Australia.

At the start of the competition, Sinner’s opponent was the Frenchman Hugo Gaston, who refused to continue the fight after the second set due to injury (2:6, 1:6). Gaston left the court in tears.

Sinner’s next opponent at the Australian Open will be the winner of the meeting James Duckworth (Australia, WC) – Dino Prizmic (Croatia, LL).

Also on Tuesday, Gael Monfils (France), who lost to qualifier Dane Sweeney, and Grigor Dimitrov (Bulgaria), who lost to Tomas Machac (Czech Republic), finished the tournament after the first round.

Grand Slam Tournament. Australian Open. Melbourne (Australia). Hard. Total prize fund: about $75 million

Men. First round

Jannik Sinner (Italy, 2) – Hugo Gaston (France) – 6:2, 6:1 (refusal – Gaston)

Dane Sweeney (Australia, Q) – Gael Monfils (France) – 6:7 (3:7), 7:5, 6:4, 7:5

Tomas Machac (Czech Republic) – Grigor Dimitrov (Bulgaria) – 6:4, 6:4, 6:3

Source: Sportbox

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