
Jordan Thompson storms into fourth round of Wimbledon for first time
Still troubled by a debilitating back injury that had him protesting after his two previous courageous five-set wins that even 'snails move faster', Thompson looked in much sharper nick as he had too much grass-court nous for Italian Luciano Darderi in their third-round clash on Friday, prevailing 6-4 6-4 3-6 6-3.
It booked the battling Thompson 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.
He 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 when they play on Saturday.
In the amphitheatre of Court 18, the 31-year-old also managed to bypass the sort of nerve-shredding drama of his previous two matches, which he had won in five-set slogs, this time nipping Darderi's attempted comeback in the bud after the Italian had taken the third set.
That raised the prospect that marathon man Thompson might be dragged into a seventh career five-setter at Wimbledon – he's won five and lost just one – only for him to reassert his quality against the 23-year-old Darderi whose two wins at Wimbledon this year doubled his career tally of grass-court victories.
Thompson will be relieved to have won in seven minutes under three hours to avoid any more pressure on his back, especially with a daunting last-16 outing awaiting against in-form fifth seed Taylor Fritz, who defeated Spain's 26th seed Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-4 6-3 6-7 (5-7) 6-1.
Earlier, Rinky Hijikata's daydream of pulling off the greatest of Wimbledon escapes against American big-hitter Ben Shelton lasted less than a minute when the pair resumed their match after it had been controversially suspended on Thursday evening.
Hijikata had got the unexpected chance to live to fight another day after saving three match points and then being reprieved by a controversial postponement of play on Thursday night amid farcical scenes as darkness descended.
But when the match resumed on No.2 Court in the Friday afternoon sunshine with No.10 seed Shelton serving for the match, everyone could see the funny side once he won all four points in just 55 seconds, including three booming aces, to complete the straightforward 6-2 7-5 6-3 victory in two hours 12 minutes.
Sydneysider Hijikata, who had been unable to dent the two-time grand semi-finalist's delivery all match, grinned ruefully as any chance of him becoming the fourth Australian to qualify for the third round alongside Alex de Minaur, Jordan Thompson and Daria Kasatkina was blasted away.
Hijikata, who had in the last game on Thursday saved three match points to extend the match, paid tribute to Shelton.
'Last night's experience was bizarre ... but that was probably an absolute clinic on how to serve out a match if you've got one game to go,' said Hijikata.
'Yeah, credit to him. It's not easy to come out and serve out a match when you have a bit of pressure and you've had the night off. I thought it was bloody good effort by him.'
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
7 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Jannik Sinner barely breaks sweat to cruise through Martínez mismatch
The key sequence, perhaps the only real piece of content in this 6-1, 6-3, 6-1 third round victory for Jannik Sinner against a semi-fit, utterly outmatched Pedro Martínez came midway through the second set on Centre Court. To that point the entire contest had felt like the tennis equivalent of watching an injured lemur being run down, idly, by a slightly bored big cat. Martínez had come into this match with an injured shoulder. Hmm. An injured shoulder against Jannik Sinner. How's that going to work out? Pretty much from the start every break in play saw the Spaniard's shirt off, shoulder being furiously pounded by medical orderlies, eyes boggled, chest hair damp with sweat, while a few yards away Sinner sat completely still, unmoved, a neat man in a cap, thinking. The roof was on for this match as a light drizzle fell outside. It is a magnificent suburban thing, the greatest side return conservatory in south-west London. Roof up, Centre Court becomes Kew Gardens, steamy, fragrant, the lunchtime chitter-chatter intimate and echoey. Here it was even a little soporific at the start. The first set had already been folded away 6-1. The second seemed to heading the same way until, at 4-2 down, and with Martínez already serving like a man leaning back in a rocking chair and listening to his own neck creak, the Spaniard was seized by a combination of endorphins and what-the-heck professional pride, and from there managed to muster up a couple of games that lasted almost as long as the entire match to that point. The first extended deuce felt like an act of mild torture. Martínez began to groan and breathe heavily. More? Really? But he took the game in the end to huge cheers from the crowd and walked back to his chair looking as if he had just done 40 minutes in a notably violent, full contact, twig-thrashing Finnish sauna. Martínez at least got to enjoy this sequence, and to entertain the crowd, showing heart and skill, punching the air, grinning occasionally. Sinner's calm through this was also notable. The world No 1 aced out break points. He stuck to the processes, barely sweating, still wearing the same shrewd, wary look. He steered Martínez gently to 5-3, with an injection of cold-eyed, quick-footed precision, finding angles with his backhand drives, then closing the set with a perfect diagonal half-court volley. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion From there the final set disappeared in a haze of creaks and groans from the persevering Martínez, and an effortless reassertion of crisp, clean baseline control. The question of how to beat Sinner, or even how to ruffle his low-tick intensity, was no closer to being answered by the end. At least for anyone in the draw who happens not to be called Carlos Alcaraz. Sinner was able to move through this match without taking anything out of himself. He talked up the quality of the rallies at the end, shrugged and sighed at Martínez's physical state, praising his ability to carry on. No Italian man or woman has ever won a Wimbledon singles title. On current form the list of people with a decent shot at stopping that sequence being broken this year currently stands at one.


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Max Verstappen snatches F1 British GP pole for Red Bull from McLarens
Max Verstappen claimed pole for the British Grand Prix for Red Bull, a blistering run beating the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris into second and third. Mercedes's George Russell was fourth, with Lewis Hamilton very much in the mix, taking fifth for Ferrari. The pole was somewhat against odds for Verstappen, who absolutely wrung the neck of the Red Bull to beat a very strong assault from both McLaren and an improved Ferrari. The world champion has not been particularly happy with his car all weekend, having struggled with its balance all season. With the team using a trimmed back low-downforce configuration at Silverstone, it required every bit of his considerable skill to wrangle across the old airfield. As he has demonstrated previously this season, sometimes he can be the ultimate differentiator. It was a salutary reminder of quite why there is so much interest in his future, with Mercedes considering him again and Red Bull just as anxious to hang on to their prized asset. With Red Bull having brought what is likely to be their last major upgrade of the season to the last race in Austria with a revision to the floor of the car hoped to help address the balance issues that have plagued it all year, they will be buoyed that this time out they had the advantage over McLaren, at least in Verstappen's mercurial hands. The team have been honest in that no quick fix was expected to the problems with a disconnect between wind-tunnel predictions and real-world performance at the heart of their inability to solve the problems but Verstappen enjoyed his lap at Silverstone perhaps more than many of late to take his fourth pole of the year and his first since Miami, six races ago. Verstappen opened the running in Q3, taking the top spot, but was swiftly eclipsed by Piastri, who set a time of 1min 24.995sec. Norris followed but could not quite hook it up and was just under two-tenths back, while Hamilton was enjoying his best qualifying of the season to grab second place just over one-tenth back from Piastri, with Verstappen fourth. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion The final laps would prove decisive and were a suitably tense affair. Norris went out first and pushed hard but did not improve enough over Piastri, while Hamilton set a superb first sector but was unable to quite make the difference. However, behind them Verstappen was flying, putting together what was his best lap of the session when it really mattered. Hammering it to the very limit, he took the top spot with a time of 1:24.892, a full tenth up on Piastri and Norris. Ollie Bearman was in eighth place for Haas but has a 10-place grid penalty for failing to slow under a red flag in third practice. Kimi Antonelli was seventh but has a three-place penalty for his crash with Verstappen in Austria. 1. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 1min 24.892sec 2. Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 1:24.995 3. Lando Norris (McLaren) 1:25.010 4. George Russell (Mercedes) 1:25.029 5. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 1:25.095 6. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 1:25.121 7. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes, three-place grid penalty) 1:25.374 8. Oliver Bearman (Haas, 10-place grid penalty) 1:25.471 9. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) 1:25.621 10. Pierre Gasly (Alpine) 1:25.785 Q2 11. Carlos Sainz (Williams) 1:25.746 12. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) 1:25.826 13. Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls) 1:25.864 14. Alex Albon (Williams) 1:25.889 15. Esteban Ocon (Haas) 1:25.950 Q1 16. Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) 1:26.440 17. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) 1:26.446 18. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) 1:26.504 19. Nico Hulkenberg (Sauber) 1:26.574 20. Franco Colapinto (Alpine) 1:27.060


Scottish Sun
11 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Tearful Emma Raducanu reveals showdown talks with coach Mark Petchey after Wimbledon exit
FIGHTING back the tears, Emma Raducanu said she will hold showdown talks with coach Mark Petchey about their future working arrangement. But she claims she will head next month to New York – the scene of her greatest triumph – brimming with confidence she CAN match the world's best. 3 Emma Raducanu was knocked out of Wimbledon on Friday night Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 3 Raducanu was respectably beaten by world No1 Aryna Sabalenka Credit: Reuters Raducanu, 22, ate a KitKat chocolate bar in the locker room after her two-hour two-set slugfest with world No1 Aryna Sabalenka on Friday night. For those who had doubted whether the Brit would ever replicate the magical form she showed when lifting the US Open four years ago, this was a demonstration of her abilities. Though she fell short, and was unable to capitalise on two clutch moments in set two, she earned widespread respect for slugging it out with the three-time Grand Slam champion on Centre Court. Petchey, who joined her team on a part-time basis in March, has had a transformative impact on her form and demeanour but there is no guarantee that coaching gig will continue. READ MORE WIMBLEDON HEALTH WORRY Wimbledon ball kid removed from court as umpire is forced to ask for help The former tennis player earns a decent living as a respected TV analyst but has to decide now whether to give that all up to sit in Raducanu's box. Raducanu said: 'It's very difficult. He obviously also has his commentating commitments. 'He agreed to help me until the end of Wimbledon and then we kind of see from there. 'Because he gave up some work to work with me here, which I really appreciate and I'm grateful for. BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK 'That's a conversation that we need to have after a few days and the dust settles a little bit.' Clutching a tissue and sniffling constantly, Raducanu had slightly red eyes when she addressed the world's media following her exit. Cam Norrie bats away awkward question about Emma Raducanu's love life It has been an emotional summer for the Kent-based superstar, one in which she has faced security concerns and received 'some pretty bad news' during her run in Eastbourne. But as self-critical as she is about her own displays, she is proud of how she competed toe-for-toe with Sabalenka, 27, especially in a 74-minute opening set under a closed roof. And that only bodes well for the hard-court swing in North America. 'IT GIVES ME CONFIDENCE' Raducanu – who will play the Mubadala Citi DC Open in Washington later this month – said: 'It's hard to take a loss like that. 'It does give me confidence because I think the problem before was that I felt like I was gulfs away from the very top. 'Having a match like that where I had chances in both sets, it does give me confidence. At the same time, it's very difficult to take right now. 'It gives me confidence that I'm not as far away as I perhaps thought before the tournament. 'Before when I was playing those top-five players, it was pretty convincing, the loss. 'IT'S A BIT OF A LEVELLER' 'I feel like grass for me is a great surface. It's a bit of a leveller in that sense. 'Taking it onto a different surface where it's a lot more lively in America is another challenge in itself. 'There's still a lot of things that I want to do better, a lot of things I want to improve to solidify my game, so that in the big moments I can back myself a little bit more. 'I don't think I've really had a loss like this in a long time, where I feel like I maybe had chances and didn't take them. Usually I'm pretty good at converting. 'In the big moments, Aryna was able to convert. She was able to hit some incredible shots. 'I just need to keep working and get back to the drawing board and improve a lot more.' 3