
Alex de Minaur comes back from set down to advance at Wimbledon
In perfect sunny conditions on Thursday morning, Australia's big hope brushed off a woeful first set against French qualifier Arthur Cazaux before regrouping, asserting his superiority and eventually prevailing 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 to ease into the third round again.
Fifteen of the 32 men's seeds had already fallen by the wayside in the first two rounds and, momentarily, there were concerns for de Minaur after a woeful first set in which he made 14 unforced errors and couldn't find a first serve for love nor money.
'It just shows you, this sport, it's not easy out there. Anything can happen on any given day,' said de Minaur after being asked about the proliferation of big names going out early.
'It definitely wasn't an easy match and there some tough moments out there but I'm super excited to be back in the third round.'
De Minaur had never been knocked out of a grand slam by anyone as lowly-ranked as No 115 Cazaux but the alarm bells were ringing once the fluid server from Montpellier took advantage on a packed No 2 Court.
But urged on at courtside by his Davis Cup captain and last Australian men's Wimbledon winner, Lleyton Hewitt, de Minaur stirred, nearly doubled his first-serve percentage of 33% to 63% and swept to level the set scores.
Cazaux, who had knocked out de Minaur's old colleague from his Sydney junior days, Adam Walton, in five sets in the opening round, had banged down one serve timed at 147mph (236.5km) in that win.
The big delivery got him out of trouble constantly as the Australian put the pressure on and earned six break points during the second set, finally earning the key break at 4-4 when the Frenchman threw in a double fault.
Serving for it, de Minaur sealed the stanza with a thrilling inside-out forehand tracer, before delivering an uncharacteristic fist-pumping roar towards the crowd, who were largely rooting for the fiance of British player Katie Boulter.
'It feels like a second home slam for me,' de Minaur told the crowd. 'The last few years, I've definitely felt the love here.'
Cazaux's spirit was broken after the second set as de Minaur felt freed up to demonstrate why he is determined to surpass his quarter-final berth in last year's event, feeding the dispirited Frenchman a 41-minute 'bagel' set to love and progressing to the last-32 in two hours 48 minutes.
In the third round, de Minaur will be up against either Czech 21st seed Tomas Machac or Danish qualifier August Holmgren, who were in action later on Thursday.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Sonay Kartal relaxed in the spotlight as she prepares for Wimbledon's last 16
Laid-back Sonay Kartal is taking the Wimbledon spotlight in her stride – even if a trip to the shops proved trickier than usual. All eyes are on Kartal as the only British woman to reach the fourth round after Emma Raducanu's brave defeat by top seed Aryna Sabalenka on Friday night. Should she beat Russian veteran Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova on Centre Court on Sunday, the 23-year-old will become the first British woman to reach the last eight since Johanna Konta in 2019. Kartal was back on court on Saturday, playing doubles with her close friend and fellow Briton Jodie Burrage. 'She's definitely got more cameras on her now. I have noticed that,' said Burrage. 'That's expected, you know. 'It was nice to play a doubles match with that atmosphere. It was packed on that court. Unfortunately we couldn't get them going a little bit more because we lost. 'But it was fun. She is taking it like a champion. She loves the limelight.' Kartal rolls her eyes, not for the first time, as her pal gently teases her. But the Brighton pro's run in SW19 has captured the public's imagination, as she found out on Friday evening after her third-round win over Diane Parry. 'I went to the shops and it was a bit tricky,' she said. 'That's something I will have to get used to for the next few weeks. 'Listen, people think I don't like it as my whole life I have gone under the radar a bit, but I don't have an issue with being in the spotlight or not. 'If the spotlight is on you it means you are doing good things. I am taking it as a compliment.' It is not just Kartal's tennis that is the hot topic in south-west London, but also her tattoos. She got her 14th after winning her first match at the French Open last month and is now taking suggestions for ink number 15. 'I've had a few – Jodie's idea of having Centre Court was terrible,' she laughed. 'I won't get that. Someone said I should get the vintage polo top that I've been wearing, I don't know if it is possible. Maybe a fire and ice tattoo. I like that – but it would remind me of Jodie!' Kartal found out she will be making her debut on Centre Court on Sunday just before she played her doubles match, and she has no intention of it being her last time this fortnight. 'It's a huge honour to play on that court. A court that you dream of,' she said. 'The way I am looking at it is that it's a slightly bigger Court One. Warming up on Court One a couple of days ago will help me. I will feel much better walking out on Centre. 'I know I am far from finished yet. I have done one week – got another week to go to the finish line. 'There have been some crazy results. I have been given a good spot in the draw, things have opened up. I am excited and will enjoy every second.'


The Guardian
12 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘In the zone': Iga Swiatek glides past Collins to become a live contender
At least one positive consequence from Iga Swiatek's relatively poor clay court run has been the added benefit of time. Instead of arriving for the grass court season exhausted from her efforts, for once she had additional time to train, work and adapt her game to the one surface she has yet to conquer. Swiatek's growing comfort at Wimbledon was reflected in her most efficient performance of the tournament so far as she dismantled the eternally dangerous Danielle Collins 6-2, 6-3 to return to the fourth round. Swiatek, who continues to build her profile as a title contender at the All England Club, will next face the 23rd seed Clara Tauson of Denmark. Tauson upset the 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina, the 11th seed, 7-6 (6), 6-3 to reach the fourth round. 'I was just in the zone,' said Swiatek. 'I knew what I wanted to play and I knew I needed to be brave and just let my hand do the job. Play fast and grab it from the beginning. You can't let Danielle play her winners. I'm really happy with the performance because there were no ups and downs, it was pretty consistent and it was a good match.' After winning five grand slam titles, establishing herself as the most successful player of her generation and spending most of the past few years as the world No 1, the No 8 seeding next to Swiatek's name, which is reflective of her difficulties over the past year, looks very strange. The 24-year-old has still not won a title at any level since the 2024 French Open last June and she has been open about how her perfectionism, one of her biggest strengths, has been her biggest weakness in recent months, often leading to her becoming overwhelmed by her negative thoughts on the court. Even though she was unable to win a fourth consecutive French Open title last month, Roland Garros appeared to mark a turning point for Swiatek as she finally stopped overthinking and began to play with greater freedom again. After putting together a series of positive performances to reach the semi-finals, Swiatek left Paris after her defeat to Aryna Sabalenka feeling as if she had regained her confidence on the court. While an exhausted Swiatek would usually prioritise rest in the aftermath of her four triumphs at Roland Garros, often returning home to Poland for a few days and then playing catch up for the rest of the grass court season, this year Swiatek headed straight to Mallorca for grass court prep. Her run to the final Bad Homburg on the eve of the Championships, both her first final of the year and her first final on grass, represented another positive result despite her eventual defeat to Jessica Pegula. She has spent her first few matches at Wimbledon attempting to further build momentum and confidence. 'Honestly, it's much more fun this year,' said Swiatek. 'I had some practices where the ball was listening to me, which was pretty new on grass. I'm just looking for that feeling for the matches as well and today was a good day. In Bad Homburg, I played many good matches so for sure, I'm getting confidence. It's a new experience feeling good on the grass.' 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 There was, of course, plenty of subtext to this match-up. Last year at the Olympic Games in Paris, the pair had an extended conversation while shaking hands at the net following Collins' retirement from their quarter-final match. Collins later revealed that she had called Swiatek 'insincere' during their handshake, the sympathy Swiatek had expressed fake. In general, Collins has made it clear that she does not care for Swiatek. In May, Collins was also responsible for one of Swiatek's worst clay-court losses in recent years as she defeated the Pole in their third-round match at the Italian Open. This time, however, the American had no response to an excellent performance. Swiatek served brilliantly, winning 86% of points behind her first serve throughout the match. Despite holding on to only one break for most of the second set, she continued to march through her service games with ease and she did not lose her serve all match. On her groundstrokes, Swiatek also struck her forehand brilliantly, constantly using it to dominate the baseline exchanges. She showed her increased comfort with her movement by effortlessly soaking up Collins' and forcing errors from the American with her defence. With her spinny forehand, her preference for slower surfaces that afford her more time on the ball, her serving struggles and the general challenge of moving well on grass, there are countless reasons why Swiatek has struggled to produce her best on this surface. However, many different players and playing styles are capable of thriving on these more forgiving modern courts. Sometimes you just need time.


BBC News
28 minutes ago
- BBC News
Britain's Salisbury and Skupski reach third round
Wimbledon 2025Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England ClubCoverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide. Britain's Joe Salisbury and Neal Skupski have progressed to the third round of the men's doubles at French Open runners-up, seeded sixth at the All England Club, defeated Colombian Nicolas Barrientos and India's Rithvik Choudary Bollipalli 6-4 7-6 (9-7).They will face Argentine 12th seeds Maximo Gonzalez and Andres Molteni for a place in the all-British pairings Sonay Kartal and Jodie Burrage, and Mimi Xu and Ella McDonald, were eliminated from the women's doubles who will face Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova for a place in the quarter-finals of the women's singles on Sunday, and team-mate Burrage lost 6-3 6-1 to Brazil's Beatriz Haddad Maia and Germany's Laura and McDonald fell to Americans Sofia Kenin and Caroline Dolehide 6-2 the mixed doubles, Marcus Willis and Alicia Barnett were beaten 7-5 6-1 by Mexican Santiago Gonzalez and Slovakia's Tereza Mihalikova. Salisbury is a four-time major champion in men's doubles, with each of those successes coming alongside American Rajeev Ram, while Skupski triumphed at Wimbledon alongside Dutchman Wesley Koolhof two years joined forces at this year's Australian Open, where they exited in the second round, they reached the Roland Garros final but lost out to Marcel Granollers and Horacio settled the first set with a single break of serve before prevailing in a 16-point second-set tie-break, during which they saved three set points to avoid being taken to a in men's doubles action on Saturday are British fifth seeds Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool, who face German Hendrik Jebens and France's Albano Olivetti.