Israeli tennis teen star Mika Buchnik bows out at Wimbledon
She was on Court 5 of the All England Lawn Tennis Club, trailing badly in a first-round Wimbledon Girls' Singles match. Still, she wanted to capture the moment.
Even when things were looking grim Saturday, Mika Buchnik took a moment to stop and look around.
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She was on Court 5 of the All England Lawn Tennis Club, trailing badly in a first-round Wimbledon Girls' Singles match. Still, she wanted to capture the moment.
'This place is amazing,' Buchnik said. 'At one point when it was 4-love down, I just wanted to look around and remember how it feels, because I want to be back here. I really hope I can come here again. It's a reminder of why you're doing this.'
'This' is competing at the highest levels of pro tennis, and Buchnik is getting closer and closer to doing that. The 18-year-old Israeli has risen up the junior ranks to now being ranked No. 31 in the world.
Last September, she became the first Israeli – boy or girl – to win a J500 singles title, claiming the Osaka Mayor's Cup in Japan.
ISRAELI TEEN Liam Oved both won their first matches at US Open juniors qualifying before bowing out in the second round (credit: LEO STOLCK)
And Saturday she was back at Wimbledon, competing in singles for the second time in her career. She put up a great fight against No. 15 seed Ruien Zhang of China but ultimately lost, 7-5, 7-6(6).
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Buchnik will also compete in the girls' doubles tournament; her first match there will be Monday at the earliest.
'If things had gone better lately, maybe I would take pride [in today's match],' Buchnik said a few minutes after walking off the court. 'But since things haven't gone well, it feels like another loss and I'm not happy.'
In Saturday's match, Buchnik played evenly with Zhang through the first set. But with Buchnik serving to force a tiebreaker at 5-6, Zhang was able to break serve for the first time and claimed the set.
The second set saw a wild swing of momentum. Zhang raced out to a 4-love lead, and it looked like the Israeli teen was about to be out of the tournament in a matter of minutes.
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But then Buchnik's ground game steadied, Zhang started making errors, and suddenly it was 4-3 – and Zhang needed a medical timeout for treatment on her calf.
'For me, I don't think she was really injured, but that's part of the sport,' Buchnik said. 'I knew even if it was 4-love, that I could push a lot more, I had a lot more to give, and I could come back.
'I knew that she was getting worried, though, if she wanted to stop the match like that.'
The two battled all the way into a tiebreak, and there Zhang went up 6-3. But Buchnik saved three match points – helped by a crowd that had grown steadily and was supporting her – before finally succumbing.
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Buchnik's parents, Golan and Lilach, looked on with pride as their daughter competed.
'We always enjoy seeing her playing, and are so proud of her,' Lilach said. 'Always a pleasure seeing her.'
Leaving Dudi Sela to train at Rafael Nadal for a week
Buchnik has seen her tennis level rise significantly over the past year. Last summer, she made the decision to leave the Dudi Sela Academy and train for a week at the prestigious Rafael Nadal Academy.
She loved the enormous number of coaches and staff there, and the setting in Manacor, Mallorca, Spain, where Nadal grew up.
'It's amazing because they have a coach for you for absolutely everything,' Buchnik said. 'A swing coach, a forehand coach, a mental coach, a physio—everything you could want.'
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After a week there, Buchnik, from Tel Aviv, decided she wanted to stay – and the decision has done wonders for her tennis. (She is coached there by Miguel Fragoso and Polina Radeva.)
'There are so many great players there, so it helps training with them,' Buchnik said. 'I think I have definitely improved.'
The Buchniks have been traveling to major tournaments with Mika for a long time, even going to Australia for this year's Australian Open.
'They came all that way and I lost [in the] first round in singles and doubles,' Buchnik said with a laugh. 'I felt so bad. But they've been so incredible and supportive.'
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Also in attendance at the Wimbledon match were a host of US college coaches, hoping to get Buchnik into their program. The University of Tennessee, Texas A&M, and the University of Virginia all had coaches watching her play.
But she's not sure if that's the next path for her.
'I still need to think about it – maybe go to college, maybe go back to the Academy,' Buchnik said. 'I have a lot of options, so I'm just not sure.'
Whatever path she chooses, this won't be the last time the tennis world hears from Mika Buchnik. Not even close.
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Myself and Emma (Hayes, the manager who took her to Chelsea) offered her that.' The experience changed Hampton. 'All the media at the time was not the important thing,' Hampton told ITV. 'What was important was to look after myself. It changed me to almost not care what people think. Just go prove people wrong.' When Chelsea came calling in the summer of 2023 upon the expiry of her Villa contract, Hampton did not tour the training ground. One call from Hayes and Hampton was sold. Chelsea had five goalkeepers, including their first-choice Germany international Ann-Katrin Berger and Sweden's 2023 World Cup star Zecira Musovic, but Hampton was not loaned out. She was there to become Chelsea No 1. Advertisement Corsie remembers Hampton was not even in the matchday squad the first time Villa faced Chelsea after she moved clubs. 'I just want to play,' she told Corsie, who replied: 'Keep working hard.' 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Bernadin, who has built a trusting relationship with Hampton, says having a 'third space', away from club and country, is important for players to 'vent and get things off their chest'. 'She doesn't get bogged down too often,' he says, citing her mantra: 'It is what it is.' Even amid selection setbacks, she stayed focused. Bernardin has seen her angry, 'which isn't a bad thing', he adds. He recalls Hampton not wanting to talk to anyone after the Champions League defeat against Barcelona in the 2024 semi-final second leg but after 20 minutes or so, she was smiling again. 'She has really high standards but she can regroup quickly,' he says. 'I've got to just go and live up to her legacy,' Hampton told the media in June after Earps' retirement, describing her former team-mate as a 'big personality' who has 'glued' the squad together and will be much missed. 'First of all we have to respect what her decision is,' said Hampton. 'There has been quite a bit of scrutiny that she does not deserve with everything that she has achieved in the game and put women's goalkeeping on the map for the younger generation.' According to a source briefed on the matter, their relationship has been respectful but there is no secret the pair are not best friends and there have been occasions when they have not seen eye to eye. Hampton sent her a text and congratulated her on a very successful international career. 'That's all I really can do,' said Hampton. 'I'm not expecting anything back. She's been an unbelievable player.' Earps said, via the Happy Place podcast, she felt 'villainised' for her decision to step down from the national team. Hampton has received backlash too. 'It's hard when you see English fans not want you in goal,' she told ITV. 'I've not done anything to make you hate me. Yes, your favourite player has retired, that's not my decision. I haven't put that in her mind. She has come to that decision herself. It just goes back to proving them wrong. You don't want people to put you down or knock the smile off your face but believe me, I'm not going to let them.' Earps' biggest strengths was her communication and Ward thinks commanding from the back is an area Hampton needs to keep refining. Hampton, who has worked with the same psychologist since before Euro 2022, has played with the pressure of silverware at Chelsea but she told Foster's podcast she had 'so much more anxiety' before a game last season. She has said one of her biggest obstacles is 'self-belief' and her worst habit is 'overthinking'. One of her most nervous moments was not on the pitch, however, but before giving a speech at Buckingham Palace for the gold Duke of Edinburgh award. Hampton's distribution was, for the most part, on point in England's 2-1 defeat by France on Saturday. She could not do anything about the two goals conceded but she had some nervy moments. Ward and Corsie believe Hampton will be fine as England No 1. 'She enjoys a bit of pressure,' says Corsie. 'She's ready to take that on.' Advertisement 'She'll fly,' adds Ward. 'She'll thrive off it. You'll see her step up. She has matured over the past few years more than I've seen in a lot of people. She needed to change that to keep on track for not only England's No 1 but also world No 1. That's somewhere I truly believe she can get to.'