
Kate Middleton left 'mortified' over dad's remark to British tennis icon at Wimbledon
Kate Middleton is known to be a huge lover of tennis and is a regular spectator in the Wimbledon royal box. As patron of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club since 2016, the Princess of Wales attends the annual sporting event each year and traditionally presents trophies to the Wimbledon champions.
In addition to this, Kate usually serves some of the most iconic outfits on the courts with fans waiting in anticipation to see which fashionable looks she will wear during her appearances at the 2025 tournament this week.
While Kate's presence at Wimbledon is considered to be an important addition to the event, the mum-of-three has confessed that she was previously left absolutely "mortified" by a comment her father Michael Middleton made while he attended the prestigious tournament.
The Middleton family have all made it clear they are big fans on Wimbledon on multiple occasions. However Kate, 43, previously recalled an embarrassing experience with her father that left her pink faced at the 2017 BBC documentary Our Wimbledon hosted by Sue Barker.
During her work on the 2017 BBC One documentary 'Our Wimbledon', the BBC broadcaster travelled around the globe to discover what makes the All England Club grass so special for tennis lovers. During her research, she interviewed Kate who shared the embarrassing incident with her father which had happened years before she married Prince William.
During the interview, the future Queen explained how her dad had tried and failed to stay cool when they crossed paths with former British number one tennis player Tim Henman.
Unfortunately, her dad Michael made a huge blunder during the moment and confused Henman with 14-time Grand Slam champion Pete Sampras.
Kate told Barker: "My father is not going to appreciate this, but we were walking past Tim Henman and we had just seen Pete Sampras play. My dad said very coolly: 'Hi Pete'. I was mortified!"
Barker recounted the tale in her 2024 book, ' Wimbledon: A Personal History ', which provides her views on the major tournament, from her days as a junior competitor to her retirement from broadcasting over half a century later in 2022.
The BBC broadcaster, 69, wrote: 'During the filming of my Our Wimbledon documentary, I interviewed both the Duke of Kent and Catherine, now Princess of Wales.
'Catherine was so lovely to talk to too. I waited in a room in Kensington Palace with producer Carl Doran and the camera crew.
'We were all a bit on edge and then in she came and put us all at ease, even saying she was a bit nervous as she hadn't given many interviews. (I'm sure she said that to make me feel better.)
'She was a natural in front of the camera and what came across in the interview was her obvious love for the game from an early age.
'Tennis is a family passion and the Middletons came to queue and watch Wimbledon most years. She told me how mortified she was when her father once mistook Tim Henman for Pete Sampras."
Thankfully since that embarrassing encounter, Kate has had plenty more opportunities to meet Henman and rectify her dad's past blunder.
As a regular attendee of high-profile matches, she is often seen sitting in the Royal Box and even made an unexpected appearance last year amid her cancer treatment.
Kate also presents the tournament's finalists with their trophies, the most recent recipient being men's singles champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dennis Rodman's loved-up daughter Trinity gazes at tennis star boyfriend Ben Shelton during his Wimbledon match
US Soccer star Trinity Rodman lovingly gazed at tennis star boyfriend Ben Shelton from her front-row seat during his second-round Wimbledon matchup on Thursday. Dennis Rodman's daughter and the American tennis dynamo hard-launched their relationship in March, a few months after Shelton competed in the Australian Open. Last month, Trinity was also in attendance at the French Open, watching her man make a run to the Round of 16, departing the field after a loss to Carlos Alcaraz at Roland Garros before his all-time classic against Jannik Sinner. In London, Rodman wore a stripped, long-sleeve shirt, not adhering to the all-white clothing requirement given to Shelton and the rest of the competitors. As Shelton came near his girlfriend in between points, as she looked up at him in admiration, believing he could do no wrong. Shelton, the No 10 seed, was well on his way to winning his match on Thursday against Australian Rinky Hijikata before play was suspended, one game away from the American being triumphant. The way Trinity Rodman looks at Ben Shelton 🥺 — ESPN (@espn) July 3, 2025 US Soccer star Trinity Rodman lovingly gazed at tennis star boyfriend Ben Shelton Dennis Rodman's daughter and the tennis star hard-launched their relationship in March Shelton was livid with the decision to end his match 91 minutes before the tournament's curfew. The match will continue Friday morning with Shelton up 6-2, 7-5, 5-4, with the likely little work needed to advance to the final 32 in men's singles being a nuisance. Rodman, far from a bother, is dealing with a back injury and has no timeline for a return to the field. That is why she is not in camp with the United States women's national team, which defeated Canada 3-0 last night in Washington DC. Shelton is part of the current American renaissance, alongside Frances Tiafoe, Tommy Paul, and Taylor Fritz, chasing the likes of Sinner, Alcaraz, and Novak Djokovic for major titles. With plenty of upsets already taking place in the men's singles draw at Wimbledon, the stars could align for a first major title for Shelton, only five wins away.


BBC News
42 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Still holes in my game' - Draper on Wimbledon exit
British number one Jack Draper says he was not "good enough" in a shock Wimbledon second-round exit, insisting a below-par performance was not because he felt increased pressure at this year's was seeded fourth at the All England Club, but lost 6-4 6-3 1-6 6-4 to 36-year-old Marin 23-year-old was the highest seeded home player since Andy Murray defended the men's title in 2013, Murray, who retired last year, was the first British man to win Wimbledon in 77 years and added his second title three years later."It makes me think that Andy's achievement of what he did - winning here twice - [was] just unbelievable," Draper said."It's not the pressure. I wasn't going out there thinking I was under so much pressure. You [journalists] mention it all the time. "I just didn't play good enough. I lost to a better player. That's the main reason. I just was not able to find the level I wanted. I came up short." A stunning rise over the past year put Draper in the position of being a genuine Wimbledon the space of a year, the Englishman has reached the US Open semi-finals, clinched the prestigious Indian Wells title and reached two other ATP Tour won a title on the Stuttgart grass last year, and reaching the Queen's semi-finals last month despite feeling unwell, many experts felt his game could translate on to the Wimbledon grass."I've been really disappointed with the way my game's been on the grass this year, in all honesty," Draper said."I really struggled on the grass. I felt great on the hard courts, felt great on the clay. "I felt there weren't many holes in my game. As soon as I came on to the grass, I felt a big difference." The left-hander's serve and forehand were highlighted as the key weapons, but he was pushed deep in the court by 2017 runner-up Cilic and saw his game neutralised as the veteran rolled back the years."I think the hole in my forehand showed up, for sure," Draper said."I wasn't able to deal with his pace of ball into my forehand. I was over-spinning a lot. "I think a lot of my success this year with my forehand, when I have more time, it's a lot easier for me because I can create the speed and the spin that I want, and the effectiveness of that."My movement could have been better. There's many areas of my game which I still really, really need to work on to be the player I want to be." Awkward match-up for Draper - analysis Todd Woodbridge, 1997 Wimbledon singles semi-finalist and nine-time doubles champion, on BBC TVI didn't think there were any nerves from Jack Draper, I thought he handled himself well. I just thought the match-up didn't go so well for him. It was an awkward match-up because the left-handed serve got into the beautiful ball-striking return of Cilic. Cilic then got the ball back in deep and he was able to dictate with his forehand. He took all of Draper's weapons away and he [Draper] never really got the chance to dictate play on his you were to go over all the stats, Draper didn't return well enough. I felt he got a lot of balls back but they were centre-balls which allowed Cilic to dictate. When Cilic had second serves, he had to get on top of him in that department. Draper was using his backhand too much and that isn't his didn't get around and use his forehand enough, so I don't think he mixed up his positioning enough to give himself an opportunity to build pressure on the Cilic serve.


BBC News
42 minutes ago
- BBC News
Shelton frustrated as play suspended when serving for match
American Ben Shelton was furious when play in his second-round encounter with Rinky Hijikata at Wimbledon was suspended because of bad light as he was about to serve for the winning the first two sets 6-2 7-5, 10th seed Shelton was leading 5-4 in the third and likely on course to wrap up his progress within a matter of with the time approaching 21:30 and the sunlight having faded, the umpire on court two announced that there would be no more play that evening, much to Shelton's two-time Grand Slam semi-finalist, 22, angrily questioned officials about the decision, which means he has to return on Friday to play what could prove to be just one game, denying him a full day to Shelton's annoyance was the fact he had lost three match points on Hijikata's serve just before, and had also asked if play could be suspended before the start of the third set.