New Wimbledon champ guaranteed as Barbora Krejcikova loses to Emma Navarro
The American's attitude and game both were in just the right places at Wimbledon overnight, when she pulled off another grand slam victory over a defending champion by eliminating Barbora Krejcikova 2-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Sending an ill and dizzy Krejcikova home in the third round, the 10th-seeded Navarro extended a recent run of one-and-done winners at the All England Club and assured the grass-court major of yet another first-time women's champion.
"Something I take a lot of pride in is being tough and fighting till the last point, no matter what the circumstances are. It's something I always try to do," Navarro said.
"I could never live with myself if I ever gave up. It's just not in my nature. I don't think it's in any of my family members' nature to ever give up on anything. I guess we're a stubborn bunch."
Krejcikova faded in the third set, getting her blood pressure checked at the changeover after Navarro broke her to lead 3-2 at No.1 Court. Krejcikova ate a banana and drank liquids during the medical timeout, while Navarro walked to her guest box and spoke to her coach during the break in action.
When play resumed, Krejcikova showed clear signs of being in distress, often leaning over and placing her hands on her knees between points.
"I was actually feeling worse and worse," said Krejcikova, who was seeded 17th but now will tumble out of the top 70 in the WTA rankings.
"It's very sad for me and very unfortunate."
This is hardly Navarro's first big win on a big stage. Last year, she eliminated Coco Gauff at Wimbledon to reach her first major quarterfinal. Then, in a rematch a couple of months later, Navarro won again at the US Open — where Gauff was the 2023 champion — en route to her debut in a slam semifinal.
Whoever ends up winning the Wimbledon women's title on July 12 will be the ninth champion in the past nine editions of the grass-court grand slam tournament. Serena Williams was the last repeat champ in 2016.
The trophy-takers since then have been Garbiñe Muguruza in 2017, Angelique Kerber in 2018, Simona Halep in 2019, Ash Barty in 2021 — all of whom are now retired — Elena Rybakina in 2022, Marketa Vondrousova in 2023 and then Krejcikova.
Rybakina lost overnight. Vondrousova exited in the second round.
Last year's triumph was the second at a major tournament for Krejcikova, who also won the 2021 French Open.
It has been a fortnight filled with surprises, and Navarro is one of four top-10 seeds left in the women's bracket. The others are No.1 Aryna Sabalenka, who won her third-round match against Emma Raducanu, Andreeva and No.8 Iga Swiatek, a 6-2, 6-3 winner against Danielle Collins.
AP
Hashtags

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

News.com.au
20 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Thompson sets sights on Fritz as Wimbledon quarter finals beckon, Alcaraz eyes Rublev challenge
Jordan Thompson is three high-quality sets away from a quarter-final berth but must overcome Taylor Fritz in their fourth round clash overnight. While Carlos Alcaraz could face his toughest challenge yet against volatile Russian Andrey Rublev, and Aryna Sabalenka eyes a deep Wimbledon run as other top seeds fall around her. Unseeded Australian Thompson has taken several big scalps through the first three rounds, with come-from-behind, five-set victories against Vit Kopriva and Benjamin Bonzi before he dispatched Lucian Darderi in four sets. It sets up a mouth-watering clash with fellow big server Taylor Fritz, the American fifth-seed who has battled his fair share of adversity. Fritz was on the cusp of elimination in the first round, down two sets to none against Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard before fighting his way through in five sets, before advancing at the expense of Gabriel Diallo and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina. Rublev is aware he has to be at the top of his game to cause an almighty upset and break his curse of never progressing beyond a Grand Slam quarter-final. The world number 14 has reached the last eight on 10 occasions without ever making it to a semi-final. 'You cannot show any weaknesses,' said Rublev on the challenge of facing Alcaraz. Rublev has already enjoyed a much happier time at Wimbledon than 12 months ago when he repeatedly smashed his racquet over his own leg during a shock first-round exit. But he has credited the influence of two-time Grand Slam champion Marat Safin, himself a notorious hothead in his prime, for bringing some calm to his game. 'There are two options,' he added. 'Try to go deeper. Or if I lose, to lose it in a mature, adult way. 'That would be success as well, to lose it in the right way.' Three-time Grand Slam champion Sabalenka missed last year's Wimbledon due to a shoulder injury and was excluded in 2022 as part of a blanket ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes. Sabalenka overcame a stern test of her tennis and temperament to end British favourite Emma Raducanu's run in the third round in arguably the match of the tournament so far.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Demon v Djoker: The Wimbledon showdown that is a year in the making
'It's funny how life works. Here we are a year later, and I'm going to get that match-up,' de Minaur said. 'But still, it was a brutal time for me last year, having to deal with all those emotions. [I'm] feeling good, ready to go, and I'm going to get my chance again, so I'm excited for that.' A lot has happened in between. De Minaur ascended to a career-high No.6 in the rankings after his 2024 Wimbledon run, but the hip setback had wide-ranging repercussions, from costing him playing singles at the Olympics to spending months on the sidelines. He somehow extended his grand slam quarter-finals streak at the US Open, but Brit Jack Draper mercilessly thrashed a clearly compromised de Minaur. His hip has long recovered, and he made a maiden quarter-final at the Australian Open in January – but a second-round loss at Roland-Garros in May prompted him to reveal he was suffering from mental fatigue and needed a tennis detox. The 26-year-old tumbled out of the top 10 ahead of this year's Wimbledon championships, and lost his only match on grass in straight sets, so expectations were modest. A friendly draw helped de Minaur advance to the round of 16 for the second straight year, with his opening three opponents' combined average ranking a lowly 127. Djokovic will be a significant rise in class. What the numbers say Both players dropped just one set on their way to the fourth round, but Djokovic's serve stands out. The Serbian superstar has hit 49 aces to the Australian's 12, his first-serve percentage shades de Minaur comfortably (73 per cent to 54), and he is winning 84 per cent of those points to de Minaur's 80. Djokovic has dropped serve only once – at his first attempt to complete his win over Miomir Kecmanovic in the previous round – whereas de Minaur's been broken four times. Loading De Minaur's ability to protect his serve will likely determine his fate, but he will fancy his chances of denting Djokovic's serving dominance, given he is the ATP Tour's leading returner statistically across the past year. Djokovic is 14th in the same metric. De Minaur has converted 15 of his 42 break points (36 per cent) at Wimbledon this year, while Djokovic has broken 19 times from 53 chances (36 per cent). There has been a gradual decline in de Minaur's first-serve percentage across the years as he takes more risks searching for power and cheaper points. Winning 80 per cent of first-serve points this fortnight is a great result. But occasionally, his percentage sinks dramatically, including landing only nine of 27 on his first ball in the opening set against Arthur Cazaux in the second round. That is the sole set de Minaur lost. He made only 42 per cent of first serves in his most-recent match against Djokovic in Monte-Carlo last year – and that won't cut it. Loading De Minaur has picked his spots well to come to the net, particularly in his past two wins over August Holmgren and Cazaux, where he won a combined 37 of 42 points (88 per cent) in that part of the court. But Djokovic has also been dominant at the net, where he is winning 80 per cent of points for the tournament. What they said Alex de Minaur: 'Novak has completed the game. He's broken all the records. It's amazing for him to still be showing up and still showing that fire and desire to win more. He's a player who can find motivation and fire from anything – and that's extremely dangerous. You don't want to give him something to get motivated about because then you'll definitely see his absolute best side.' Novak Djokovic: 'Alex has improved his game tremendously in the last couple of years. He's playing the tennis of his life. He's definitely knocking on the door of the final stages of grand slams. You're not super excited to play Alex de Minaur on grass, that's for sure, because he's so quick, and he's a complete player. He has gained pace on his serve as well. He hits his spots very well. [I'm expecting] a very tough challenge. I'm looking forward to it. I think it's going to be a great test to see where my game is at against a top player like Alex.' Demon v Djoker match-ups 2023 Australian Open R4 (hardcourt) Novak Djokovic d Alex de Minaur 6-2, 6-1, 6-2 How Demon reflects: 'Obviously, that first one we played was a whitewash. He was way too good, and I had no answers for him.' 2024 United Cup quarter-finals (hardcourt) Alex de Minaur d Novak Djokovic 6-4, 6-4 How Demon reflects: 'It was an incredible moment to be able to overcome that previous result and actually finish on top. That was a huge stepping stone in my career and my confidence levels because the feeling I had after that first time we played wasn't great, and I was able to overcome that.'

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
Demon v Djoker: The Wimbledon showdown that is a year in the making
'It's funny how life works. Here we are a year later, and I'm going to get that match-up,' de Minaur said. 'But still, it was a brutal time for me last year, having to deal with all those emotions. [I'm] feeling good, ready to go, and I'm going to get my chance again, so I'm excited for that.' A lot has happened in between. De Minaur ascended to a career-high No.6 in the rankings after his 2024 Wimbledon run, but the hip setback had wide-ranging repercussions, from costing him playing singles at the Olympics to spending months on the sidelines. He somehow extended his grand slam quarter-finals streak at the US Open, but Brit Jack Draper mercilessly thrashed a clearly compromised de Minaur. His hip has long recovered, and he made a maiden quarter-final at the Australian Open in January – but a second-round loss at Roland-Garros in May prompted him to reveal he was suffering from mental fatigue and needed a tennis detox. The 26-year-old tumbled out of the top 10 ahead of this year's Wimbledon championships, and lost his only match on grass in straight sets, so expectations were modest. A friendly draw helped de Minaur advance to the round of 16 for the second straight year, with his opening three opponents' combined average ranking a lowly 127. Djokovic will be a significant rise in class. What the numbers say Both players dropped just one set on their way to the fourth round, but Djokovic's serve stands out. The Serbian superstar has hit 49 aces to the Australian's 12, his first-serve percentage shades de Minaur comfortably (73 per cent to 54), and he is winning 84 per cent of those points to de Minaur's 80. Djokovic has dropped serve only once – at his first attempt to complete his win over Miomir Kecmanovic in the previous round – whereas de Minaur's been broken four times. Loading De Minaur's ability to protect his serve will likely determine his fate, but he will fancy his chances of denting Djokovic's serving dominance, given he is the ATP Tour's leading returner statistically across the past year. Djokovic is 14th in the same metric. De Minaur has converted 15 of his 42 break points (36 per cent) at Wimbledon this year, while Djokovic has broken 19 times from 53 chances (36 per cent). There has been a gradual decline in de Minaur's first-serve percentage across the years as he takes more risks searching for power and cheaper points. Winning 80 per cent of first-serve points this fortnight is a great result. But occasionally, his percentage sinks dramatically, including landing only nine of 27 on his first ball in the opening set against Arthur Cazaux in the second round. That is the sole set de Minaur lost. He made only 42 per cent of first serves in his most-recent match against Djokovic in Monte-Carlo last year – and that won't cut it. Loading De Minaur has picked his spots well to come to the net, particularly in his past two wins over August Holmgren and Cazaux, where he won a combined 37 of 42 points (88 per cent) in that part of the court. But Djokovic has also been dominant at the net, where he is winning 80 per cent of points for the tournament. What they said Alex de Minaur: 'Novak has completed the game. He's broken all the records. It's amazing for him to still be showing up and still showing that fire and desire to win more. He's a player who can find motivation and fire from anything – and that's extremely dangerous. You don't want to give him something to get motivated about because then you'll definitely see his absolute best side.' Novak Djokovic: 'Alex has improved his game tremendously in the last couple of years. He's playing the tennis of his life. He's definitely knocking on the door of the final stages of grand slams. You're not super excited to play Alex de Minaur on grass, that's for sure, because he's so quick, and he's a complete player. He has gained pace on his serve as well. He hits his spots very well. [I'm expecting] a very tough challenge. I'm looking forward to it. I think it's going to be a great test to see where my game is at against a top player like Alex.' Demon v Djoker match-ups 2023 Australian Open R4 (hardcourt) Novak Djokovic d Alex de Minaur 6-2, 6-1, 6-2 How Demon reflects: 'Obviously, that first one we played was a whitewash. He was way too good, and I had no answers for him.' 2024 United Cup quarter-finals (hardcourt) Alex de Minaur d Novak Djokovic 6-4, 6-4 How Demon reflects: 'It was an incredible moment to be able to overcome that previous result and actually finish on top. That was a huge stepping stone in my career and my confidence levels because the feeling I had after that first time we played wasn't great, and I was able to overcome that.'