
Emma Raducanu books spot in Wimbledon second round with routine win over Mimi Xu
While defending champion Carlos Alcaraz became ensnared in a five-set epic against the maverick Fabio Fognini, over on Wimbledon 's second show court, another former US Open champion was showing him how first-round matches at grand slams are supposed to go.
In fact, his future doubles partner: Emma Raducanu. The pair's paths have diverged quite considerably since breakout seasons as teenagers, Raducanu winning a maiden major in Flushing Meadows in 2021, Alcaraz following suit the year after.
The Brit has never been able to replicate the highs of that stunning major win, but is back in the world's top 40 after a more consistent first half of the season, and back in the British No 1 spot.
The opponent she faced on Monday evening at SW19 may have reminded her somewhat of herself at a younger age. 17-year-old Mimi Xu has recalled watching Raducanu's US Open win, surrounded by friends she trained with at the LTA academy in Loughborough, and cites the 22-year-old as a 'role model' for her.
The Swansea teenager was awarded a wildcard into the main draw at Wimbledon this year, after a brilliant rise to the cusp of the world's top 300, including beating two top-100 players on grass this summer. Her reward was a first-round encounter with Raducanu, and primetime billing on Wimbledon's second-biggest court.
It was quite the step up for someone mid-A levels, who - excellent season notwithstanding - largely competes on the ITF circuit. And initially Xu looked a little star-struck. Raducanu opted to receive first and immediately piled pressure on the teenager's serve, breaking at the first time of asking. The 22-year-old often cuts a fired-up figure on court, and Xu's quiet racquet-shakes to herself were drowned out by Raducanu's frequent shouts of 'Come on!' as she raced into the lead.
But after the first couple of games whizzed by, and the crowd began to fear a whitewash, Xu seemed to let herself relax. A shout of 'Come on Britain!' offered the reminder that, with this being an all-British affair, the crowd – at least – was guaranteed to be supportive. Xu switched up her game, drawing Raducanu into the net, and after saving another break point, got herself on the board for 2-1.
It was to be a fairly brief respite, as Raducanu immediately reminded Xu – and everyone watching – why this was such a lopsided match. The teenager swung for the ball on a lethal body serve and missed completely, before slipping over at the baseline chasing the ball down.
Raducanu held to love and despite Xu showing glimpses of her quality – a fine forehand, easy power – she more often than not miscontrolled, and could not keep pace with the clean, destructive groundstrokes of her more experienced opponent.
Another error from Xu handed over the first set, 6-3 in 37 minutes. Someone in the crowd popped a bottle of champagne behind Raducanu's seat, the cork flying over her head and landing in the service box.
But the excitable punter may have been celebrating a win too early, and Raducanu would require digging into the well of that experience in a topsy-turvy second set. Xu left the court to regroup and it was clear Raducanu fancied getting through proceedings quickly, practicing serves while she waited for her to return.
A swift hold to love, followed by a break of the Xu serve after a mammoth game, may have signalled the beginning of the end – but as so often with underdogs, Xu had other ideas. She began swinging freely, at the same moment as Raducanu began to falter. Three blistering aces helped the British No 1 to a 40-0 lead, before Xu fought back to deuce. A clean winner brought up break point, and the wallflower of the first set disappeared as Xu broke, gesturing to the crowd to make some noise. Thrilled at seeing the fightback, they duly obliged.
Four breaks in succession meant there was little to separate the pair, but Raducanu has been here several times before, and the depth of her experience told. From 40-0 up on serve at 4-2, she was pegged back to 40-30, disrupted by a spectator's alarm repeatedly blaring. But she dug her heels in to back up her break, and did so again as she slipped to 0-30 serving for the match at 5-3. Xu shanked the ball into the net to bring up match point; a blistering serve was thumped into the tape, and that was that.
There were no hugs at the net, no warm words between the apprentice and her role model, just a businesslike handshake. But Raducanu was all smiles afterwards – as well as perhaps heaving a sigh of relief at how she avoided getting entangled in a lengthy epic, Alcaraz-style. The back issue that has troubled her in recent weeks also appeared pleasingly absent.
'I'm super pleased to have come through, it's so difficult playing another Brit first up,' she said afterwards. 'I had some really good patches and I had some moments where I lost my focus. I'm really happy with how I toughed it out and won the important points today.' Tougher tests will await, but this was a good one to tick off.

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


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Wimbledon diary: strawberry sandwiches, pricey rackets and Oliver Tarvet's expenses
'Where are the strawberries and cream?' was among the more unexpected questions for one of Wimbledon's army of volunteer stewards as the crowd streamed through the gates on Monday morning, given that the answer is 'absolutely everywhere you look'. It was a different story, though, at the local branch of Marks & Spencer, where 300 packs of the chain's specially commissioned strawberry & crème sandwich, a staple food for influencers on Instagram and TikTok in recent days, ran out shortly after 9am. A sample did make it into the media room, however, and while strawberries 'paired with whipped cream cheese on sweetened bread' might sound like the losing team's product idea on week two of The Apprentice, it has to be said … it's very edible. There was an air of genteel bedlam in the main Wimbledon shop as the first wave of merch-hungry tennis fans poured through the doors in search of SW19-branded booty. The demand for hats and towels was, not surprisingly, rather stronger than that for sweatshirts and hoodies, and no one at all seemed inclined to lug around one of the giant tennis rackets – designed to be hung on the wall, apparently – that are the most expensive single items in the shop at £600 a pop. And why would you, when you can get a self-inflating cushion – a genuine masterpiece of cutting-edge design that does exactly what it promises to do – for £582 less? Wimbledon's post-match media conferences can tend towards the formulaic – in the post-Nick Kyrgios era, at any rate – but there was an unusual twist in Oliver Tarvet's debrief after his excellent opening-day win against Leandro Riedi, as a 30-second chat about the match itself gave way to an in-depth discussion of the US collegiate system's rule limiting an athlete's annual earnings to $10,000 (£7,300). Tarvet, who is at San Diego University, is guaranteed at least £99,000 for reaching the second round and will now aim to spend as much of it as possible to get below the limit. 'I will try and do everything I can to make that work out and to find X amount of expenses so I'm under $10,000 of profit,' he said. 'I've got to find £60k, £70k of expenses. Tennis is an expensive sport so, hopefully I can make that happen. Just pay my coaches a little bit extra, I don't know. We'll figure something out. Fly business class. No, I keep humble, but yeah, really try to make that happen.' One of the more persistent – if understandable – annual breaches of Wimbledon protocol appears to have been consigned to history (along with the line judges) at this year's tournament: the running-while-looking-like-you're-not dash from gate three to the kiosk selling returns from the show courts as soon as the gates open at 10am. The simple solution – so simple that you can only wonder why it did not happen years ago – was to move the kiosk from its old spot by the Garden Café, on the far boundary of the site, to a new location … right next to gate three. 'We had to get lots of stewards in to try to get people to stop running,' an official mused while watching the new system working flawlessly on Monday. 'It wasn't very Wimbledon.' 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 Tennis-goers at Wimbledon are used to spending a fair part of their day looking nervously skywards but, for one day at least, players and punters alike were hoping for a cloud or two to offer some blessed respite from the 30C heat. Keeping cool was a constant challenge and one to which Daniil Medvedev, the No 9 seed, epically failed to rise. His rackets paid a heavy price for his surprise defeat by Benjamin Bonzi, as Medvedev took out his rage on both his chair and his bag, though he was more philosophical in the media room. 'Physically, it was not easy,' he said. 'To make a winner against him today, I had to make like, three great shots in the corner. I will never say he won because of the heat, but the heat is not easy to play. I do think, if you ask him, probably he was not enjoying the heat either.'


Spectator
an hour ago
- Spectator
Wimbledon's myth of elitism
Many were the jibes when Boris Johnson announced that he was 'thrilled' to be back on the tennis court in 2021 as lockdown restrictions eased. 'Bloody posho poncing about on a tennis court' or 'how typical' were probably some of them. Sir Keir, naturally, made sure that he was photographed on a football pitch on the same day. But here's the thing: these days, playing tennis isn't posh. Yes, chins love to watch it and play it – helped by tennis courts of their own – but the playing of tennis has become democratised. Reports of next-gen community tennis clubs springing up all over the country have become widespread, according to the Financial Times. And yet tennis has always had a class problem. Long viewed as a pastime solely for the aristocracy and middle classes, tennis has good reason to be associated with the elite: think ice cubes rattling away in the clubhouse, membership at vast prices, immaculate tennis whites, lots of free time during the day. It's hardly surprising that as a sport it produces feelings of revolutionary ire in some people. To add to this, the major tennis tournaments played in this country – Queen's and Wimbledon – are profitable because they play on these associations of elitism and old-school money: strawberries and cream, Panama hats, dress codes. Crowds love Wimbledon not just for its tennis but also for its raging gatekeeping snobbery, while the Queen's Club doesn't have to do much more than put up a few cordons to give people the feel that some necessary exclusion is going on somewhere. But if British tennis tournaments play on their toff overtones for profit, the pros themselves tell a totally different story. British players who qualify for Wimbledon are anything but posh – and proud of it. Take Liam Broady and Dan Evans, both top-ranking British players, who have risen through the gritty ranks of the tour on little to no financial recompense, a lot of sweat and some long-suffering parents willing to drive them around the country at weekends. Broady, the cheeky chappie from Stockport who delighted the centre court crowd back in 2023 by telling his mum to 'chill out' because he had 'already won 80 grand', briefly became something of a national treasure. Dan 'Evo' Evans, the self-styled bad boy from Birmingham, lived with a host family in Loughborough at the start of his career – far from manicured private courts and a clubhouse. Andy Murray, arguably Britain's most successful tennis player, began his ascent on the drizzly tennis courts of Dunblane, a town not known for its tennis culture. When this country did, finally, produce a posh tennis player in the shape of privately educated Old Dragon Tim Henman, the media went wild for his Oxfordshire middle-class credentials. At the peak of his career, Henman inspired public frenzy as the Daily Mail and other titles went wild for his inscrutable, Panama hat-wearing father Tony, his lovely Pony Club wife Lucy, and – rather mysteriously – his looks. The British love tennis precisely because it is a familiar choreography of our class struggle, kept within the tramlines But I always felt rather sorry for Tim Henman, a man who came to represent far more than the tennis he played: a rare beast who elided the public perception of tennis with his ambition. In 1999, Pat Cash, earring-sporting Australian and former Wimbledon champion, declared that Henman would never make it because he was 'the product of the middle classes' and 'didn't have the stomach for a fight'. How very unfair of Mr Cash – but also, as it turns out, so canny of him to underline the nation's hopeful obsession with Henman as our desire to see sport and player reunited in the same class bracket. So why the social dissonance between the sport and its professionals? Who gains? Certainly not the professionals, who bemoan the sport's middle-class straitjacket – and certainly not the Lawn Tennis Association, who have long disputed the 'white, male and stale' perceptions of the sport. This 'negative' view, they claim, deters young players coming up through community outreach schemes, leading the Guardian to state that there 'will never be a Marcus Rashford of tennis'. In his book A People's History of Tennis, David Berry attempts to counter the monocultural record of the sport, arguing for its radical nature that has always attracted maverick visions of femininity and politics – pointing to the socialist tennis movement of the 1970s, when there was briefly a 'Worker's Wimbledon'. Personally, I'm not convinced that we want tennis to be radical. The British love tennis precisely because it is a familiar choreography of our class struggle, kept within the tramlines. Boris knew it when he lumbered onto a tennis court that day – and we know it when we switch the box on for Wimbledon. As a social game, we're always at love-all without an umpire.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Grigor Dimitrov dating history: Who has the tennis star been in a relationship with?
GRIGOR DIMITROV has endured an injury-hit year - but his relationships continue to be headline-grabbing. Here we take a look at the Wimbledon star's life off the courts. 7 Grigor is a professional tennis player who spends much of his life on the ATP Tour. Born May 16 1991, in Bulgaria, Grigor is yet to win a major Grand Slam title, but he has certainly won the hearts of some of Hollywood's most beautiful stars. Eiza Gonzalez (2025 - Present) 7 Rumours surrounding Grigor's love life resurfaced in recent months following speculation of a burgeoning romance with Eiza Gonzalez. The world No 21 and Hollywood actress Eiza went public with their relationship in April at the Madrid Open. The tennis star received a celebratory kiss from Eiza on the cheek after he defeated Nicolas Jarry to reach the fourth round. The actress, who is 35 years old, shot to fame as Monica 'Darling' Costello in the 2017 hit Baby Driver, alongside Ansel Elgort. The Hobbs & Shaw actress is from Mexico and gained popularity in Spanish-language television and films before going to Hollywood. There has been no official confirmation on their relationship status. 7 Wimbledon 2025 LIVE - follow all the latest scores and updates from a thrilling fortnight at SW19 Madalina Ghenea (2023) Before finding love with Eiza, Grigor spent over a year single, following the end of his relationship with Madalina Ghenea. The Bulgarian tennis star started dating Madalina at the start of 2023. 7 Throughout their relationship, the Romanian was often seen supporting her beau at some of the biggest games of his career. Despite her busy schedule as a supermodel and actress, having starred as Sophia Loren in the series House of Gucci and alongside Ed Westwick in Deep Fear, she was often courtside. Nicole Scherzinger (2015-2019) Grigor and former Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger started dating in 2015, with their relationship going public in 2016. 7 Nicole is no stranger to a sporting love interest, with her former long-term relationship with Formula 1 GOAT Lewis Hamilton and current relationship with former rugby international Thom Evans. But from the moment their relationship became known, they faced scrutiny and rumours around whether they were still together. Busy schedules and countless rumours of break-ups plagued their relationship, which eventually ended in 2019. Maria Sharapova (2012-2015) With life on the tour, the idea of dating a fellow tennis player would seem enticing due to the difficult schedules. 7 That's why the long-term relationship of Maria Sharapova and Grigor seemed like the "perfect match". The couple started dating in 2012, and their relationship became public in 2013. The highest-paid sports woman in the world, at the time, was five years older than Grigor, who was only 23 during their relationship. However, after three years together, the couple broke up due to their "split paths". Serena Williams (2012) While this relationship is only speculated by fans, Serena Williams was rumoured to be dating the tennis star in 2012. The couple never officially confirmed their relationship and still speak regularly, according to Grigor.