Sunday, November 3, 2024

WTA Wimbledon Winners And Losers: Barbora Krejcikova and Emma Raducanu resurgent as Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff disappoint

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A dramatic and hugely surprising Wimbledon women’s singles draw is now finished, after plenty of shocks – and a fair few twists and turns.

As the dust settles, we look at the big winners and losers from a wild fortnight of action at the All England Club.

Big Winners

Barbora Krejcikova: A second Grand Slam singles title almost out of nowhere for Krejcikova, who has been out of form since January. It’s a 12th major overall for the Czech, who will be back in the top 10 on Monday – and has surely sealed a Hall of Fame spot.

Jasmine Paolini: Consecutive Slam final defeats will be tough for Paolini, but she has a lot to be proud of. She was the first Italian woman to reach the final, and will be world No 5 next week.

Donna Vekic: Vekic was deflated by her semi-final loss but it was an outstanding run for the 28-year-old, who reached the last four of a major for the first time. Good things could still yet come with Pam Shriver in her box.

Emma Raducanu: The British star is back in the world’s top 100 and reached the second week of a Slam for the first time since her US Open win. An impressive, resurgent run for the wildcard showed why she is one of the biggest stars in the sport.

Emma Raducanu set to be handed huge rankings opportunity when she returns to action

Barbora Krejcikova: 3 key factors behind Wimbledon victory over Jasmine Paolini

WATCH: Barbora Krejcikova pays emotional tribute to Jana Novotna after she stuns Wimbledon favourite

Donna Vekic’s legendary coach: 22-time Grand Slam champion guiding epic Wimbledon run

Big Losers

Marketa Vondrousova: Few predicted Vondrousova to defend her title, but she ultimately became just the second woman in history to be beaten in round one of her title defence. A tournament to forget for the sixth seed, who will be out of the top 10 on Monday.

Iga Swiatek: The world No 1 is the dominant force on clay and across the WTA Tour, but she failed to match her quarter-final run from 2023 and has a surprisingly poor record at Slams outside Roland Garros since 2023. A disappointing campaign for Swiatek.

Coco Gauff: The world No 2 was handed a golden chance to go deep at SW19 but was tactically outfought in round four by Emma Navarro. Gauff’s forehand and second serve remain vulnerable ahead of a huge summer.

Elena Rybakina: A semi-final run is not poor, but Rybakina should have claimed the title looking at who she was joined by at the last eight stage. A missed opportunity to win her second major.

Madison Keys: Penny for the thoughts of Keys, who was a double break up against Paolini in round four, only to sustain a hamstring injury that eventually forced her retirement. What could have been for her had she closed that match out harm-free?

Aryna Sabalenka: The most consistent Slam performer in the women’s game, Sabalenka was ruled out on the first day with a shoulder injury. Looking at how the draw opened up, she could have well won this had she been fit.

Madison Keys speaks out for first time since heartbreaking Wimbledon exit

Wimbledon: The 4 defending champions to lose first round – as Marketa Vondrousova joins unfortunate club

Iga Swiatek set for another No 1 rankings milestone after Coco Gauff follows her out of Wimbledon

Coco Gauff ‘wanted more’ from her coaching team amid shock Wimbledon defeat

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