Katie Boulter and Liam Broady are both out of Wimbledon
Katie Boulter and Liam Broady are both out of Wimbledon

Wimbledon latest as Katie Boulter and Liam Broady both beaten in straight sets


Katie Boulter and Liam Broady both saw their Wimbledon dreams ended in ruthless fashion on middle Saturday.

Boulter lost 6-1 6-1 to Harmony Tan while Broady was defeated 6-3 6-4 7-5 by Alex De Minaur, threatening to force a fourth set before finally succumbing to the Australian.

A match too far for Boulter

A drained Boulter admitted she ran out of steam as her fine Wimbledon run ended in disappointing fashion with a one-sided defeat by Tan in the third round.

Boulter produced the best result of her career by upsetting last year’s runner-up Karolina Pliskova on Thursday but was unable to get into the match against Tan, who has built on her first-round victory over Serena Williams brilliantly and is through to the last 16 at a grand slam for the first time.

Tan, ranked three places higher than Boulter at 115, was in control from the start and eased to a 6-1 6-1 victory in just 51 minutes.

Boulter went into Wimbledon on the back of strong performances in Nottingham, Birmingham and Eastbourne but has been enduring a tough time off court and was in tears during her on-court interview on Thursday after revealing her grandmother died earlier this week.

The 25-year-old said: “I think I’m just a little bit emotionally drained, if I’m honest. It’s been a long few weeks. I’m not going to even talk about this week. I think this week was the cherry on top.

“But I’ve been working so hard for a long period of time, getting through an injury to start with is a huge, huge struggle, and I made it through, and I’m here and played some amazing tennis week in, week out. I’ve played a lot of matches. I sort of went from zero to a hundred quite quickly.

“This week has probably been the tipping point. I’ve played some great matches. It’s also been very emotional. I think today was one step too far for me. Credit to her, she was playing some tough, tough tennis. Clearly it was a bit much.”

Wimbledon organisers faced criticism for not scheduling Boulter on a bigger court after her exploits against Pliskova, and there were plenty of empty seats on Court Two when play began at 11am.

Tan felt the decision helped her, saying: “When you play a Brit on Centre Court, I think there is a lot of people for her. I like to play on a small court.”

Boulter had no complaints, though, adding: “You’re supposed to put the best matches there are out there on Centre Court and on Court One. We’ve got Iga (Swiatek) who is out there on an I don’t know how many match winning streak. I would never expect to be put ahead of players like that.”

Boulter might have sensed it would not be her day when, in her first service game, she broke a string and saw two Tan shots hit the top of the net.

If the Frenchwoman had a slice of luck, though, she more than earned her superiority in the rest of the match.

While Boulter was happily able to trade pace with the flat-hitting Pliskova, this was a very different assignment, with Tan chipping the ball back and mixing up angles and spins.

Despite the drubbing, Boulter had a smile on her face in her post-match press conference as she reflected on the best month of her career.

“I’ve got absolutely loads of positives,” she said. “Many come from a physical and mental place. I know I can compete with these players week in, week out at this level. That for me is the biggest thing out of everything.

“It’s easy to say that I believe, but I’ve done it for the past four weeks off the back of an injury. Going forward, if I can kind of use this momentum, I really feel like I’m going to be in a great place by the end of the year. I’ve just got to stay healthy, fit and fresh.”

The frustration for Boulter is that the ATP and WTA’s decision to remove points this year means her run will not be rewarded by a rise in the rankings from 118 that could have seen her make it into the main draw of the US Open.

“I’ll be ready for qualies (qualifying) this year,” she said. “If it’s this year, next year, whatever year it might be, it’s a privilege to play the tournament at all.

“You never know, hopefully I can do what Emma (Raducanu) did last year. Hey, we’re a long way away from that and I’m just going to go out there and enjoy myself.”

Broady goes down fighting

Broady’s best run at Wimbledon ended with a straight sets defeat in the third round following a classy display by De Minaur.

The British number five had achieved a career-best win in round two over Diego Schwartzman to make the last 32 in SW19 for the first time but ran into an in-form 19th seed on Court One who won 6-3 6-4 7-5.

It was the second match in a row De Minaur had ended the hopes of a home player after he dumped out Jack Draper on Thursday and he simply proved too efficient once again.

Broady had spent more than seven hours on court during his first two wins and knew his chances of another memorable victory would require similar impressive levels of endurance.

Two big aces in the opening service game of the Australian were a sign of things to come but the Briton did try his best to trade blows and a wonderful drop shot demonstrated his ability.

An overhead smash by De Minaur – not long after a brilliant lob – set up a first break point which he was able to take to move 4-2 up.

Katie Boulter was not yet in the crowd to applaud the efforts of her boyfriend, due to her press duties following defeat to Harmony Tan earlier in the day, as he soon wrapped up the opener in 29 minutes with a 128mph ace.

With Broady down 15-40 early in the second, a quick conclusion looked likely, but the Stockport left-hander dug deep and his own ace sealed a big hold.

The issue remained De Minaur’s serve. The world number 27 lost only three points on it during the first set and with plenty of other shots in his locker, it was not long before he broke again.

Another sumptuous lob sealed it and a delicious drop shot should have helped clinch a second break, only for Broady in trademark fashion to reel off five points in a row to hold.

De Minaur still looked rock-solid on his service game and the latest to love put him one set away from the last 16.

Broady’s ill-timed double-fault at the beginning of the third saw the 23-year-old from Sydney take the initiative once again.

The Briton kept on providing plenty of entertainment and looked to use the crowd when he earned a first break point after one hour and 24 minutes.

It could not be taken and neither could the second soon after but, with De Minaur given the chance to serve for the match, an unexpected break did go the way of the player ranked 132nd in the world.

Court One reacted with glee but any hopes of a fourth set were short-lived when the Australian immediately broke back and, at the second time of asking, did serve out – although only after a 12-minute final game.

For Broady, who is expected to drop in the rankings due to the lack of points on offer at the All England Club, he will now aim to build on this for the hard-court season.

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