World No 1 Iga Swiatek dumped out of Wimbledon by Yulia Putintseva

Having claimed her fourth French Open title last month, Swiatek was on a 21-match winning streak but Putintseva was also carrying plenty of confidence, having lifted the title in Birmingham two weeks ago. As the 29-year-old found her game, attacking more as the match went on, so Swiatek fell apart, the efforts of her clay court streak perhaps taking their toll.“My tank of really pushing myself to the limits became suddenly empty,” she admitted. “I was kind of surprised. But I know what I did wrong after Roland Garros. I didn’t really rest properly. I’m not going to make this mistake again.

“I feel like on grass I need a little bit more of that energy to keep being patient and accept some mistakes. Mentally, I didn’t really do that well in this tournament. I need to recover better after the clay court season, both physically and mentally.”

There remains a fragility about the 23-year-old on grass, which denies her the time she likes to gain a solid base from which to unleash her groundstrokes. But her woes should take nothing away from Putintseva, whose speed, consistency and variety made her unstoppable as the match progressed.The first set went according to the script but at the beginning of the second, things changed. As Swiatek faltered, Putintseva was dictating the rallies, hitting hard and flat, using the grass to her advantage.

An early break gave her a 3-1 lead in the second set and Swiatek lost her way, her second serve surprisingly vulnerable. Despite her brilliance from the baseline, Swiatek still looks uncomfortable moving forward, lacking the soft touch Putintseva showed whenever she came to the net. And when Putintseva got the chance, she unloaded on her own groundstrokes.The second set disappeared in a blur, prompting Swiatek to take a lengthy bathroom break before the start of the third set. But it did not change the momentum or stop the mistakes flowing from her racket. Putintseva won 14 of the first 16 points on her way to a 4-0 lead before Swiatek finally stopped the rot, holding serve. At 5-1, 40-40 on the Swiatek serve, Putintseva was two points from victory. The Pole held serve, just, and then saved two match points with bold, go-for-broke hitting. A beautiful drop shot gave Putintseva a third match point and Swiatek dumped a backhand return in the net.

“At some point I was playing fearless,” Putintseva said. “I was just, ‘I can do it I have to believe 100%, I have nothing to lose, just go for it’. Also my coach told me: ‘No matter which shot you’re doing, believe 100% and just follow’.

“It’s when the turning point happened. I started to play really, really good. Today I’m happy, extra happy, because she didn’t lose it; I took it. I was playing really well. This is for me the most important.”

“Definitely it was a great performance,” said Svitolina, who now plays China’s Wang Xinyu. “I’m really happy with the way I was playing, the way I was moving around the court. I had to be focused from the first point to the last one, and I’m happy I could execute that.”

Elena Rybakina, the third seed and the champion in 2022, steamrollered former world No 1 Caroline Wozniacki 6-0, 6-1 to set up a fourth-round clash with Anna Kalinskaya. The American Danielle Collins, who trailed 4-0 before the first rain break, recovered to beat Beatriz Haddad Maia, of Brazil, 6-4, 6-4.

This is what we’re up against
Teams of lawyers from the rich and powerful trying to stop us publishing stories they don’t want you to see.

Lobby groups with opaque funding who are determined to undermine facts about the climate emergency and other established science.

Authoritarian states with no regard for the freedom of the press.

Bad actors spreading disinformation online to undermine democracy.


But we have something powerful on our side.

We’ve got you.

The Guardian is funded by readers, like you in Nigeria, and the only person who decides what we publish is our editor.

If you want to join us in our mission to share independent, global journalism to the world, we’d love to have you on side.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply