
Katie Boulter looking ahead to Wimbledon after Nottingham exit
Katie Boulter decided to focus on the positives despite seeing her quest for a third straight title at the LTA's Lexus Nottingham Open end in the quarter-final.
Boulter battled bravely but lost out to American McCartney Kessler 6-3 3-6 6-4 at centre court, ending not only Boulter's hopes of a hat-trick of successes but snapping her 12-match winning streak in Nottingham.
Yet despite defeat in the last eight, Boulter believes her performance provided plenty to take heart from.
'I felt like I played some really good tennis,' said Boulter. 'It's unfortunate that I lost today but I actually think that was one of my better matches here.
'It's pretty ironic but it is what it is. I thought there some really good positives to take from it.
Backhand brilliance from @katiecboulter ☄
Your @LexusUK Shot of the Day from Nottingham pic.twitter.com/bangTdU7lJ
— LTA (@the_LTA) June 20, 2025
'I found my groove as we got to the set-all. I played one bad game in the first set and thought the rest of the match was a high performance from the both of us.
'I felt like the level out there was really good. It's been better than a lot of my matches. Just because I win a match doesn't mean it was my best tennis and just because I lose a match doesn't mean it was my worst tennis.
'I'm allowed to be beaten on the day and I felt like she [McCartney] did that. She's a very good player and I'm positive her ranking will go higher and higher for the rest of the year.
'I played some really good stuff in the second and got unlucky in certain points but I played the game I wanted to play and normally I can and that was some of the best tennis I've played this year.'
Boulter departs the Midlands less than a week away from the LTA's Lexus Eastbourne Open but she has already ruled out competing there.
Instead, Boulter has decided to switch her focus to ensuring that she heads to the lawns of SW19 at her absolute best physically and mentally.
She added: 'I haven't thought too much about it yet but I'm not playing next week. If I was chasing points and rankings I would be but my plan is not to because I want to prioritise Wimbledon and that's something I've never done before and I'd like to try something different.
'The odd match here and there would have been but I don't think that'll make a difference when I step out to Wimbledon. It's now about getting work done in the next week and continuing to work on my physical game.
'It makes a massive difference and something I've never done before so I'd like to try it.
'I've always focused on getting a lot of matches before Wimbledon and getting as much time as I got on the grass and I don't think that's helped me a lot as I ran into Wimbledon on fumes mentally.'
Boulter's battle with Kessler headlined an action-packed programme at Nottingham.
Earlier, Ukraine's Dayana Yastremska was the first player to reach the final four after taking down fifth seed and last year's Eastbourne runner-up Leylah Fernandez 6-3 7-6 (6).
And sixth seed Magda Linette held off second seed Clara Tauson 6-2 7-5 to reach a career-first semi-final on grass.
Linette hardly broke a sweat in the first set but found herself fighting off a ferocious fightback from her opponent, who surged to a 5-2 lead in the second.
The Pole proved herself more than up to the challenge, halting Tauson in her tracks by taking the last five games to advance.
Top seeds Shuai Zhang and Su-Wei Hsieh advanced to the semi-final in women's doubles after defeating Eri Hozumi and Aldila Sutjiadi 6-4 6-3.
They next face fourth seeds Ena Shibahara and Anna Danilina, who eliminated Anastasia Detiuc and Bibiane Schoofs 7-6 (5) 6-3.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
29 minutes ago
- The Independent
Emma Raducanu speaks out after stalker tried to buy Wimbledon tickets
Emma Raducanu has praised Wimbledon after her stalker was blocked from buying tickets to this year's event. The man, who was previously given a restraining order by Dubai police after stalking the British former US Open Champion at four successive tennis tournaments in Singapore, Abu Dhabi, Doha and Dubai, had his name red-flagged on the All England Club's security system. He was blocked from entering the public ballot. "I got a notification, the police contacted me and told me and assured everything was good," Raducanu told BBC Sport.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Emma Raducanu lifts lid on Carlos Alcaraz link-up: He has been my motivation for years
Emma Raducanu has revealed the motivation behind her doubles link-up with Carlos Alcaraz and says she will take inspiration from him at Wimbledon. The new team – who can expect to be given a portmanteau nickname of either 'Alcaranu' or 'Raducaraz' – are one of several eye-catching partnerships set to make their debuts at the US Open in August. Alcaraz joked that when he proposed the pair join forces for the $1million event, Raducanu took 'a while' to reply to him. 'Gotta keep them on their toes!,' Raducanu laughed before clarifying she had to go through the formality of asking her coach before responding to the request. 'He's so nice, very happy, amazing values and just a really positive light to be around. Good tennis player as well, great tennis player. 'I remember he beat Stef [Tsitsipas] in the third round [at the US Open in 2021] and it was like a big win, his breakout kind of win on a big stage and it was really cool to go through that tournament together. I kept going through the US Open, but we were staying in touch for the whole time and it's nice. We have a good relationship still. He's obviously overtaken me a lot, but it's nice that we have that from a while ago.' 🪙 . @carlosalcaraz and @EmmaRaducanu are still working to get on the same page ahead of the US Open Mixed Doubles Championship 😅 — US Open Tennis (@usopen) June 19, 2025 Raducanu was spotted on the Queen's Club balcony with Myah Petchey, daughter of her coach Mark, watching Alcaraz's semi-final victory over Roberto Bautista last Saturday as she continued her recovery from a back spasm ahead of Eastbourne and Wimbledon. Raducanu says Queen's winner Alcaraz, who is after a Wimbledon 'three-peat' has plenty of magic to bring to their partnership, with the pair's history starting in 2021, when she was catapulted to superstardom by winning the US Open. Then, Alcaraz was ranked 55th in the world – Raducanu was 150th – and for both of them, the tournament was a coming-of-age moment that would change the trajectory of their careers. Raducanu lifted the trophy months after doing her A Levels, while Alcaraz announced himself on the world stage by knocking out then-third seed Stefanos Tsitsipas on Arthur Ashe. It was during that tournament that the two teenagers encountered each other for the first time, and it is at the same venue that they will make their doubles debut in August this year. 'When I see him play, he's always got a smile on his face and enjoying it,' Raducanu said. That's why he's able to do such crazy shots, turn points around that he's maybe not favoured to and pull out these ridiculous shots. It's coming from a place of curiosity. 'It's amazing to have that on the men's side and take inspiration when I can.' On June 17, it was announced that Raducanu's stalker was blocked in his attempt to buy Wimbledon tickets for the summer's tournament, after officials spotted his name on the list of applicants. The man, who is understood to be from South America, had applied last year in the public ballot. 'I think when I heard that I was like Wimbledon has done an amazing job and I got a notification and the police contacted me and told me and assured me everything was good, everything was okay,' Raducanu told the BBC when asked about the news. 'I know I'm not the first athlete to go through this and I won't be the last. I feel comfortable, I feel safe, I feel great. I've had protection whenever I've been at these events recently and I feel okay.' Raducanu's preparations for Wimbledon have been far from straightforward as she continues to contend with a back issue that forced her to pull out of the Berlin Open last week. During her quarter-final defeat to Zheng Qinwen in west London, a medic was called to court, and Raducanu later admitted she needed painkillers to get through it. Admitting the issue 'needs a lot of work' the British No 1 has been doing a combination of dry needling, soft tissue massages, muscle stimulation and taping, but the day before her opening round match against Ann Li on the south coast, she was untroubled by it in morning practice. 'I have good days and bad days with it,' Raducanu said, adding: 'I'm just trying to manage it as best as I can.' For Raducanu, who described the problem as a 'vulnerability' that needs care rather than something serious, it remains to be seen how much of a problem it will cause at Eastbourne and SW19.


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
New Rangers chairman Andrew Cavenagh ‘relishing challenge' of overhauling Celtic
Gers have won only one top-flight title and three major honours in total since their financial implosion in 2012, with their city rivals dominating the trophy count in that period. However, Cavenagh, fronting an American consortium that took control of the Ibrox club earlier this month, is confident they can bridge the gap in Glasgow and, over time, assert the Light Blues as Scotland's leading force. 'We relish that challenge,' said Cavenagh, facing the media at Ibrox on Monday just hours after an EGM in the city in which their immediate plans were given the all-clear by shareholders. 'We are impatient, we are competitive and so we look forward to the challenge.' At today's General Meeting held today at the DoubleTree Hilton in Glasgow, shareholders voted in favour of all proposed resolutions, to support the club's future growth and investment plans. — Rangers Football Club (@RangersFC) June 23, 2025 Pressed further on the scale of the task Rangers face as they bid to usurp a Celtic side thriving under Brendan Rodgers, Cavenagh said: 'We think it is achievable or we wouldn't be here. We don't think it will be easy. 'It is not going to happen instantaneously but we will strive to improve the on-field performance and we will continue to build the infrastructure of the club. If we didn't think we could win we wouldn't be here. We are here because we think we can. 'There is real work to be done, I think everyone is aware of that. Paraag (Marathe, vice-chairman) and I are two of the least patient people you will meet and we are also incredibly competitive so we share our supporters' sense of urgency. We are in with both feet today and we will move this forward as fast as we can.' Cavenagh – sure-footed and measured throughout his first briefing with Scottish journalists – outlined his aim of establishing Rangers as Champions League regulars. Andrew Cavenagh (left) and vice-chairman Paraag Marathe at Ibrox on Monday (Andrew Milligan/PA) 'Champions League is the goal we are trying to get to every year,' he said. 'It is important because it brings more revenue. It will always be our benchmark. 'It is not as if we are banking on that and if it doesn't happen then there is some sort of a problem. That is not the case at all. But it is our goal. 'As we increase revenue, which comes from the Champions League, then we get to re-invest that in the club. That is why it is the goal from both a sporting perspective and the revenue model perspective.' While the new owners are intent on ensuring financial sustainability, they were given the green light on Monday to get the ball rolling on their revival of the club with a £20million investment. '£20m is the amount of primary capital that we are putting in,' said Cavenagh. 'We have been careful to not say we won't put more in and to not say we will put more in. Russell Martin has impressed Rangers' new owners (Steve Welsh/PA) 'When we think about the amount of capital that is needed, we look at it through three lenses. The first is what impact will it have and we think £20m into the club – and again, we're not being specific about where the £20m is going – we think £20m is the right amount this summer. 'And the other two lenses that we look though are FSR (UEFA's Financial Sustainability Regulations) and making sure we are running the club in a sustainable way. 'We are not looking for what I think of as the sugar high – come in spend some money, sign some players and try to win something and then you have the sugar crash that comes from that.' One of the new owners' first big calls was to appoint Russell Martin as head coach earlier this month. 'There were four criteria that we looked at for head coach,' said Cavenagh. 'One, somebody that would coach what we think is the right style of play or game model. Two, someone who would build the culture and the way we think it needs to be built. 'Three, someone who will develop talent. And four, someone who will win matches. Russell was the standout across all of those metrics, unanimously among our team.'