logo
No Dutch treat for Aussies in grasscourt wipeout

No Dutch treat for Aussies in grasscourt wipeout

Yahoo12-06-2025

Australian tennis hopes of an encouraging start to the grass-court season have been dashed as both Alexei Popyrin and Kim Birrell got knocked out of the annual pre-Wimbledon tournament at Rosmalen.
The double defeat in the Dutch event on Thursday meant there are no Australians left in the singles at the venue where Alex de Minaur lifted the title in 2024.
With de Minaur taking a rest before competing at Queen's Club next week, most hopes rested on sixth seed Popyrin, who was hoping to rebound swiftly after the disappointment of his fourth-round exit at the French Open at the hands of Tommy Paul.
Next stop: Quarter-finals 🎟️✈️@ZizouBergs comes from a set down to take out Popyrin in an entertaining match, 6-7(3) 6-2 7-6(3)!@LibemaOpen | #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/f7YqP08dah
— ATP Tour (@atptour) June 12, 2025
Up to a career-high ranking of 21 thanks to his run to the fourth round in Paris, Popyrin had looked forward to starting his grass campaign in style after a first-round bye, but found himself edged out in a three-set duel with Zizou Bergs.
The Belgian, named after the French soccer great Zinedine Zidane whose nickname is 'Zizou', outlasted Australia's No.2 Popyrin 6-7 (3-7) 6-2 7-6 (7-3) after the Sydneysider had taken the opening set in their last-16 clash.
AS. GOOD. AS. IT. GETS. 😲🫨What a get from @AlexeiPopyrin99! @LibemaOpen | #LibemaOpen pic.twitter.com/uWlaNVXBMB
— ATP Tour (@atptour) June 12, 2025
Popyrin had his moments, including one dazzling angled crosscourt winner that he scooped up after chasing down a Bergs volley, but it wasn't enough to earn the 25-year-old his first quarter-final berth in a grass-court event.
Meanwhile, in the women's event, world No.69 Birrell, who had defeated another Chinese Wang Xinyu in the first round, went down to Yuan Yue 6-4 6-3 in the last-16 to end the Australian interest.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Florian Wirtz holidays with Liverpool star before £116m transfer as exciting Milos Kerkez update revealed
Florian Wirtz holidays with Liverpool star before £116m transfer as exciting Milos Kerkez update revealed

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Florian Wirtz holidays with Liverpool star before £116m transfer as exciting Milos Kerkez update revealed

On the way: Florian Wirtz is set to swap Bayer Leverkusen for Liverpool in a major transfer that could be worth £116m (REUTERS) Florian Wirtz has been pictured on holiday with Jeremie Frimpong as he prepares to seal a huge transfer to Liverpool. German forward Wirtz is expected to fly in for a medical on Merseyside on Friday after a mammoth deal was finally struck with Bayer Leverkusen last week worth an initial guaranteed £100million up front plus a further potential £16m in add-ons, which if met would make it the most expensive signing in the history of British football, overtaking Chelsea's £115m swoop for Ecuadorian midfielder Moises Caicedo from Brighton in the summer of 2023. Advertisement Wirtz has been on holiday since Germany's Nations League finals campaign on home soil ended with a last-four defeat by eventual winners Portugal - in which he scored - and subsequent third-place play-off loss to France last weekend, having already agreed personal terms with Liverpool as he prepares to finalise the move after a break. Frimpong has now posted a picture of the pair relaxing on holiday on a boat in a sunny location, with the Dutch international defender having already sealed his own £29.5m switch from Leverkusen to Anfield last month as Trent Alexander-Arnold's long-term right-back replacement following the latter's early £10m move to Real Madrid ahead of the Club World Cup. Alongside a snap of himself and Wirtz posing on the boat, Frimpong posted on social media: 'Vacation mode with my bro.' Advertisement Wirtz and Frimpong played together for four seasons at Leverkusen after the latter joined from Celtic in 2021, each enjoying a key role in the Xabi Alonso team that won a memorable Bundesliga and German Cup double in 2023/24, narrowly missing out on a trophy treble after losing the Europa League final to Atalanta in Dublin. Liverpool fans will hope that the pair are swiftly joined at Anfield by Milos Kerkez, who looks to be firmly on track to complete a £45m move from Bournemouth soon having spoken to Reds supporters on a recent live stream and held up a flag of a Liverpool supporters' group in Serbia. The father and agent of Kerkez - an international team-mate and close friend of Liverpool's Dominik Szoboszlai with Hungary - also confirmed that his son joining Liverpool was now 'basically a done deal' as he hailed the impact of Richard Hughes, Liverpool's sporting director who signed Kerkez from Dutch side AZ Alkmaar during his time at Bournemouth. 'It's only Liverpool for us and we're not going anywhere else and we won't talk to other clubs,' Sebastijan Kerkez told the Super Indirektno podcast. Advertisement 'Everything is done between us, we just need to sort out some details. But it's basically a done deal." On Hughes, he said: 'Richard Hughes brought us to Bournemouth, if he said we go to India, then we go to India. Everything is agreed, just some little things.' Kerkez's proposed transfer to Liverpool had already looked to be moving closer this week after Bournemouth signed French left-back Adrien Truffert from Rennes - his assumed replacement - in a £10.1m deal. Alongside Frimpong, Wirtz and likely Kerkez, Liverpool are also welcoming Georgian goalkeeper Giorgi Mamardashvili this summer after a £29m deal was agreed with Valencia last year. Advertisement Fellow goalkeeper Armin Pesci, 20, has also arrived from Hungarian side Puskas Akademia, with the Reds securing new competition and support for first-choice stopper Alisson Becker after long-time deputy Caoimhin Kelleher's £18m switch to Brentford. Left-back stalwart Andy Robertson could yet leave amid the pursuit of Kerkez, having now been linked with Atletico Madrid as he enters the final year of his Liverpool contract. If he stays, then understudy Kostas Tsimikas could depart instead, Sky Sports claim, with Wolves, Nottingham Forest and Leeds all linked with the Greek defender.

Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023
Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023

Markéta Vondroušová is into her first final since she won Wimbledon in 2023. The Czech, who has been hampered by shoulder problems since her stunning victory at SW19, beat world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka 6-2, 6-4 in the German Open semifinals Saturday. Advertisement Sabalenka, one of the favorites to lift the Wimbledon title this year, had saved four match points in a tiebreak to escape 2022 champion Elena Rybakina the previous day, one of them coming via a fortunate net cord. But Vondroušová was not so profligate. After both players saved break points in their opening service games, Vondroušová needed just one chance to break Sabalenka's serve at the next opportunity. She broke again to seal a clinical first set, and when the Belarusian — as she so often does — mounted a charge early in the second, Vondroušová broke her to love to restore parity immediately and snuff out the world No. 1's momentum. At 4-4 in the second set, Vondroušová made her move at the most critical time. A stunning forehand winner with her knee to the ground earned a Sabalenka double fault, as she tried to overpress and earn back the advantage. Sabalenka got to 30-30, but Vondroušová changed from a chipped, slow return and slammed a first serve to her opponent's ankles to cough up a short ball and win a break point. Sabalenka saved that one, but missed a routine forehand into the net under pressure at 40-40, echoing how Rybakina had tightened against her with their match on the line the previous day. And then Vondroušová somehow stayed in a point from the shadows deep behind the baseline, lobbing and chipping strikes back into play until she managed to jam Sabalenka on a volley that she dumped into the net. Serving for the match, Vondroušová found herself down 0-40. But in the face of Sabalenka's much-improved defense, she kept playing attacking tennis and earned errors to get back to deuce. Two points later, she was back where she had dreamed of being for so long. Vondroušová's four consecutive victories in Berlin match the longest win streak she has compiled in the two years since her Grand Slam triumph. Last grass season, her Wimbledon title defense ended with a first-round defeat to Jessica Bouzas Maneiro of Spain, then the world No. 83. Vondroušová was world No. 6. The first unseeded woman to lift the Venus Rosewater Dish one year; the second defending women's champion to lose in the first round in the Open Era the next. Advertisement Come last year's U.S. Open, she was undergoing surgery. At 25, Vondroušová thought her career was close to over. She couldn't swing a tennis racket after surgery on her shoulder. She would try to play. The pain would return. Another surgery wasn't an option. All the time spent on physical improvement wasn't translating into tennis. She missed six months of the 2024 season, returning in January 2025. 'It's not fun,' Vondroušová told at Roland Garros a few weeks ago. 'I had to be very patient.' In Paris, she won two Grand Slam matches for the first time in over a year, and now that tennis has moved from clay to grass, her command of the ball, skidding groundstrokes and confidence at the front of the court is back on full display. In a rematch of the 2023 Wimbledon final, she took out Ons Jabeur for the right to face Sabalenka, having beaten Madison Keys, another serious Wimbledon contender, in the opening round. Vondroušová will play either Liudmila Samsonova or Wang Xinyu in Sunday's final. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023
Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023

New York Times

time38 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Marketa Vondrousova beats Aryna Sabalenka to reach first final since Wimbledon 2023

Markéta Vondroušová is into her first final since she won Wimbledon in 2023. The Czech, who has been hampered by shoulder problems since her stunning victory at SW19, beat world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka 6-2, 6-4 in the German Open semifinals Saturday. Sabalenka, one of the favorites to lift the Wimbledon title this year, had saved four match points in a tiebreak to escape 2022 champion Elena Rybakina the previous day, one of them coming via a fortunate net cord. But Vondroušová was not so profligate. After both players saved break points in their opening service games, Vondroušová needed just one chance to break Sabalenka's serve at the next opportunity. She broke again to seal a clinical first set, and when the Belarusian — as she so often does — mounted a charge early in the second, Vondroušová broke her to love to restore parity immediately and snuff out the world No. 1's momentum. Advertisement At 4-4 in the second set, Vondroušová made her move at the most critical time. A stunning forehand winner with her knee to the ground earned a Sabalenka double fault, as she tried to overpress and earn back the advantage. Sabalenka got to 30-30, but Vondroušová changed from a chipped, slow return and slammed a first serve to her opponent's ankles to cough up a short ball and win a break point. Sabalenka saved that one, but missed a routine forehand into the net under pressure at 40-40, echoing how Rybakina had tightened against her with their match on the line the previous day. And then Vondroušová somehow stayed in a point from the shadows deep behind the baseline, lobbing and chipping strikes back into play until she managed to jam Sabalenka on a volley that she dumped into the net. Serving for the match, Vondroušová found herself down 0-40. But in the face of Sabalenka's much-improved defense, she kept playing attacking tennis and earned errors to get back to deuce. Two points later, she was back where she had dreamed of being for so long. Vondroušová's four consecutive victories in Berlin match the longest win streak she has compiled in the two years since her Grand Slam triumph. Last grass season, her Wimbledon title defense ended with a first-round defeat to Jessica Bouzas Maneiro of Spain, then the world No. 83. Vondroušová was world No. 6. The first unseeded woman to lift the Venus Rosewater Dish one year; the second defending women's champion to lose in the first round in the Open Era the next. Come last year's U.S. Open, she was undergoing surgery. At 25, Vondroušová thought her career was close to over. She couldn't swing a tennis racket after surgery on her shoulder. She would try to play. The pain would return. Another surgery wasn't an option. All the time spent on physical improvement wasn't translating into tennis. She missed six months of the 2024 season, returning in January 2025. Advertisement 'It's not fun,' Vondroušová told The Athletic at Roland Garros a few weeks ago. 'I had to be very patient.' In Paris, she won two Grand Slam matches for the first time in over a year, and now that tennis has moved from clay to grass, her command of the ball, skidding groundstrokes and confidence at the front of the court is back on full display. In a rematch of the 2023 Wimbledon final, she took out Ons Jabeur for the right to face Sabalenka, having beaten Madison Keys, another serious Wimbledon contender, in the opening round. Vondroušová will play either Liudmila Samsonova or Wang Xinyu in Sunday's final.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store