Tennis

Number 2 seed given huge fright by Brit Katie Boulter

Britain’s world number 219  Katie Boulter produced a performance fit for Centre Court this evening, but ultimately went out to the number 2 seed Aryna Sabalenka in a match which lasted more than two hours.

In a contest which see-sawed one way then the other, the Belarusian was pushed all the way by Boulter, who went down 4-6, 6-3, 6-3.

Boulter broke in the very first game of the match, but her opponent hit straight back with a break of her own.

In the very early stages Boulter appeared to struggle with Sabalenka’s strong serve and aggressive all-round game.

She was forced to save break points in her second service game – but then began to grow into the match. A fantastic body shot straight down the middle brought up two break-points for the Brit in the seventh game, and Sabalenka then served up a double fault to give Boulter a 4-3 lead before she served out a love game with the new balls for a 5-3 lead.

And although Sabalenka held her next service game, the ardent Leicester City fan held her nerve to take the set.

Aryna Sabalenka reacts during her second round ladies’ singles match against Katie Boulter on Centre Court on day three of Wimbledon (Picture: PA)

The number 2 seed came out fighting in the first game of the second set, with a simple hold, and in the next game threatened to break at 0-30, but the Brit produced a stunning lob and then forced errors from Sabalenka at just the right time to level things up at 1-1.

The players held serve until the sixth game when Boulter was broken. She served a double fault to give Sabalenka break point, then hit a backhand into the net to give her opponent a 4-2 lead – a score which quickly moved to 5-2 as the Belarusian held to love.

Boulter held in the next game and had a break-back point in the ninth game, but the tournament’s second favourite held her nerve to recover and take the set 6-3.

The Brit didn’t buckle. She held serve in the first game of the second set and produced some brilliant strokes to stay in the match.

But a fantastic return of serve – followed by a crashing overhead – from the Belarusian allowed her to force an early break at 2-1, clinched thanks to a long forehand from Boulter.

Boulter would not go away – she broke back to make it 2-2 but then let a 40-0 lead on her serve slip, conceding five consecutive points, and a 3-2 deficit.

Sabalenca then held serve to love to make it 4-2 in the decider.

But still she could not shake off the Brit. First Boulter reduced the deficit to 4-3 during a game in which she produced arguably the shot of the match, a fine cross court backhand lob which wrong-footed her opponent, who was running the other way.

Then came the game of the match, Boulter working six break-point opportunities for herself before Sabalenka held firm to take a 5-3 lead – and finishing the match off in her next service game.

 

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