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Alcaraz's Wimbledon win streak extends to 18

As Sabalenka reaches 11th consecutive Grand Slam quarterfinal

China Daily | Updated: 2025-07-08 09:34
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Spain's Carlos Alcaraz stretches to make a return shot to Russia's Andrey Rublev during their Wimbledon fourth-round match in London on Sunday. The Spaniard overcame a shaky start to beat the No 14 seed 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, extending his unbeaten run to 22 matches. AP

LONDON — Carlos Alcaraz's latest up-and-down Wimbledon performance began with a dropped set. Later Sunday, he was in danger of getting broken to fall further behind in the third. And then, as he so often does, the Spaniard seized the moment, produced some magic and moved closer to a third consecutive title at the All England Club.

Alcaraz stretched his winning streak in the grass-court Grand Slam tournament to 18 matches — and his current unbeaten run across all events to 22 — by coming back to beat No 14 seed Andrey Rublev 6-7(5), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 on Centre Court to return to the quarterfinals.

In this year's first Wimbledon matchup between two men ranked in the top 20, No 2 Alcaraz brought out his best while down 3-2 in the third set. First, he needed to fend off a break chance for Rublev, doing so with a forehand passing winner.

After eventually holding to 3-all, Alcaraz earned his own break opportunity and didn't let Rublev escape. On an eight-stroke exchange, Alcaraz sprinted from one corner of the court to the other and, with a stomp of his right foot and a bit of a slide, he flicked a cross-court forehand winner.

Oh, did he relish that one. Alcaraz spread his arms wide, pointed to his right ear and basked in the crowd's loud adulation, the noise bouncing off the underside of the stadium's closed roof.

Rublev sat in his sideline chair, looked up at his guest box and made a sarcastic "OK" hand signal. Just 10 minutes later, that set belonged to Alcaraz, who will face 2022 semifinalist Cameron Norrie — the last remaining Briton in the men's singles — on Tuesday for a berth in the final four.

"I always said that it's just about belief in yourself. It doesn't matter that you are one-set-to-love down," Alcaraz said. "Tennis is a sport that can change in just one point. One point can change the match; completely turn around everything."

The 61st-ranked Norrie, who played college tennis at TCU in Fort Worth, Texas, advanced with a 6-3,7-6 (4), 6-7 (7), 6-7 (5), 6-3 win over qualifier Nicolas Jarry, who hit 46 aces. Norrie had a chance to close things out much earlier than he did, but failed to convert a match point while ahead 6-5 in the third-set tiebreaker.

The other men's quarterfinal Tuesday will be No 5 Taylor Fritz vs No 17 Karen Khachanov. Fritz, last year's US Open runner-up, had a short day because his opponent, Jordan Thompson, quit after about 40 minutes with back and leg injuries that he had been dealing with throughout the tournament.

Alcaraz is just 22 and already owns five Grand Slam trophies, the latest arriving in June at the French Open. He hasn't lost a match anywhere since April 20 against Holger Rune in the final at Barcelona.

There have been lapses, of course, including when Alcaraz fell behind by two sets against No 1 Jannik Sinner in the final at Roland Garros. Or when the Spaniard lost four points in a row after going up 5-3 in the opening tiebreaker against Rublev.

He hasn't been as close-to-perfect as others over the past week: Sinner, No 10 Ben Shelton and No 22 Flavio Cobolli haven't dropped a set heading into their fourth-round contests.

Alcaraz, however, has ceded five sets already, but all that matters is that he hasn't lost a match.

Sabalenka stands tall

Women's No 1 Aryna Sabalenka reached the quarterfinals for an 11th consecutive time at Grand Slam tournaments, defeating No 24 Elise Mertens 6-4, 7-6 (4), and will play unseeded Laura Siegemund, the 37-year-old German who followed up her elimination of Australian Open champ Madison Keys by beating lucky loser Solana Sierra 6-3, 6-2.

The victory improved her winloss record against Belgian Mertens to 11-2, and she said the growing adoration of the crowd made a big difference, after being on the other side of fans' support when she beat 40th-ranked British hopeful Emma Raducanu on Friday.

"I definitely felt the support. It was so amazing playing and feeling the support. I didn't have to pretend that they were cheering for me, because they really were cheering for me," said Sabalenka.

"What can be better than that? I really enjoyed it. I hope it can stay the same all the way, and they help me, energy-wise, to stay strong and to face all of the challenges."

Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova overcame a missed call late in the first set — when the electronic system was accidentally switched off — and beat Sonay Kartal 7-6 (3), 6-4 to return to the grass-court major's quarterfinals for the first time in nine years. Pavlyuchenkova's opponent Tuesday will be Amanda Anisimova, the 13th-seeded American who got past No 30 Linda Noskova 6-2, 5-7, 6-4.

Agencies

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