Wimbledon
For Jasmine Paolini, Barbora Krejcikova was one forehand and one serve too good in the Wimbledon final
By Jul 13, 2024Wimbledon
Darren Cahill: Jannik Sinner watches more Carlos Alcaraz matches than he does with any other player
By Jul 14, 2025Wimbledon
Jannik Sinner reignites Carlos Alcaraz rivalry with Wimbledon victory
By Jul 14, 2025Wimbledon
Jannik Sinner reversed his usual pattern against Carlos Alcaraz. It won him Wimbledon
By Jul 14, 2025Wimbledon
Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens win women's doubles title at Wimbledon
By Jul 13, 2025Wimbledon
Joy to the World: What Carlos Alcaraz has, and what we are enjoying
By Jul 13, 2025Wimbledon
Iga Swiatek keeps surprising herself after Wimbledon title caps "surreal" turnaround on grass
By Jul 12, 2025Wimbledon
Iga Swiatek wins first Wimbledon, sixth Grand Slam title with 6-0, 6-0 rout of Amanda Anisimova
By Jul 12, 2025Wimbledon
Wimbledon men's final preview: Will Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner share another epic?
By Jul 12, 2025Wimbledon
Julian Cash, Lloyd Glasspool become first all-British pair to win Wimbledon men's doubles title since 1936
By Jul 12, 2025For Jasmine Paolini, Barbora Krejcikova was one forehand and one serve too good in the Wimbledon final
The two unlikely finalists took the most pressure-filled stage in tennis on Sunday, and acquitted themselves in memorably valiant fashion.
Published Jul 13, 2024
Advertising

Czechs Barbora Krejcikova and the late Jana Novotna are forever linked.
Advertising
Advertising

In the winner-take-all set, Paolini continued to attack and hold with relative ease, while Krejcikova rediscovered her serve when she needed it.
© Getty Images
Advertising

“The only thing I was telling myself,” Krejcikova said of the ending, “‘Just try to make a first serve and try to play your shot and just be brave.’”