When Emma Raducanu nonchalantly flicked a lob that appeared to be drifting long before it dropped inches inside the baseline to earn her a break and a hollering ovation from the Wimbledon crowd, Maria Sakkari must have known this was not going to be her day.
So it proved to be as Britain's only female singles Grand Slam champion in the last four decades was roared on to a 6-2 6-3 third round victory over the Greek ninth seed under a closed Centre Court roof on a soggy Friday.
Raducanu, who needed a wildcard invite from organisers to even compete at the grasscourt major as her ranking has plummeted to 135th after an injury plagued 2023, had beaten Sakkari the only previous time they had met -- at the 2021 U.S. Open semi-finals.
Demonstrating a steely resolve and showing flashes of the brilliance that unexpectedly carried her to the 2021 Flushing Meadows title, Raducanu once again made a mockery of her ranking difference with a show-stopping performance and sealed victory after Sakkari whipped a forehand wide. Raducanu will next play New Zealand qualifier Lulu Sun for a place in the quarter-finals.
Holder Alcaraz wins a close battle
Defending Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz came dangerously close to relinquishing his crown against inspired American Frances Tiafoe but lived to fight another day with a 5-7 6-2 4-6 7-6(2) 6-2 victory on Centre Court on Friday.
Alcaraz came under intense pressure throughout a spellbinding third-round contest played in a superb spirit and which had the crowd fully involved.
With his back to the wall when trailing by two sets to one and being outplayed by the swashbuckling Tiafoe, the Spanish third seed suddenly found an extra gear to seize control. Tiafoe had looked on the verge of avenging the heart-breaking five-set defeat he suffered against Alcaraz in the semi-finals of the 2022 U.S. Open deep in the fourth set. But the 21-year-old Alcaraz responded in devastating fashion to blaze through the tiebreak and the fifth set was one-way traffic as Tiafoe's energy levels finally ebbed away.
Alcaraz clinched victory with a drop shot and the two players embraced warmly at the net as the crowd erupted.
His victory means he has now reached at least the fourth round in 10 of his first 14 Grand Slam tournaments and he will face either Frenchman Ugo Humbert or unseeded American Brandon Nakashima in the next round.
"It's a big challenge playing Frances and once again he showed he deserves to be fighting for big things," Alcaraz, who went on to win his first Grand Slam title having beaten Tiafoe at Flushing Meadows two years ago, said on court.
"It was really difficult to adapt my game and to find solutions to put him in trouble today. I had difficult moments in the fourth set but was thinking just fight one more ball."
Forty nine years ago to the day Arthur Ashe had become the first Black man to win Wimbledon.
The way Tiafoe, born in Maryland to parents from Sierre Leone, played for most of the contest it did not seem fanciful to imagine him following in Ashe's footsteps.
With the roof closed, Tiafoe turned the power dial up to 11 - belting the ball to all corners of the court and displaying his trademark athleticism around the grass. Alcaraz did lead 4-2 in the opener but Tiafoe broke back and then broke serve again at 5-5 with a hammered forehand pass before holding serve to clinch the set.
Three-time Grand Slam champion Alcaraz appeared to have built some momentum with a five-game roll that helped him level the match but Tiafoe had other ideas.
Attacking at every opportunity, Tiafoe broke serve at 3-3 in the third set and Alcaraz was wobbling as he was again forced to work hard at 3-5 to stay in the set. Tiafoe duly held serve to move to within one set of the biggest win of his career and was knocking on the door throughout the fourth set with Alcaraz subdued. At 4-4, 0-30 on the Alcaraz serve it seemed Tiafoe was closing in on a huge shock. It was the closest he came though.
When Alcaraz won a point he had no right to, clawing back a Tiafoe volley to lead 2-0 in the breaker, he raised his fist aloft to crowd and was suddenly re-energised as he took an epic tussle into a deciding set. Whether a nasty slip near the baseline late in the breaker affected Tiafoe, only he knows, but his challenge faded fast after that and Alcaraz roared home.