Greg Wood at Wimbledon 

Kartal and Miyazaki pull off Wimbledon wins but Broom and Watson go out

Sonay Kartal upset the No 29 seed Sorana Cirstea for her first grand slam win, while Stan Wawrinka saw Britain’s Charles Broom
  
  

Britain’s Sonay Kartal in action during her surprise victory over Sorana Cirstea.
Britain’s Sonay Kartal in action during her surprise victory over Sorana Cirstea. Photograph: Paul Childs/Reuters

Sonay Kartal and Lily Miyazaki joined their fellow Briton Emma Raducanu in claiming victories on the opening day of the Championships in the women’s singles, with 22-year-old Kartal shocking the 29th seed, Sorana Cirstea, 3-6, 6-2, 6-0 – and winning 10 straight games in the process.

It was Kartal’s first grand slam triumph and by far the best win by ranking of her career. After being held back by injuries and health issues, she came through three rounds of qualifying to reach the main draw: “Getting a first win at any slam, and to have it at Wimbledon, makes it extra special,” she said. “I think going through qualifying was the best thing for me this year.”

Miyazaki reached the second round with a comfortable 6-2, 6-1 defeat of Tamara Korpatsch.

Miyazaki dropped just seven points on serve in the match and wrapped up her first Wimbledon victory against the world No 73 in less than an hour, setting up a meeting with Daria Kasatkina, the No 14 seed, on Wednesday.

Her win was much needed for the home team after a series of disappointments for the British contingent earlier in the day, on Monday, with Charles Broom, Heather Watson and Liam Broady among those who slipped to defeat.

Broom lost 6-3, 7-5, 6-4 against Stan Wawrinka, the former world No 3. He had secured a wild card with a fine run of form on the Challenger circuit and started the match as only a marginal underdog with the bookmakers, despite the 153-run gap in the ratings ladder to his Swiss opponent.

There had to be a possibility, after all, that the 13-year age gap between Broom and his Swiss opponent would prove more significant, and for the opening games at least the Wimbledon debutant held his own against Wawrinka, who was making his 18th attempt to win the only grand slam title missing from his career CV.

Wawrinka has also been no stranger to early exits here in the past. The first of his seven first-round defeats came as long ago as 2005, when his opponent on Monday had just celebrated his seventh birthday, and he has departed at the second hurdle four times.

But Broom’s solid start went to waste in the sixth game, when he lost his serve to love, and the first set followed three games later. Then, having reeled off the first three games in the next, he missed a chance to go a double-break in front in the fourth and later failed to serve out the set at 5-3.

In a nervy opening to the game he slipped to 0-30, and while he fought back to deuce, an attempted drop volley found the net to give Wawrinka a break-back point and he powered a cross-court winner to regain the initiative.

Broom said: “I played some good points, just didn’t quite execute. To a certain extent, that’s probably my level, and just exposing myself to those important moments on a bigger stage, I think it’s something I’m going to have to get used to.”

Watson, meanwhile, will hope to spend considerably more time on court with Greet Minnen in the women’s doubles than she managed in the singles, having earlier become the first British player to be knocked at the championships this year as she lost 7-5, 6-4 on court 18.

The 32-year-old made the worst possible start to what turned out to be an error-strewn first set, as she lost the first eight points to slip to 0-2 with barely five minutes on the clock.

She staged a spirited rally to level at 4-4 and was gifted a chance to serve for the set when Minnen double-faulted on break point, only for Watson to lose her own serve to love a couple of minutes later.

Minnen reeled off the next two games as well to close out the set, and while there were occasional flashes of inspiration from her doubles partner on the other side of the net, the former British No 1 eventually wilted under the strength of Minnen’s forehand in particular.

“Every one”, Watson screamed in frustration as another backhand drifted wide to leave her serving to stay in the match in the second, and the fact that her penultimate point of the match was a double fault summed up her day.

“It’s just such tiny margins and fine details that can make a big difference,” Watson said. “I just wasn’t able to find the court. Greet is a really good friend of mine on tour, we get on very well. I can’t wait to be on the same side of the court with her.” In a five-set epic on court 16, Britain’s Arthur Fery lost against Germany’s world No 80 Daniel Altmaier. Fery, the world No 247, won the first and third sets but started to struggle physically and took a medical timeout in the fourth set.

Altmaier took control in the fourth before securing victory – 4-6, 7-6 (6), 1-6, 6-3, 6-1 – in the three-hour, 43-minute match.

 

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