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Yesterday — 22 June 2026Yahoo! Sports - News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games

“Feels Like A Stunt” – Serena Williams Slammed By Tennis Insider For Accepting Wimbledon Wild Card At 44

Aug 24, 2020; Flushing Meadows, New York, USA; Serena Williams (USA) returns the ball against Arantxa Rus (NED) during the Western & Southern Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. © Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports
Aug 24, 2020; Flushing Meadows, New York, USA; Serena Williams (USA) returns the ball against Arantxa Rus (NED) during the Western & Southern Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. © Robert Deutsch-USA TODAY Sports

Serena Williams’ singles return at Wimbledon has become official. And while the tennis community rallies behind the returning legend, few from the sport’s inner circle have criticized Wimbledon for handing her a wildcard, with one prominent insider calling Williams’ move a “stunt.”

Well-known tennis insider Craig Shapiro recently took a jab at Williams’ highly anticipated singles return on his X account. Shapiro argued that a player who has been out of competition for four years should not receive a direct entry into a Grand Slam without even playing a warm-up tournament.

“Wild to accept a wc into a major after being long retired, over the hill- without playing one tournament in many years, imo.”

He then linked Williams’ wildcard entry to celebrity boxing matches while also expressing shock at Wimbledon’s involvement in something he views as a publicity stunt:

“Feels like a stunt- one of these “boxing” matches featuring Jake Paul, or Mike Tyson for that matter. Surprised Wimbledon involved themselves in this.”

Shapiro did not stop there. He disagreed with the widespread excitement surrounding the 23-time Grand Slam winner’s return, arguing that it reflected poorly on the current scenario of women’s tennis:

“journalists writing how exciting this is- I couldn’t disagree more. it seems like an indictment of women’s tennis, that the level is so bad a one time great player that last won a pro match 8 years ago would return at the most important tournament without even playing a warmup.”

As the criticism continues, Wimbledon has already provided Williams with a singles and a doubles wildcard. After competing in two grass-court Opens this month, it remains to be seen if the returning legend has built the right kind of momentum needed to tackle Wimbledon.

Serena Williams To Reunite With Sister Venus Williams for an Epic Wimbledon Doubles Run

The Williams sisters are reuniting for a doubles run at Wimbledon, a decade later. The duo has won the doubles title at this prestigious Grand Slam six times and established themselves as one of the strongest doubles teams in tennis history.

While Venus continues to actively compete, for Serena, this is the first time in four years that she will step onto the English lawn. The sisters last played doubles together at the 2022 U.S. Open, where they lost the opening match.

Serena Williams has managed to recondition her body for the grass through her recent endeavors in England, starting with her inaugural win alongside Victoria Mboko in the Queen’s Club tournaments’ doubles match.

Read more:

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“Serena Williams Is Not Hanging Out” – Ex-Pro Explains Exactly Why American Is The Perfect Player-Friendship Model

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in tennis, college football, men’s college basketball, women’s college basketball, and college baseball!

Penn student trains for a spot in all-female pro tournament

The Ennoble Care Philly Open will be gathering pro players to the city in August!

One lucky student from UPenn will be able to step on the court during that event.

Esha Velaga is the top student for their Women's Varsity Tennis Team.

"The fact that this is a women's only tournament where students can come out, people in Philly can come out... It's just a really good spotlight for the sport," said Velaga.

The athletes will also be the ones playing on Velaga's home turf, the Hamlin Tennis Center at University of Pennsylvania.

The tournament is brought to the city with help from The Philadelphia Sisters, and takes place August 23-29.

For more information, check out the video above.

Also, check out their website.

Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova handed four-year suspension for refusing drugs test

Marketa Vondrousova has been suspended for four years (PA Wire)

2023 Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova has been suspended for four years for refusing a drugs test.

Vondrousova, the former world No 6, refused an out-of-competition test by a doping control official on 3 December 2025 and was subsequently charged by the International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA), which oversees tennis’ anti-doping policy, for failing to provide a sample in April this year.

The ITIA announced on Monday that an independent tribunal ruled Vondrousova’s evidence during the hearing offered “no compelling justification” for her refusal of the test.

Vondrousova released a statement this April saying that she had “reached a ⁠breaking point after months of physical and mental stress” at the time of the random visit and suffered an “acute stress reaction” which had prevented her from thinking rationally.

Tennis players are required to log their whereabouts for an allotted hour each day with anti-doping authorities so they can be tested outside of competition, although tests can also occur outside these set windows.

The officer who visited her in December arrived at 8.15pm, outside her whereabouts submission slot for the day, and demanded an immediate test, which Vondrousova described as a “serious intrusion into my privacy”.

The ITIA said on Monday: “Under anti-doping rules, the starting point for a sanction when a player refuses a test must be the same as if they had tested positive. This is to ensure that anyone who is doping cannot serve a shorter ban simply by refusing to be tested.”

The ITIA’s chief executive Karen Moorhouse said: “We understand that the testing process is uncomfortable, and acknowledge that it is an additional burden for players whose jobs already come with a high level of pressure and scrutiny, but it is essential to protect fair competition.

“Safety and welfare of players and our testers is really important to us. Our testers are well-trained, professional, and the gender of our testing witness always matches the player. They carry ID at all times, and players are able to verify their identity in other ways if they are ever unsure.”

Marketa Vondrousova won Wimbledon in 2023 (Reuters)
Marketa Vondrousova won Wimbledon in 2023 (Reuters)

Vondrousova explained during the hearing that stress and poor mental health affected her decision making, as well as concerns for her safety, and said that the tester failed to properly identify themselves.

The tribunal considered her explanations as well as evidence from the doping control officer who had attempted to conduct the test, and determined there was “no compelling justification” for her refusal.

Moorhouse added: “Unpredictable testing is an essential tool to protect clean sport.

“The independent tribunal ultimately supported that principle. This case is an important reminder that players can be tested at any time, in any place, and that refusal comes with significant risk.”

She defeated beat Ons Jabeur in the Wimbledon final and rose to a career high of world No 6 later that year (PA Archive)
She defeated beat Ons Jabeur in the Wimbledon final and rose to a career high of world No 6 later that year (PA Archive)

In her statement in April, released on Instagram, Vondrousova cited the case of double Wimbledon champion and her compatriot Petra Kvitova, who was brutally attacked by an intruder at her home in 2016, suffering severe stab wounds to her left playing hand.

Vondrousova said: “After what happened to ⁠Petra, we don't take strangers at our door lightly.”

She continued: “The recent doping control incident happened because I reached a breaking point after months of physical and mental stress.

“Years of hateful messages and threats have affected how safe I feel in my own space. When someone rang my door ‌late at night without properly identifying themselves or ‌following protocol — I reacted as a person who felt scared.

“In that moment, it was about feeling safe, not about avoiding anything.”

Vondrousova, pictured last October, last played on the WTA Tour this January (Getty)
Vondrousova, pictured last October, last played on the WTA Tour this January (Getty)

She revealed that experts confirmed she suffered an Acute Stress Reaction and Generalised Anxiety Disorder, adding: “In that moment, fear clouded my judgment and I just couldn't process the situation rationally.”

Now ranked 112th in the world, Vondrousova last played on the WTA Tour in Adelaide this January.

The 26-year-old has the right to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, as do the ITIA and the Czech national federation. She not be allowed to play in, coach at, or attend any events organised or sanctioned by any of tennis’ four major bodies: the ITF, ATP, WTA, or the grand slams, as well as any organised by any national association, during her four-year ban.

Her suspension will end on 21 June 2030. She had originally been slated to appear at Wimbledon next week.

When is the Wimbledon draw? Date, time, wildcards and who could Serena Williams play?

Serena Williams will make her return to Wimbledon and could play any of the other 127 women in the singles draw  (PA Archive)

The Wimbledon draw takes place on Friday 26 June as Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek enter as defending champions and Serena Williams returns to singles action for the first time since 2022.

Seven-time Wimbledon champion Williams, 44, accepted the final wildcard spot in the women’s singles and could be drawn to play one of the world’s top players in her first match in four years. Williams has played two doubles matches so far in her comeback, and has also accepted a doubles wildcard alongside her sister Venus.

World No 1 Sinner, newly crowned French Open champion Alexander Zverev and the 39-year-old Novak Djokovic are arguably the standout favourites on the men’s side, while two-time champion Carlos Alcaraz continues to be sidelined by a wrist injury.

Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka is yet to win Wimbledon and is the top seed on the women’s side, ahead of former champion and world No 2 Elena Rybakina and defending champion Swiatek. French Open winner Mirra Andreeva carries good form onto the grass.

From a British perspective, Emma Raducanu returns as the 30th seed after an impressive run to the Queen’s final while former world No 4 Jack Draper is unseeded as he returns to action after a year of injury hell.

When is the Wimbledon draw?

The draw for the men’s and women’s singles at Wimbledon will take place at 10am BST (UK time) on Friday 26 June.

Entry list - women’s singles

What to watch for

Everyone will be desperate to see who Serena Williams plays in her first singles match in four years. She could play anyone, from world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka down to a fellow wildcard like Britain’s Katie Swan. Defending champion Iga Swiatek will hope for a good draw when she opens play on Centre Court on Tuesday - perhaps she will land in the same quarter as last year’s runner-up Amanda Anisimova, who Swiatek defeated 6-0 6-0. British No 1 Emma Raducanu, the 30th seed, has found some form on the grass and is likely to be handed a collision course with a big name by the third round. As for dangerous floaters, as well as Williams, there are two recent Wimbledon champions returning as unseeded players: Barbora Krejcikova and Marketa Vondrousova.

Seeded

  1. Aryna Sabalenka
  2. Elena Rybakina (Kaz)
  3. Iga Swiatek (Pol)
  4. Jessica Pegula (USA)
  5. Mirra Andreeva
  6. Amanda Anisimova (USA)
  7. Coco Gauff (USA)
  8. Elina Svitolina (Ukr)
  9. Linda Noskova (Cze)
  10. Karolina Muchova (Cze)
  11. Belinda Bencic (Swi)
  12. Marta Kostyuk (Ukr)
  13. Jasmine Paolini (Ita)
  14. Naomi Osaka (Jpn)
  15. Diana Shnaider
  16. Iva Jovic (USA)
  17. Sorana Cirstea (Rom)
  18. Ekaterina Alexandrova
  19. Anna Kalinskaya
  20. Maja Chwalinska (Pol)
  21. Marie Bouzkova (Cze)
  22. Leylah Fernandez (Can)
  23. Emma Navarro (USA)
  24. Clara Tauson (Den)
  25. Elise Mertens (Bel)
  26. Madison Keys (USA)
  27. Anastasia Potapova (Aut)
  28. Ann Li (USA)
  29. Alexandra Eala (Phi)
  30. Emma Raducanu (Gbr)
  31. Donna Vekic (Cro)
  32. Katerina Siniakova (Cze)
Iga Swiatek returns as champion after beating Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0 in last year’s final (Getty)
Iga Swiatek returns as champion after beating Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0 in last year’s final (Getty)

Unseeded

Jelena Ostapenko (LAT)

Cristina Bucsa (ESP)

Xinyu Wang (CHN)

Jaqueline Cristian (ROU)

Maya Joint (AUS)

Sara Bejlek (CZE)

Emma Navarro (USA)

Elisabetta Cocciaretto (ITA)

Karolina Pliskova (CZE)

Janice Tjen (INA)

Barbora Krejcikova (CZE)

Barbora Krejcikova won Wimbledon in 2024 (Getty)
Barbora Krejcikova won Wimbledon in 2024 (Getty)

Tereza Valentova (CZE)

Marketa Vondrousova (CZE)

Dayana Yastremska (UKR)

Laura Siegemund (GER)

Mccartney Kessler (USA)

Maria Sakkari (GRE)

Magdalena Frech (POL)

Lois Boisson (FRA)

Jessica Bouzas Maneiro (ESP)

Tatjana Maria (GER)

Qinwen Zheng (CHN)

Yuliia Starodubtseva (UKR)

Talia Gibson (AUS)

Caty Mcnally (USA)

Magda Linette (POL)

Anna Bondar (HUN)

Zeynep Sonmez (TUR)

Antonia Ruzic (CRO)

Daria Kasatkina (AUS)

Elsa Jacquemot (FRA)

Solana Sierra (ARG)

Nikola Bartunkova (CZE)

Oleksandra Oliynykova (UKR)

Panna Udvardy (HUN)

Katie Boulter (GBR)

 (Getty)
(Getty)

Renata Zarazua (MEX)

Taylor Townsend (USA)

Shuai Zhang (CHN)

Yulia Putintseva (KAZ)

Elena-Gabriela Ruse (ROU)

Petra Marcinko (CRO)

Camila Osorio (COL)

Beatriz Haddad Maia (BRA)

Anastasia Zakharova

Alycia Parks (USA)

Eva Lys (GER)

Viktorija Golubic (SUI)

Irina-Camelia Begu (ROU)

Kimberly Birrell (AUS)

Veronika Erjavec (SLO)

Kamilla Rakhimova (UZB)

Sara Sorribes Tormo (ESP)

Sofia Kenin (USA)

Aoi Ito (JPN)

Oksana Selekhmeteva (ESP)

Anhelina Kalinina (UKR)

Ajla Tomljanovic (AUS)

Lilli Tagger (AUT)

Peyton Stearns (USA)

Simona Waltert (SUI)

Diane Parry (FRA)

Daria Snigur (UKR)

Tamara Korpatsch (GER)

Ella Seidel (GER)

Emiliana Arango (COL)

Anna Blinkova

Lanlana Tararudee (THA)

Sinja Kraus (AUT)

Hanne Vandewinkel (BEL)

Paula Badosa (ESP)

Darja Vidmanova (CZE)

Francesca Jones (GBR)

Wildcards

Serena Williams was announced as the final Wimbledon wildcard as she returns to singles (Reuters)
Serena Williams was announced as the final Wimbledon wildcard as she returns to singles (Reuters)

Qualifiers

An additional 14 places will be secured through qualifying, which takes place from Monday 22 June to Thursday 25 June.

Withdrawals

  • Victoria Mboko
  • Hailey Baptiste
  • Sonay Kartal
  • Varvara Gracheva
  • Veronika Kudermetova

Entry list - men’s singles

What to watch for

As always, where Novak Djokovic lands in the draw will be fascinating. As seventh seed, he could be drawn to face defending champion Jannik Sinner as early as the quarter-finals. After excellent performances at the French Open, all eyes will be on rising stars Rafael Jodar and Joao Fonseca as they enter seeded 23rd and 24th respectively. Former world No 4 Jack Draper could be a dangerous floater as the popular Briton returns alongside new coach Andy Murray, while former Wimbledon finalist Matteo Berrettini is also unseeded.

Seeded

  1. Jannik Sinner (Ita)
  2. Alexander Zverev (Ger)
  3. Felix Auger-Aliassime (Can)
  4. Ben Shelton (USA)
  5. Alex de Minaur (Aus)
  6. Taylor Fritz (USA)
  7. Novak Djokovic (Ser)
  8. Daniil Medvedev
  9. Flavio Cobolli (Ita)
  10. Alexander Bublik (Kaz)
  11. Casper Ruud (Nor)
  12. Andrey Rublev
  13. Jiri Lehecka (Cze)
  14. Luciano Darderi (Ita)
  15. Jakub Mensik (Cze)
  16. Learner Tien (USA)
  17. Frances Tiafoe (USA)
  18. Francisco Cerundolo (Arg)
  19. Karen Khachanov
  20. Arthur Fils (Fra)
  21. Tommy Paul (USA)
  22. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (Spa)
  23. Rafael Jodar (Spa)
  24. Joao Fonseca (Bra)
  25. Arthur Rinderknech (Fra)
  26. Cameron Norrie (Gbr)
  27. Ugo Humbert (Fra)
  28. Brandon Nakashima (USA)
  29. Tomas Etcheverry (Arg)
  30. Alejandro Tabilo (Chi)
  31. Ignacio Buse (Per)
  32. Matteo Arnaldi (Ita)
Jannik Sinner will not have Carlos Alcaraz in his path as he prepares to defend his Wimbledon title (PA Wire)
Jannik Sinner will not have Carlos Alcaraz in his path as he prepares to defend his Wimbledon title (PA Wire)

Unseeded

Alexander Blockx (BEL)

Mariano Navone (ARG)

Corentin Moutet (FRA)

Adrian Mannarino (FRA)

Denis Shapovalov (CAN)

Zizou Bergs (BEL)

Raphael Collignon (BEL)

Jaume Munar (ESP)

Alex Michelsen (USA)

Tallon Griekspoor (NED)

Marin Cilic (CRO)

Miomir Kecmanovic (SRB)

Gabriel Diallo (CAN)

Ethan Quinn (USA)

Nuno Borges (POR)

Terence Atmane (FRA)

Fabian Marozsan (HUN)

Botic van de Zandschulp (NED)

Juan Manuel Cerundolo (ARG)

Yannick Hanfmann (GER)

Hamad Medjedovic (SRB)

Thiago Agustin Tirante (ARG)

Marton Fucsovics (HUN)

Jenson Brooksby (USA)

Alexei Popyrin (AUS)

Sebastian Baez (ARG)

Vit Kopriva (CZE)

Daniel Altmaier (GER)

Roman Andres Burruchaga (ARG)

Martin Landaluce (ESP)

Camilo Ugo Carabelli (ARG)

Lorenzo Sonego (ITA)

Adolfo Daniel Vallejo (PAR)

Dino Prizmic (CRO)

Mattia Bellucci (ITA)

Valentin Royer (FRA)

Jack Draper (GBR)

Jack Draper returns to Wimbledon with coach Andy Murray in his corner (Getty)
Jack Draper returns to Wimbledon with coach Andy Murray in his corner (Getty)

Kamil Majchrzak (POL)

Hubert Hurkacz (POL)

Jan-Lennard Struff (GER)

Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard (FRA)

Marco Trungelliti (ARG)

Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE)

James Duckworth (AUS)

Marcos Giron (USA)

Thanasi Kokkinakis (AUS)

Zachary Svajda (USA)

Daniel Merida (ESP)

Damir Dzumhur (BIH)

Quentin Halys (FRA)

Aleksandr Shevchenko (KAZ)

Pablo Carreno Busta (ESP)

Sebastian Ofner (AUT)

Yibing Wu (CHN)

Aleksandar Kovacevic (USA)

Patrick Kypson (USA)

Emilio Nava (USA)

Benjamin Bonzi (FRA)

Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP)

Aleksandar Vukic (AUS)

Adam Walton (AUS)

Rinky Hijikata (AUS)

Luca Van Assche (FRA)

Jan Choinski (GBR)

Sho Shimabukuro (JPN)

Alex Molcan (SVK)

Matteo Berrettini (ITA)

Matteo Berrettini has endured years on injury struggles since his Wimbledon final in 2022 (Reuters)
Matteo Berrettini has endured years on injury struggles since his Wimbledon final in 2022 (Reuters)

Alexandre Muller (FRA)

Jesper de Jong (NED)

Titouan Droguet (FRA)

Dalibor Svrcina (CZE)

Martin Damm (USA)

Wildcards

  • Grigor Dimitrov (BUL)
  • Stan Wawrinka (SUI)
  • Jacob Fearnley (GBR)
  • Arthur Fery (GBR)
  • Felix Gill (GBR)
  • Jack Pinnington Jones (GBR)
  • Toby Samuel (GBR)
  • Harry Wendelken (GBR)
Grigor Dimitrov suffered an injury while leading Jannik Sinner in last year’s quarter-finals (PA Archive)
Grigor Dimitrov suffered an injury while leading Jannik Sinner in last year’s quarter-finals (PA Archive)

Qualifiers

An additional 14 places will be secured through qualifying, which takes place from Monday 22 June to Thursday 25 June.

Withdrawals

  • Carlos Alcaraz
  • Lorenzo Musetti
  • Valentin Vacherot
  • Tomas Machac
  • Holger Rune
  • Sebastian Korda
  • Reilly Opelka
  • Arthur Cazaux
  • Eliot Spizzirri

Why shadows on a tennis court cause headaches for players and fans

Welcome back to the Monday Tennis Briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories from the past week on court.

This week, a player’s injury comeback led to a wider discussion, the strangest shadows in tennis struck again, and a star of college tennis on and off the court found more success.

If you’d like to follow our fantastic tennis coverage, click here.

How did one player’s injury announcement fit into a wider debate?

After Holger Rune confirmed he would miss Wimbledon as he recovers from a ruptured Achilles tendon, his manager and mother, Aneke, added further context.

Holger has not played since a full rupture of his left Achilles at the Stockholm Open last October, and Aneke put his injury into conversation with several sidelined or recently injured players in his age bracket, including Carlos Alcaraz, Jack Draper and Lorenzo Musetti, all of whom withdrew from Queen’s, the prestigious Wimbledon warm-up event played last week.

“It is concerning to see so many young players sidelined by injuries,” she said in a text message.

“Over the past years, players have repeatedly tried to engage about improving conditions.”

Rune, Alcaraz (inflammation of the tendon sheath in his right wrist), Draper (bone bruising in left elbow, tendon injury in right knee) and Musetti (left thigh injury) are all 23 or 24 years old. Draper is returning at the Eastbourne Open in England this week, but Alcaraz and Musetti are yet to set a return date.

Another rising talent, Arthur Fils, is also out indefinitely. The 22-year-old withdrew from this year’s French Open with an unspecified injury, which he said in a news conference was related to his hip. Fils had only recently returned after nine months managing a stress fracture in his back, which has been a chronic concern since he was a child.

Aneke’s focus was the quality of the balls and the speed of the courts on the tour, which have also become fixations for players.

“Over time, courts have generally become slower, while the balls used on tour are noticeably heavier and slower (lower quality?) than they were years ago,” she added.

“That means players are required to generate more force, over longer rallies, on slower surfaces. The result is longer matches and significantly greater wear and tear on the body.”

Leading players, such as Daniil Medvedev, Alexander Zverev and Taylor Fritz, have been vocal critics of the quality of the balls used on tour, and of a prior lack of standardization between events. Those players and others have drawn a link between new balls fluffing up more quickly (and so requiring more force to generate the same speed) and an increase in injuries on the tour, while multiple players have attributed their heaviness to matches feeling slower and rallies longer.

Tour data shows that rally length has either remained flat or decreased over the past five years, while court-speed data shows that hard courts across the tour have increased in speed in the past five years, not slowed down.

The ATP Tour has also reduced the number of ball types used at tournaments, with more consistency across each part of the season, according to an internal document reviewed by The Athletic. As recently as the fall of 2024, four different ball types were used across a run of five events on the same surface.

The spate of injuries on the men’s tour — and the extent to which they are linked to the present conditions of the sport — is a topic that everyone in tennis has a view on. Sometimes it is obvious when an injury is a freak incident, rather than an accumulation problem, but sometimes it is less so. The more, younger players who suffer persistent injuries, the more the debate will tip toward the nature of contemporary men’s tennis itself.

Charlie Eccleshare

How to solve one of the strangest tennis problems?

Germany’s Halle Open may have attracted an impressive field this year, but it has held a far less desirable accolade for much longer: The worst shadow in tennis for those watching on television.

This is a subjective category — and there is quite a bit of competition in the sport — but the images, even from inside the stadium, tell their own story.

Daytime matches at the Madrid Open can see one quadrant of the court, and sometimes as much as half of it, flooded with dazzlingly bright light which makes one of the players, and the ball, disappear during points. The Berlin Open (also played last week) and the Italian Open (which follows Madrid) suffer from shadowy court patterns, some from stadia and some from overhanging flora, both of which can make matches on television borderline unwatchable.

The architecture of certain venues, which aren’t built tennis-first, is what most often turns some tennis spectacles into carbuncles. Halle’s main stadium, which has a capacity of over 12,000, is used as an indoor venue for most of the year. Camera angles on TV, roof design, and even the way the courts are facing can all have an impact too.

In the competitive battle for eyeballs, these eyesores can literally be a turn-off.

Charlie Eccleshare

How did a figurehead of college tennis star on the court?

It’s been quite a senior year for Reese Brantmeier, the University of North Carolina Tar Heel who seems to know how to win on and off the tennis court.

Brantmeier won the NCAA singles title in November. At the time, the 21-year-old was also lead plaintiff in a lawsuit against the NCAA aimed at allowing student-athletes in tennis to keep the prize money they earn in pro tournaments before and during their time in college.

By this spring, Bantmeier and her lawyers had settled that lawsuit, on very favorable terms for the plaintiffs. Players can now keep all their prize money ahead of their enrollment. Brantmeier and her co-plaintiff, WTA Tour pro Maya Joint, got $10,000. The NCAA set up a compensation fund for players who have had to leave prize money earned before their enrollment on the table in recent years.

Later that spring, Brantmeier graduated, after pursuing a double major in exercise and sports science and studio art. And last week, she captured a wild card into the main draw of the U.S. Open singles competition, by winning the NCAA wild card playoff in Orlando, Fla. Brantmeier defeated Tennessee’s Katrina Scott, 6-4, 7-6(7).

In the same playoff, Brantmeier and Alanis Hamilton lost the doubles final to DJ Bennett and Ava Esposito of Auburn, who beat them 4-6 6-3 7-5. But even that loss came with a win — a wild-card entry into the doubles qualifying.

— Matt Futterman

What did a Sunday of finals say about American hopes for Wimbledon?

When Sunday started, the schedule suggested that the U.S. might be raising several hands for contention at Wimbledon.

Something of an American grass-fest appeared to be on across Europe. Jessica Pegula was playing Linda Nosková in the Berlin Tennis Open final. Emma Navarro was squaring off against Marie Bouzková in Nottingham, England. Tommy Paul and Francisco Cerúndolo were battling for the Queen’s title in London, and Frances Tiafoe and Taylor Fritz were going after the championship at the Halle Open in Germany.

By the day’s end, Tiafoe was the sole U.S. victor, after rolling through Fritz in straight sets. All the other Americans lost in three.

So what’s the takeaway? Navarro was two points from winning the first set when Bouzková pulled up with a left ankle issue, but after treatment, Bouzková recovered to take the opener in a tiebreak and ask Navarro to win two sets out of two. There was little for Pegula to do in her third set against Nosková, when the Czech 21-year-old found a flow of service winners and laser groundstrokes. Paul was up a set and a break, but Cerúndolo started playing better on important points right when he needed to, and Paul started playing a little worse. Many such cases of all of those in tennis.

Tiafoe, Fritz, Paul, and Pegula all deserve to be hopeful about deepish runs at the year’s third Grand Slam, though it’s unclear how healthy Fritz’s knees are. Navarro is still making her way back from time off to manage a health issue earlier in the year, and likely has longer-term aspirations.

— Matt Futterman

Shot of the week

During an ATP Challenger Tour match between Australia’s Bernard Tomic and Ireland’s Conor Gannon in Dublin, one seagull decided that a banana meant for Gannon was, in fact, for the birds.

🏆 The winners of the week

🎾 ATP: 

🏆 Francisco Cerúndolo (7) def. Tommy Paul (8) 6-7(4), 6-4, 6-3 to win Queen’s (500) in London. It is the Argentine’s first ATP 500 title.

🏆 Frances Tiafoe def. Taylor Fritz (5) 6-4, 6-4 to win the Halle Open (500) in Halle, Germany. It is the American’s first ATP 500 title.

🎾 WTA:

🏆 Linda Nosková (8) def. Jessica Pegula (3) 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 to win the Berlin Tennis Open (500) in Berlin. It is the Czech’s second WTA Tour title and her first on grass.

🏆 Marie Bouzková (4) def. Emma Navarro (3) 7-6(5), 4-6, 6-2 to win the Nottingham Open (250) in Nottingham, England. It is the Czech’s first WTA Tour title on grass.

📈📉 On the rise / Down the line

📈 Nikola Bartůňková moves up 16 places from No. 62 to No. 46, a career-high ranking.

📈 Raphaël Collignon ascends eight spots from No. 51 to No. 43, also a career high.

📈 Linda Nosková rises three places from No. 13 to No. 10, also a career high.

📈 Frances Tiafoe returns to the top 20, rising seven spots from No. 26 to No. 19.

📉 Stefanos Tsitsipas falls eight places from No. 80 to No. 88.

📉 Markéta Vondroušová drops 73 places from No. 49 to No. 122.

📉 Jack Draper tumbles 47 spots from No. 113 to No. 160.

📉 Wang Xinyu moves down 20 spots from No. 32 to No. 52.

📅 Coming up

🎾 ATP 

📍Mallorca, Spain: Mallorca Championships (250) featuring Luciano Darderi, Martín Landaluce, Stefanos Tsitsipas, Ignacio Buse.

📍
Eastbourne, England: Tournament (250) featuring Jack Draper, Raphaël Collignon, Zizou Bergs, Térence Atmane.

📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel 💻 Tennis TV

🎾 WTA

📍Bad Homburg, Germany: Bad Homburg Open (500) featuring Iga Świątek, Mirra Andreeva, Naomi Osaka, Alex Eala.

📍
Eastbourne, England: Eastbourne Open (250) featuring Jasmine Paolini, Barbora Krejčíková, Madison Keys, Jelena Ostapenko.

📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel

Tell us what you noticed this week in the comments below as the men’s and women’s tours continue.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

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Francisco Cerundolo wins longest final in Queen’s history to seal biggest title of career

Francisco Cerundolo beat Tommy Paul in an epic at Queen's (PA)

Argentina’s Francisco Cerundolo won the longest final in Queen’s history as he defeated 2024 champion Tommy Paul to win the biggest title of his career.

The seventh seed is the first Argentinian to win the ATP 500 tournament, one of the most prestigious warm-up events before Wimbledon, and celebrated with his parents, who flew in just in time to watch their son’s success.

Four of the 27-year-old’s five matches in west London this week went to a decider and it was only fitting that the final would too, as he fought back from a set down for the third successive match to win 6-7 (4) 6-4 6-3, after Paul saved four championship points.

At three hours and four minutes, in sweltering heat, an enthralling final was seven minutes lengthier than the previous longest, Marin Cilic’s 2018 win over Novak Djokovic.

Afterwards Cerundolo paid tribute to his father Alejandro, who flew out from Argentina - despite a fear of flying - with his mother to support him.

“It's not easy to speak right now. My mum and dad just arrived for the last two games,” an emotional Cerundolo said. “It’s the first time my dad took a flight and watched me outside Argentina. Congratulations for Father’s Day!”

He later told the BBC: “My dad has a phobia of planes. Since I was born, I never travelled with him and he never came to watch me in tournaments.

“He watched me in Buenos Aires one time a year and at the Davis Cup. They just arrived and I just saw them when I went to celebrate.”

Cerundolo’s inspiration for his first ATP 500 title was a Diego Maradona Argentina shirt draped over a chair in the player’s box throughout the tournament. It was rather prescient, coming one day before the 40th anniversary of Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal against England at the Mexico World Cup.

Cerundolo dropped to the ground in delight and exhaustion as he converted his fifth championship point (Getty)
Cerundolo dropped to the ground in delight and exhaustion as he converted his fifth championship point (Getty)

Yet it was the forehand of Cerundolo which dominated the early stages of this match, consistently unsettling Paul on the Andy Murray Arena.

The Buenos Aires native served for the opening set but lost all four points as Paul suddenly came to the party, forcing a tie-break which the seventh seed gift-wrapped to him with a double fault.

Paul broke again for 3-2 in the second, but his serve quickly deserted him as Cerundolo broke back twice to level the match.

It was the first set Paul had dropped all week, and the 29-year-old was flagging down the home straight as Cerundolo grabbed the decisive break for 4-2.

Paul saved four championship points, three on his own serve, but Cerundolo converted his fifth with an overhead before dropping to the turf in celebration.

Paul was unable to defend his title last year due to an abdominal injury (AP)
Paul was unable to defend his title last year due to an abdominal injury (AP)

For Paul it was a first defeat in 10 matches here, having won the title in 2024 before being unable to defend it last year through injury. In fact the last time he lost a match in West Kensington was in 2023, against Cerundolo, who also beat him to the Eastbourne trophy on the grass in 2023.

“Congrats to Fran, I have a ton of respect for you,” said the American, who covered his head with a towel in disappointment after the match.

“We always seem to have unreal matches and today you were the better player so I am happy for you. And thanks to the crowd for the support all week long, it’s a blast playing in front of you guys.”

Tim Henman shares thoughts on whether Emma Raducanu can win another Grand Slam title

Photo by Morgan Hancock/Getty Images
Photo by Morgan Hancock/Getty Images

Emma Raducanu’s coaching approach draws mixed reactions

Emma Raducanu has become one of the more divisive names in tennis, regularly finding herself at the centre of debate among fans.

A common point of contention is her approach to coaching, with some pointing to her frequent changes since winning the US Open in 2021.

While many believe that this lack of stability has hindered her progress, there are those who support her decision to move on quickly from coaches who don’t match her needs. The latter group, though, is very much in the minority.

Tim Henman has recently weighed in on Emma Raducanu’s coaching choices over time, specifically mentioning her apparent decision to stick with Andrew Richardson for now.

Photo by James D. Morgan/Getty Images
Photo by James D. Morgan/Getty Images

Tim Henman offers thoughts on Emma Raducanu’s coaching path

In an interview with The Guardian, Henman started by reflecting on the decision to part ways with Richardson after her US Open win.

“I was surprised she chose not to work with him,” Henman said. “She’s worked with a lot of coaches since then and now I really hope that her decision to get back with Andrew works for both their sakes.

“He’s one of my best friends and I’ve also been around Emma. So it would be good if results improve.”

Touching on Raducanu’s history of frequent coaching changes, he added: “Emma’s had eight or nine coaches, but it’s her prerogative. I looked for consistency, continuity and building the relationship – and that’s why I had three coaches in 16 years.”

The pair seem more settled now since Raducanu brought Richardson back into her team earlier this year. Having already reached another final together, there is optimism that this could mark the beginning of a stable and successful period for them both.

Tim Henman shares thoughts on Raducanu’s Grand Slam hopes

In the same conversation, Henman also spoke about whether Raducanu has what it takes to win another Grand Slam title.

While her breakthrough moment in 2021 captured everyone’s attention, she hasn’t managed to replicate that form since then.

Even so, the former British number one kept a positive outlook when discussing her future.

He said: “It would be very hard.

“Not many people win slams so you could say, if you’ve done it once, you can do it again. But it’s all about the process. She’s got to become physically more resilient to build up her schedule, her match count, her weight of shot, her speed of movement and durability.”

Outside of that US Open title run, Raducanu’s best showings at a major have been two fourth-round appearances at Wimbledon.

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