Katie Boulter rounds off Britain’s opening day in the sun at Wimbledon

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Wimbledon is just not used to this kind of thing.On the hottest opening day in the history of the championships, with the temperature reaching 32.3C, British players sizzled with a record seven recording victories, the highest number on any day in the open era, beating the previous record of six.Sonay Kartal got the ball rolling with a brilliant 7-5, 2-6, 6-2 win against the former French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko, and more than seven hours later Katie Boulter set the new mark, beating that achieved on day two in 2022, with an equally impressive 6-2, 3-6, 6-4 win against the former world No 2 Paula Badosa.With 23 British players across the two singles events, the most since 1984, there was plenty of hope, if not total expectation, that several of them could progress to round two.

Emma Raducanu and Cameron Norrie were always favoured to advance, and did, but Kartal, Billy Harris, Arthur Fery and Oliver Tarvet all defeated much higher-ranked opponents to break the record.This time last year, the 23-year-old Kartal was ranked No 298, battling just to make it as a professional.On Monday, after a whirlwind 12 months, she gave British players the perfect start with an outstanding win against the 20th seed Ostapenko.“I was happy to be first up,” the world No 51 Kartal said.“You know when you’re going to be on.

I hope that maybe it can give the other guys a bit of extra motivation, if they need it.”Ostapenko had beaten Kartal in Eastbourne last week and led 3-0 and 5-2 in the first set, only to squander three set points at 5-3 as Kartal won five games in a row to take the set.Although Ostapenko battled back to level, Kartal held her nerve in the third, overcoming a minor stumble when serving for the match at 5-0 to close it out two games later.“I don’t think that I could have done too much better at times in that match,” said Kartal, who next plays Viktoriya Tomova of Bulgaria.“I feel confident.

I feel like this is the best I’ve ever played on grass.It’s the most confident I’ve also got in my game, as well.It probably ranks top – just proving to myself that I can compete with the best.She’s an incredible player and has so much experience on the tour.She has an amazing game for grass.

I think that one is probably my biggest win,”If that was a surprise, then Fery’s 6-4, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4 victory against Alexei Popyrin, the men’s 20th seed, was more akin to an earthquake,Ranked 461 and having struggled with injuries in the past couple of years, the 22-year-old had not even won a Tour-level match before and a few eyebrows were raised when he was given the last wildcard,Popyrin, by contrast, reached the last 16 at Roland Garros and defeated Novak Djokovic at the US Open last year,The French-born Fery was also giving up eight inches in height to the 6ft 5in Australian but he returned brilliantly and stayed calm to clinch his best win, going one better than a year ago when he was beaten in five sets by Daniel Altmaier of Germany.

“I think I used the experience from last year to get over the line today,” Fery said,“Two years ago was against [Daniil] Medvedev, so I had not much expectation,Last year was really tough to lose in that manner,So definitely very proud and very special moment today to win here,“I never thought I was going to quit, but I was struggling to find answers to my issues.

It’s been tough.My ranking’s nowhere near where I want it to be and nowhere near where my level is.So I still have a lot of work on that front to do.Hopefully I’m over the worst of it, and I can now focus on my tennis and my career.I think I’m making good steps towards that.

”Centre Court (1.30pm BST start)B Krejcikova (Cz, 17) v A Eala (Phi)A Muller (Fr) v N Djokovic (Srb, 6)D Yastremska (Ukr) v C Gauff (US, 2)No.1 Court (1pm BST start)J Sinner (It, 1) v L Nardi (It)P Kvitova (Cz) v E Navarro (US, 10)J Draper (GB, 4) v S Baez (Arg)No.2 Court (11am BST start)E Cocciaretto (It) v J Pegula (US, 3)N Basilashvili (Geo) v L Musetti (It, 7)I Swiatek (Pol, 8) v P KudermetovaB Shelton (US, 10) v A Bolt (Aus)No.3 Court (11am BST start)J Monday (GB) v T Paul (US, 13)M Andreeva (7) v M Sherif (Egy)G Dimitrov (Bul, 19) v Y Nishioka (Jpn)E Avenesyan (Arm) v E Rybakina (Kaz, 11)Court 12 (11am BST start)C Tauson (Den, 23) v H Watson (GB)D Evans (GB) v J Clarke (GB)G Monfils (Fr) v U Humbert (Fr, 18)S Kenin (US, 28) v T Townsend (US)Court 18 (11am BST start)A de Minaur (Aus, 11) v R Carballes Baena (Sp)M Joint (Aus) v L Samsonova (19)C McNally (US) v J Burrage (GB)H Gaston (Fr) v J Mensik (Cz, 15)Selected courts only; full order of play here.

Tarvet, a college student in the US and the lowest-ranked player in the draw at world No 733, showed his run through qualifying was no fluke as he took out Leandro Riedi of Switzerland 6-4, 6-4, 6-4, setting up a clash with the two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz.“As a kid, it’s what you dream of,” he said.“I came here when I was a little kid.It’s what you work for.Obviously, it’s a pretty long-term goal.

But for it to happen so suddenly has been really special.”Harris took out Dusan Lajovic of Serbia 6-3, 6-2, 6-4, Norrie battled past Roberto Bautista Agut 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 and Raducanu made it six with a 6-3, 6-3 win against Mimi Xu, the Welsh teenager.Although Jacob Fearnley, Harriet Dart, Hannah Klugman, Henry Searle, Oliver Crawford and Mika Stojsavljevic were all defeated, Boulter made sure of the record with a win on Centre Court late on.“I’ve played a lot of matches recently where I’ve started out great and then kind of let it slip,” Boulter said.“I played one like that at Queen’s [Club] which hurt me a lot so I just tried to compete, fight and hope for the best today.

“I had to hope that she missed and keep pushing myself to be positive,I had to keep going after the ball and hoping that it would happen, and today it actually did happen, so I’m thrilled,”
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Katie Boulter fights back from the brink to topple ninth seed Paula Badosa

At the start of a tension-filled final set on Centre Court, when she desperately needed to showcase the best of her abilities, Katie Boulter’s game was in freefall. Her rapid‑fire start had given way to painful service issues and her unforced error count was growing with every point.The 28-year-old Briton responded to those difficulties, however, with a demonstration of her resilience, digging deep at the end of three testing sets to produce one of the best wins of her career by toppling the ninth seed, Paula Badosa, to reach the second round of Wimbledon with a 6-2, 3-6, 6-4 victory.The win marks the fourth top-10 victory of Boulter’s career and her second at a grand slam tournament following her dramatic three-set win against the then No 7, Karolina Pliskova, on the same court in 2022.“I think I got one of my first against Pliskova on this court,” Boulter said of her top-10 wins

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Emma Raducanu too strong for teenager Mimi Xu in British battle

“Come on Britain!” echoed through the sweltering 32C heat on No 1 Court as Emma Raducanu defeated Mimi Xu in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3. The all-British clash featured two players – attired similarly in matching outfits and golf visors – who captivated the home crowd.While Raducanu has been a fan favourite since her fairytale 2021 US Open triumph, the grand slam ­debutant Xu, ranked No 300 in the world, has impressed in junior circuits and shown significant promise on the senior tour.“It was an interesting dynamic today,” Raducanu said. “It is really awkward playing a Brit, especially someone younger

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Farewell tradition, hello robots: Wimbledon adjusts to life without line judges

Sometimes progress registers simply as absence, and so it was on the opening day of Wimbledon this year when the pursuit of greater accuracy led to the disappearance of the tournament’s famous line judges.Electronic line calls are now in operation in SW19, bringing the championships into line with the grand slam tournaments in Melbourne and New York and also the ATP Tour. The French Open still uses line judges. But the shift to camera‑based, AI‑enhanced decision-making cuts deeper at Wimbledon, where up to 300 line judges have been a colourful part of the tournament’s ensemble cast for the past 147 years.With protests outside the gates (albeit with tongue in cheek) and ambivalence among fans, there were also unexpected reactions from players to the changes

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Wimbledon diary: strawberry sandwiches, pricey rackets and Oliver Tarvet’s expenses

“Where are the strawberries and cream?” was among the more unexpected questions for one of Wimbledon’s army of volunteer stewards as the crowd streamed through the gates on Monday morning, given that the answer is “absolutely everywhere you look”. It was a different story, though, at the local branch of Marks & Spencer, where 300 packs of the chain’s specially commissioned strawberry & crème sandwich, a staple food for influencers on Instagram and TikTok in recent days, ran out shortly after 9am. A sample did make it into the media room, however, and while strawberries “paired with whipped cream cheese on sweetened bread” might sound like the losing team’s product idea on week two of The Apprentice, it has to be said … it’s very edible.There was an air of genteel bedlam in the main Wimbledon shop as the first wave of merch-hungry tennis fans poured through the doors in search of SW19-branded booty. The demand for hats and towels was, not surprisingly, rather stronger than that for sweatshirts and hoodies, and no one at all seemed inclined to lug around one of the giant tennis rackets – designed to be hung on the wall, apparently – that are the most expensive single items in the shop at £600 a pop