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Thursday, July 9, 2026

W.11- Muchova Mounts Her Peak


Could it really be happening?




After hoping for years that Karolina Muchova might one day be able to find the perfect path in which her magically versatile game and good health somehow managed to link arms and join forces to allow her to reach her *full* potential on the major stage, I admit to questioning over that time if it would ever *really* happen.

It still hasn't, not officially in its *purest* form. But this season, culminating in the Czech's current run at this Wimbledon, is as close as we've ever been to truly witnessing "Peak Muchova" become a reality. A season of good health, big wins and (yes, actual singles) titles has allowed Muchova to carry her momentum into SW19. Finally. And look at what's happened.

So far, it's been just as spectacular as anyone could have dreamed. Coming into today's semifinal with #7 Coco Gauff, #10 Muchova had already knocked off a pair of multi-slam title winners in consecutive matches vs. Barbora Krejcikova and Naomi Osaka. Against Gauff, she saw yet another on the other side of the court. Only this one arrived with a 6-1 record against her in their career head-to-head.

Ah, but in this potentially "Peak" season the series has seen Muchova finally collect both her first set (in Melbourne) off Gauff, as well as get her first win (in Stuttgart) over her ahead of their first meeting on grass, a surface on which Muchova's variety-filled game (w/ its glorious slice shots and picturesque volleys) has always felt like a more natural fit than that of Gauff's.

(Pay no mind to Muchova's 0-4 mark at SW19 in the four years preceding this tournament, as she's rarely been 100% at this time of the year during that stretch and *probably* wouldn't have even played Wimbledon in each of those years if the decision would have been based on whether there was much chance she was going to be *able* to make a deep run similar to her QF in her first two appearances back in 2019 & '21.)

While Muchova's past showed a 4-2 record against Top 10 players in majors, it's not as if Gauff was some sort of a slouch on the big stage. "A"-game or no, no one fights like Coco, and after winning four straight three-setters to reach her maiden Wimbledon semifinal (two in a row from a set down) she came into Day 11 one win away from reaching the final at a third different major.

In the opening set, Muchova was the much steadier player. She broke Gauff to lead 2-1, then staved off a pair BP a game later as Gauff's errors (including on a missed overhead, usually a solid shot in her arsenal) kept the Czech an arm's length ahead. Riding the wave, Muchova broke again to lead 4-1, then overcame a love/40 deficit in game 6, winning five straight points to hold for 5-1 as Gauff (who commented "so many errors" to herself mid-point) continued to search for some measure of consistency. Two games later, Muchova held from 15/30 to win the 1st at 6-2.

But Gauff surely wasn't going away. She's won more matches from a set down this season than any top player, and she turned things around in the 2nd. Muchova saved a BP and held in game 2, but Gauff's renewed surge carried her throughout the set. After a love hold, she broke the Czech to lead 3-1, then consolidated her edge with a hold a game later. She claimed the set 6-1, and seemed ready to race into the decider.



Up 2-1 in the 3rd, Muchova held a pair of BP at 15/40 in game 4, but Gauff held to prevent the set from getting away from her early. Still, while Muchova wasn't cashing in on opportunities, she was aggressive while Gauff was clearly more tentative than she would have liked. Muchova's holds kept her a half-step ahead on the scoreboard throughout, and when Gauff managed to (tapping her wrist?) carve out a well-timed challenge, such as her two BP chances at 4-4, the Czech answered the threat and didn't blink.

Winning a series of rally battles, Muchova held for 6-5, even as she began poking at the right side of her chest with her finger and wincing (oh-no). Gauff held to force a match tie-break for a spot in the final, as she tried to win her second (after rallying from 7-4 down in the MTB in the 2nd Round vs. Solana Sierra) during the fortnight.

It turned out to be the stretch of the tournament on the women's side, with both players bringing their best, with multiple iconic moments/shots and MP held by both women.

A Gauff volley error gave Muchova the early 2-1 lead, then the Czech picked off a volley from an incredibly low position (ankle-level?) to go up 3-1.



A big serve gave Muchova a 4-1 lead, but a point later Gauff pulled off a long run to chase down a ball and send it back. When Muchova couldn't keep her reply in the court, Gauff clung to life at 4-2. Then Muchova had the shot of the match (tournament?), making a diving volley winner to lead 5-3.



The Czech followed with an ace to go up 6-3 (coach Sven Groeneveld patted his heart in the stands). But Gauff kept close at 6-5 by winning both of her serve points, then got a little bit of luck when a Muchova net cord shot landed out to tie the score at 6-all.

A few points later, a Gauff DF gave Muchova an 8-7 lead, but her back-to-back long errors (first a forehand, then a backhand) gifted consecutive points and a MP to Coco at 9-8.

With the match on her racket (literally), Gauff seemed to get caught by an odd bounce at the net, causing her to badly flub her drop shot attempt. Later, she said that the decision to attempt the shot was immediately complicated by a Muchova return that came back in a tricky spot and a bounce that caught her off guard. She admitted to panicking a little, but held to her belief that the shot was the right one to try (if things hadn't suddenly gone haywire).



Saved by the lawn, Muchova put up a lob in the next point that gave her a MP at 10-9, but with the win within reach a few moments later she slipped at the net during a volley attempt and saw Gauff's shot go past her and fall inside the line, tying the score again at 10-10.

Not discouraged, Muchova fired off a forehand to get her second MP chance, then her down the line ball proved to be unreturnable, ending the MTB with the Czech in the lead at 12-10, giving her the 6-2/1-6/7-6(12-10) victory and a spot in her first Wimbledon final.



For the day, Muchova saved 11 of 13 BP. In the QF, Gauff had converted 5-of-5 BP chances vs. Jessie Pegula. Her win is her sixth Top 10 victory in this her greatest (to date) season, one off the tour's season lead. She's the only woman this season with Top 10 wins on hard court, clay *and* grass.

Afterward, Muchova said "I'm good" (multiple times, in fact) when questioned about her poking at her side during the match, saying something about having a hard time catching her breath. Honestly, I'm not *totally* sure I believed her. Hopefully, if pain is involved, it won't be enough to derail her best effort two days from now.

With Muchova, history has told us to always be on the lookout for the roadblock, the obstacle that prevents the dream from playing out in real time.

Maybe it'll happen again, and the hoped-for "Peak Muchova" moment will end with a slightly less spectacular "Mount Muchova" moment at this Wimbledon.

But hoping for the best at times like this are what tennis dreams are made of, right?








=DAY 11 NOTES=
...compared to the day's first women's semifinal, the second sported both similarities (the winner was also Czech) and differences (such a dramatic ending was simply not necessary).



While both #9 Linda Noskova and #12 Marta Kostyuk were facing off to determine which would reach her maiden major final, it was pretty evident -- even while the score remained close throughout -- that the outward confidence and seeming inner belief that *everything* has changed for her career that has stuck like glue to Noskova since her title run in Berlin a few weeks ago hadn't gone anywhere.

The two combined to carve out just one BP in the opening nine games of today's match (Kostyuk saved it and held for 3-3), but when both dusted off love holds down the stretch in games eight and nine, while Kostyuk was trying to keep pace and hold on, it was Noskova who found herself precisely where she'd wanted to be.

In her last two wins, Noskova had rode late-in-set breaks and/or surges to a pair of straight sets wins over Madison Keys and Elise Mertens, biding her time and then putting down the hammer at the eleventh hour to close out her opponents in four consecutive sets. She picked up right where she left off vs. Kostyuk. With the Ukrainian missing on multiple first serves while trying to stay in the set at 5-4, Noskova's big groundstokes quickly put her out to a love/40 lead. Her back up against the wall, Kostyuk double-faulted on BP/SP #2 and Noskova slammed the door on the set shut, winning 6-4.

From the way she's handled things over this fortnight, though she'd likely be loath to admit it, it seemed as if Noskova never had a doubt about what was going to happen.



The pressure of Noskova's flat power shots and serve continued to squeeze Kostyuk in the 2nd set, as while the Czech needed to simply push forward it was apparent that the Ukrainian would need to pull something *special* out of her bag to turn around her fortunes.

Noskova broke Kostyuk at love for a 3-1 lead, and held a GP for 4-1. But, for a moment, Kostyuk seemed capable of maybe finding just the magic ingredient she'd been looking for. Moving in just a bit and trying to perfectly time her returns (per the signals of coach Sandra Zaniewska), Kostyuk finally managed to put together a string of good return shots. A slightly over-hit swing volley from Noskova gave Kostyuk her first BP of the day, and she (albeit briefly) cracked the Czech's code and got the break to get the set back on serve.

Of course, doing it *again* was another thing.

Kostyuk held at love in game 6, and kept pace at 4-4. But Noskova was doing the same, and that was Kostyuk's main problem. The Czech held at 15 to lead 5-4 and, at about the same time that she "cracked the whip" in her last two wins, she did the same here. She raised her game just a notch, and quickly went up 15/40 on Kostyuk's serve. On her second MP, it was over. Noskova won 6-4/6-4.



Her win sets up the first all-Czech (with two players *representing* the nation, as Martina Navratilova defeated Hana Mandlikova in the '86 final) in Wimbledon history, *and* assures that the 22-year run of pre-SW19 event titles winners coming up short at Wimbledon will end on Saturday. With both Noskova and Muchova having won grass court tune-up events, one will become the first to double-up in such a way since Maria Sharapova in 2004, and become just the second to do it since countrywoman Jana Novotna did it in 1998.

Not only that, but one will become the first to win the Wimbledon title after saving a MP en route since Venus Williams in 2009, with Muchova saving one today and Noskova having done it back in the 3rd Round vs. Sorana Cirstea.

Muchova has the experience, having played in a slam final before ('23 RG), but does she have the *belief* (not only that she belongs, but maybe that this title is *hers* to win) that Noskova seems to be sporting at the moment?

As glorious as Muchova can be, I don't think I'm convinced after watching Noskova these last few rounds that the Venus Rosewater Dish won't be *on her racket* on Saturday.

Let's see if she can finish in two days the way she has the last few times she's hit the court. If she can, she's going to win her first major.

...meanwhile, the first champions of this Wimbledon were crowned on Thursday...



#2 seeds Alona Ostapenko & Marcelo Arevalo defeated Storm Hunter & Marc Polmans in the Mixed Doubles final by a 4-6/7-5/6-2 score. The win gives Ostapenko her maiden slam MX crown.

With her past major titles in singles ('17 RG) and women's doubles ('24 US), she joins Serena Williams, Venus Williams and Barbora Krejcikova as the only four active women with titles in all three slam disciplines in their careers.



...the top-seeded duo of Katerina Siniakova & Taylor Townsend won't be adding to their haul in Wimbledon, as they fell today in the SF to #10 Guo Hanyu & Kristina Mladenovic, 7-6(8)/7-5.

...the top four seeds have advanced to the wheelchair semis.

The finalists will be decided in final four matches between #1 Yui Kamiji (def. Jinte Bos today) and #4 Wang Ziying (the DC def. Lizzy de Greef), and #2 Diede de Groot (def. Aniek Van Koot) and #4 Li Xiaohui (def. Ksenia Chasteau).

Kamiji still seeks the only major title she's never won -- the Wimbledon singles -- to match the feat of the only other woman to ever win all eight major singles/doubles WC crowns (as well as Paralympic s/d Golds and year-end the Masters s/d titles), de Groot. They could meet in what would be their 19th slam singles final match-up.

The wheelchair doubles final will pit #1 Kamiji/Zhu Zhenzhen against #2 seeds (and defending champs) Li & Wang. A win for Kamiji would match Van Koot's record of 24 women's slam doubles titles in a career.

...the junior singles semis will see #1 seed Sun Xinran face the reigning Roehampton winner, Janae Preston. The other match will pit #15 Polina Skliar of Ukraine against #14-seeded Hordette Anna Pushkareva. Skliar defeated another Russian opponent, #7 Mariia Makarova, today in the QF, after having defeated yet *another* Hordette opponent (Ekaterina Dotsenko) back in the 1st Round.

Jana Kovackova (along with fellow Czech Katerina Zajickova, the recent RG-winning duo) reached the girls' doubles semis, keeping alive her chances for a Career Junior Doubles Slam and fourth consecutive major title in the discipline.








*WOMEN'S SINGLES FINAL*
#10 Karolina Muchova/CZE vs. #9 Linda Noskova/CZE

*WOMEN'S DOUBLES SF*
#10 Guo/Mladenovic (CHN/FRA) vs. Jiang X./Xu Y. (CHN/CHN)
#13 Aoyama/Liang (JPN/TPE) vs. #2 Dabrowski/Stefani (CAN/BRA)

*MIXED DOUBLES FINAL*
#2 Ostapenko/Arevalo (LAT/ELS) def. Hunter/Polmans (AUS/AUS) 4-6/7-5/6-2

*WHEELCHAIR WOMEN'S SINGLES SF*
#1 Yui Kamiji/JPN vs. #4 Wang Ziying/CHN
#3 Li Xiaohui/CHN vs. #2 Diede de Groot/NED

*WHEELCHAIR WOMEN'S DOUBLES FINAL*
#1 Kamiji/Zhu (JPN/CHN) vs. #2 Li/Wang (CHN/CHN)

*GIRLS' SINGLES SF*
#1 Sun Xinran/CHN vs. Janae Preston/USA
#15 Polina Skliar/UKR vs. #14 Anna Pushkareva/RUS

*GIRLS' DOUBLES SF*
#1 Barros/Leme da Silva (BRA/BRA) vs. Berezina/Cvetkovic (RUS/SRB)
#5 J.Kovackova/Zajickova (CZE/CZE) vs. #8 Wobker/Zoldakova (GER/CZE)










...WELP... ON DAY 11:




...COCO BEING COCO... ON DAY 11:




...BOO-HOO... ON DAY 11:




...ALL RIGHT... ON DAY 11:




...PRELUDE TO THE FERY TALE... ON DAY 11:


























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*2026 WTA TITLES AFTER FACING MATCH POINT*
Indian Wells - Aryna Sabalenka (1 vs. Rybakina in F)
Stuttgart - Elena Rybakina (2 vs. Fernandez in QF)
Wimbledon - Muchova (1 vs. Gauff/SF) or Noskova (1 vs. Cirstea/3r)
[recent slam titles after saving MP]
2014 AO - Li Na (1 vs. Safarova in 3r)
2016 AO - Angelique Kerber (1 vs. Doi in 1r)
2018 AO - Caroline Wozniacki (2 vs. Fett in 2r)
2021 AO - Naomi Osaka (2 vs. Muguruza in 4r)
2021 RG - Barbora Krejcikova (1 vs. Sakkari in SF)
2024 RG - Iga Swiatek (1 vs. Osaka in 2r)
2025 AO - Madison Keys (1 vs. Swiatek SF)
[at Wimbledon]
1935 Helen Wills Moody (1 vs. Helen Jacobs F)
2005 Venus Williams (1 vs. Davenport in Final)
2009 Serena Williams (1 vs. Dementieva in SF)

*2026 TOP 10 WINS; (w/ #1 wins)*
7 - Kostyuk, Rybakina(1), Svitolina
6 - Muchova
5 - Eala, Mboko, Pegula(1), Sabalenka
3 - Baptiste(1), Bencic, Gauff, Keys
--
NOTE: Muchova (3 HC, 2 RC, 1 GR) only with Top 10 wins on three surfaces

*2026 WTA ALL-NATION FINALS*
(USA) Austin - Stearns d. Townsend #
(UKR) Rouen - Kostyuk d. Podrez
(CZE) Wimbledon - Muchova vs. Noskova
[most recent at majors]
2009 (RUS) RG - Kuznetsova d. Safina
2009 (USA) WI - S.Williams d. V.Wiliams
2015 (ITA) US - Pennetta d. Vinci
2017 (USA) AO - S.Williams d. V.Williams
2017 (USA) US - Stephens d. Keys #
2026 (CZE) WI - Muchova vs. Noskova
-
#- tournament in home nation

*FIRST-TIME SLAM FINALS IN 2020s*
2020 AO - Sofia Kenin, USA (12th slam MD)
2020 RG - Iga Swiatek, POL (7th)
2021 AO - Jennifer Brady, USA (15th)
2021 RG - Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS (52nd)
2021 RG - Barbora Krejcikova, CZE (5th)
2021 US - Leylah Fernandez, CAN (7th)
2021 US - Emma Raducanu, GBR (2nd)
2022 AO - Danielle Collins, USA (17th)
2022 RG - Coco Gauff, USA (10th)
2022 WI - Ons Jabeur, TUN (21st)
2022 WI - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (12th)
2023 AO - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (20th)
2023 RG - Karolina Muchova, CZE (17th)
2024 AO - Zheng Qinwen, CHN (9th)
2024 RG - Jasmine Paolini, ITA (18th)
2024 US - Jessie Pegula, USA (23rd)
2025 WI - Amanda Anisimova, USA (22nd)
2026 RG - Mirra Andreeva, RUS (13th)
2026 RG - Maja Chwalinska, POL (3rd)
2026 WI - Linda Noskova, CZE (16th)

*FIRST-TIME SLAM CHAMPS AT WIMBLEDON - Open era*
1968 Billie Jean King, USA
1978 Martina Navratilova, USA
1994 Conchita Martinez, ESP
1998 Jana Novotna, CZE
2000 Venus Williams, USA
2004 Maria Sharapova, RUS
2011 Petra Kvitova, CZE
2013 Marion Bartoli, FRA
2022 Elena Rybakina, KAZ
2023 Marketa Vondrousova, CZE
2026 Muchova or Noskova

*MOST WTA FINALS in 2026*
4 - Aryna Sabalenka (3-1)
4 - Mirra Andreeva (3-1)
4 - KAROLINA MUCHOVA (2-1)
3 - Marta Kostyuk (2-1)
3 - Jessie Pegula (2-1)
3 - Elena Rybakina (2-1)
3 - Elina Svitolina (2-1)
3 - Victoria Mboko (0-3)
2 - Marie Bouzkova (2-0)
2 - LINDA NOSKOVA (1-0)
2 - Emma Navarro (1-1)
2 - Coco Gauff (0-2)
2 - Emma Raducanu (0-2)
[nations]
11 (5) - USA
10 (7) - CZE** (w/ WI win)
10 (5) - UKR
5 (3) - RUS
4 (3) - BLR
3 (0) - CAN
3 (1) - GBR
3 (2) - KAZ
2 (1) - CRO
2 (0) - GER
2 (0) - POL
1 (1) - ESP
1 (1) - ITA
1 (1) - ROU
1 (0) - AUT
1 (0) - CHN
1 (0) - HUN
1 (0) - JPN

*RECENT WIMBLEDON "Ms. OPPORTUNITY" WINNERS*
2014 Lucie Safarova, CZE
2015 Garbine Muguruza, ESP
2016 Elena Vesnina, RUS
2017 Magdalena Rybarikova, SVK
2018 Julia Goerges, GER
2019 Simona Halep, ROU and Alison Riske, USA
2021 Aryna Sabalenka, BLR and Kgothatso Montjane, RSA (WC)
2022 Harmony Tan, FRA
2023 Marketa Vondrousova, CZE
2024 Jasmine Paolini, ITA and Donna Vekic, CRO
2025 Iga Swiatek, POL and Wang Ziying, CHN (WC)
2026 Karolina Muchova, CZE and Linda Noskova, CZE

*RECENT WIMBLEDON MIXED DOUBLES CHAMPS*
2013 Kristina Mladenovic & Daniel Nestor, FRA/CAN
2014 Samantha Stosur & Nenad Zimonjic, AUS/SRB
2015 Martina Hingis & Leander Paes, SUI/IND
2016 Heather Watson & Henri Kontinen, GBR/FIN
2017 Martina Hingis & Jamie Murray, SUI/GBR
2018 Nicole Melichar & Alexander Peya, USA/AUT
2019 Latisha Chan & Ivan Dodig, TPE/CRO
2021 Desirae Krawczyk & Neal Skupski, USA/GBR
2022 Desirae Krawczyk & Neal Skupski, USA/GBR
2023 Lyudmyla Kichenok & Mate Pavic, UKR/CRO
2042 Hsieh Su-wei & Jan Zielinski, TPE/POL
2025 Katerina Siniakova & Sem Verbeek, CZE/NED
2026 Alona Ostapenko & Marcelo Arevalo, LAT/ELS

*SLAM WS/WD/MX TITLES IN CAREER - active*
39...Serena Williams (23-14-2)
23...Venus Williams (7-14-2)
12...Barbora Krejcikova (2-7-3)
3...ALONA OSTAPENKO (1-1-1)





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TOP QUALIFIER: Robin Montgomery/USA
TOP EARLY-ROUND (1r-2r): #1 Aryna Sabalenka/BLR (two straight sets wins; extends slam TB win streak to 21)
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #10 Karolina Muchova/CZE (def. consecutive multi-slam winners in Krejcikova/Osaka)
TOP LATE-ROUND (SF-F): x
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1 - Anastasia Gasanova/RUS def. Varvara Lepchenko/USA 2-6/6-1/7-6(12-10) - Lepchenko led 5-3 in the 3rd, twice served for the match, led 5-1 in MTB and at 9-6 held four MP over a 5-point stretch. Gasanova wins 12-10.
TOP EARLY-RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 1st Rd. - Maya Joint/AUS def. Serena Williams/USA 6-3/6-7(6)/6-3 - 20-year old Aussie, 1-13 in her last 14 matches, defeats returning 44-year old Williams in her first singles match since 2022
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 3rd Rd. - #9 Linda Noskova/CZE def. #17 Sorana Cirstea/ROU 2-6/6-3/7-6(11-9) - Noskova 4-2 lead in 3rd, Cirstea MP at 5-4 and Noskova 2 MP before deciding MTB; Noskova wins 11-9)
TOP LATE-RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.-WC): x
=============================
FIRST VICTORY: #11 Belinda Bencic/SUI (def. Stojsavljevic/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #20 Maja Chwalinska/POL (1st Rd. - hurt ankle/foot on MP up 6-2/5-2 vs. Sawangkaew/THA)
FIRST SLAM MD WINS: Anastasia Gasanova/RUS (2nd MD), Tyra Grant/ITA (1st MD), Mananchaya Sawangkaew/THA (2nd MD), Lanlada Tararudee/THA (2nd MD)
UPSET QUEENS: Czech Republic
REVELATION LADIES: Southeast Asians
NATION OF POOR SOULS: GBR (1-7 1st Rd., after 0/7 through qualfiying; Kartal DNP, Raducanu w/d and started 0-7 in MD play)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Ashlyn Krueger/USA (4th Rd.)
LAST WILD CARD STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
PROTECTED RANKING WINS: Karolina Pliskova/CZE, Sara Sorribes Tormo/ESP (both 2nd Rd.)
LUCKY LOSERS: Darja Semenistaja/LAT(L)
LAST BRIT STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
Ms. OPPORTUNITY: Karolina Muchova/CZE and Linda Noskova/CZE
IT "Filipina": Alex Eala/PHI (first PHI woman to slam Round of 16)
COMEBACK PLAYER: Jasmine Paolini/ITA
CRASH & BURN: #2 Elena Rybakina/KAZ, #3 Iga Swiatek/POL and #6 Amanda Anisimova/USA ('22 champ and both '25 finalists lose in 3rd Round on middle Saturday)
ZOMBIE QUEEN OF LONDON: Linda Noskova/CZE (3r- saved MP vs. Cirstea)
DOUBLES STAR: Nominees: J.Kovackova, (WD)
VETERAN PLAYER (KIMIKO CUP): Nominees: Mertens, Kamiji(WC), Aoyama, Mladenovic, (Invitational WD)
LAWN COURT ROLLER: Nominee: Kamiji
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: Nominees: J.Preston, J.Kovackova
SPIRIT OF JANA (NOVOTNA) HONOREES: Maja Chwalinska/POL (devastating loss in 1st Rd. after having MP at 6-2/5-2 before fall injures ankle); Karolina Muchova/CZE and Linda Noskova/CZE (first all-CZE Wimbledon F)








All for Day 11. More tomorrow.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

W.10- The Inevitability Always Rings Twice


Here comes Marta. Again. Already.













=DAY 10 NOTES=
...sometimes a player "graduates" right before our eyes, and this grass court season may have been the moment it happened for Linda Noskova.

The big-hitting Czech has been a dangerous player to watch for a couple of seasons, but for much of that time -- though she made her maiden slam QF *two* seasons ago in Melbourne while still a teenager (after upsetting then-#1 Swiatek... when that still *meant something*) -- her storyline was most often about her putting big-time pressure on top players, often stretching them to three sets, but usually coming up just short of the big, career path-changing victory.

But Noskova's title run in Berlin may have changed that. Before that week on the grass, she'd had a typical "nibbling at the edges" 2026 campaign. After reaching a 1000 final in Beijing last fall, Noskova reached the Indian Wells SF, Madrid QF and Rome 4th Round this spring, but the form she showed in Berlin, knocking down Alex Eala and Jessie Pegula en route to the title, seems to have changed her *mindset* more than anything.

The win pushed her (only briefly, for a single week) into the Top 10, but the belief the whole experience instilled in her has been in evidence throughout this Wimbledon.

At SW19, whether it's been when the Czech is in the lead, is being challenged, or even when she's seemingly in trouble (like when she faced a MP vs. Sorana Cirstea in the 3rd Rd.), Noskova has *played* like the favorite, not just because of her #9 seed or '26 grass record (9-1 coming into today) but more importantly because of what's been between her ears and inside her chest. To date, it's always *felt* like Noskova was in control, even when she really wasn't because she has seemed to *believe* she was, or at least was *about to be*.

We saw it again today in the #9 seed's QF match vs. #25 Elise Mertens. The veteran Belgian barely conceded Noskova an inch, sticking like glue on the scoreboard all day, but it never really felt as if Noskova was in trouble, nor did she let the closeness of the match cause her to overplay or do anything desperate. She just played her game and let the match *come to her*, which it eventually did when she applied just the right amount of pressure at just the right time.

Mertens saved three BP to hold for 2-2 in the 1st, and neither woman had managed a break of serve deep into the set. And then Noskova suddenly did, as occurred in the Round of 16 vs. Madison Keys when the Czech waited things out until she had a chance to pounce, then did so late in the opening set and in the blink of an eye she had the match lead. Keys never fully rediscovered her footing following her swift dispatching in the closing game of that set, when she'd led 40/love only to lose five straight points and drop the set entirely, and (so far) Noskova hasn't looked back.

Noskova broke Mertens' serve to shake up the series of holds, taking a 5-3 lead. She then held at love to secure a 6-3 1st set. Just like that.

To open the 2nd set, again Mertens struggled to stay even with Noskova, rallying from 15/40 down and saving three BP before finally holding on her fourth GP opportunity. The set stayed on serve without much wavering until game 8, when Noskova let a 40/love lead slip to deuce. But she quickly recovered within a blink, using a drop shot/winner combo and then a closing ace to shut down any hope for an eleventh-hour Mertens surge.

Noskova held three BP in the next game, one on which the Czech seemingly played the *perfect* point that was about to end with a stinging volley into the corner... only to see Mertens race to get a racket on the ball and her desperation lob attempt catch the baseline to help her stay alive. She held for a 5-4 lead.



But Noskova remained calm, secure in her place and with her ability to close out the match. After missing on three GP chances, and seeing Mertens twice get within two points of the taking the set (but never reaching SP), Noskova held to even the score again. Then the Czech, once again, stepped things up significantly in the close moments of yet another set, breaking Mertens in the next game and (again) serving out the set/match with a love service game after that, winning 6-3/7-5 to reach her maiden slam semifinal.



It's been more than twenty years (Sharapova 2004) since a pre-Wimbledon event title winner went on to win at SW19, and just one has done it since 1998. But two of the final four woman who claimed crowns earlier this grass season are still in the running to match the feat. Decades ago, back when the likes of Martina Navratilova (who did it while winning seven of her nine Wimbledon championships) and Jana Novotna (who did so in '98 in her lone SW19 run) were roaming the lawns, it was a routine occurrence.

Of course, both of those two women were Czech-born, as are the two who are still in position to double-up this year, Noskova and countrywoman Karolina Muchova. In fact, they *could* meet in the final, an affair that would represent a virtual celebration of all that the Czechs has done at this slam over the years.

Incredibly, there's never been an *official* all-Czech final at Wimbledon. Not in the women's, nor the men's (while the likes of Jan Kodes, Ivan Lendl and Tomas Berdych have reached the final Sunday). The closest was in 1986, when Navratilova (Czech-born, but by then a U.S. citizen) defeated Czech Hana Mandlikova.

Muchova/Noskova would be the long-overdue maiden Czech-vs.-Czech clash. We'll see if it happens.



...meanwhile, Marta Kostyuk has spent most of the grass season sitting on her inevitability. She didn't play a grass court tune-up event, then with little fanfare worked her way through this draw. So against her nature, she barely caused a stir, even while winning back-to-back three setters (vs. a Russian opponent in Blinkova, and then #23 Navarro), pulling away down the stretch in both to throw cold water on any potential drama. She then did the same after falling behind 4-2 in the 2nd set vs. a qualifier (Krueger) in the Round of 16, moving on in straights.

Throughout, Kostyuk's Wilson-supplied attire for the fortnight -- allowing for post-match, ballerina-like twirls to show off its frills -- has gotten more play than Kostyuk's good form.

On Day 10, the #12-seeded Ukrainian found her way to Centre Court, but only while *another* women's quarterfinal was also taking place next door on Court 1. The Noskova/Mertens match, a tight affair decided by a few key points here and there, began *before* Kostyuk's own against #13-seed and former finalist Jasmine Paolini, but it was the latter which managed to finish first, re-setting the ongoing stage for the biggest local story at this Wimbledon (which shows that, on occasion, those wild cards the tournament hands out *are* deserved and well used, even if it's not *usually* the case).

Though this Wimbledon served as an oasis in a season's storm for Paolini, who will look to build upon her best singles result since last fall, was consistently in Kostyuk's wake on this day. Kostyuk broke to take a 3-2 lead in the 1st, then backed it up with a love hold. Though she wasn't able to open an even wider gap on the scoreboard after holding double-BP on Paolini's serve in game 7 (the Italian held), she put away the set-clinching break two games later to take the 1st at 6-3.



Kostyuk took another early break lead at 3-1 in the 2nd, and coasted to a 6-3/6-2 win to secure her second consecutive slam semifinal.

With only three more women's matches left to play at this Wimbledon, suddenly Kostyuk's inevitability might be showing once again.



For now, Kostyuk cracks the Top 10 for the first time, assuming the #10 spot in the "live" rankings. But it could be short-lived, as Noskova (the live #11) could still knock her out with a win tomorrow.

With the QF round complete, this marks the first time in the Open era that the final four at SW19 consists of four first-time Wimbledon semifinalists.

But before the "you-know-who" lot begin to yelp about how it shows a "weakness" at the top of the WTA, we should also note that the four remaining woman include a multi-slam winner, another former slam finalist, two players who just completed a Career Semifinal Slam, and another player who has reached back-to-back semis in majors. In fact, it shows the *depth*.

So there's that.

...the junior quarterfinals are set, and top-seed and girls' #1 Sun Xinran is still on track to reach her second straight junior singles slam final, after reaching the RG final last month. She'd be the first Chinese girl to win the Wimbledon juniors.

Also in the last eight is unseeded Janae Preston, as the Bannerette seeks to become the third U.S. girl ('17 Claire Liu, '22 Liv Hovde) to win both the Roehampton and Wimbledon titles in the same year.

One big upset in the singles today involved the exit of #3 Jana Kovackova, who lost to Germany's Emily Eigelsbach. The Czech Crusher is still alive in the doubles QF, though, as Kovackova seeks the first recorded Career Junior Doubles Slam (which would also be a "Kovackova Slam" since it'd be her *fourth* straight major doubles win).








*WOMEN'S SINGLES SF*
#10 Karolina Muchova/CZE vs. #7 Coco Gauff/USA
#12 Marta Kostyuk/UKR vs. #9 Linda Noskova/CZE

*WOMEN'S DOUBLES QF*
#1 Siniakova/Townsend (CZE/USA) vs. #10 Guo/Mladenovic (CHN/FRA)
(PR) Neel/Olmos (EST/MEX) vs. Jiang X./Xu Y. (CHN/CHN)
#13 Aoyama/Liang (JPN/TPE) def. #9 Perez/Schuurs (AUS/NED)
#2 Dabrowski/Stefani (CAN/BRA) def. Piter/Siskova (POL/CZE)

*MIXED DOUBLES FINAL*
Hunter/Polmans (AUS/AUS) vs. #2 Ostapenko/Arevalo (LAT/ELS)

*WHEELCHAIR WOMEN'S SINGLES QF*
#1 Yui Kamiji/JPN vs. Jinte Bos/NED
#4 Wang Ziying/CHN vs. Lizzy de Greef/NED
Ksenia Chasteau/FRA vs. #3 Li Xiaohui/CHN
Aniek Van Koot/NED vs. #2 Diede de Groot/NED

*WHEELCHAIR WOMEN'S DOUBLES SF*
#1 Kamiji/Zhu (JPN/CHN) vs. Montjane/Shuker (RSA/GBR)
de Groot/Van Koot (NED/NED) vs. #2 Li/Wang (CHN/CHN)

*GIRLS' SINGLES QF*
#1 Sun Xinran/CHN vs. (Q) Anna Pircher/AUT
Emily Eigelsbach/GER vs. Janae Preston/USA
#7 Mariia Makarova/RUS vs. #15 Polina Skliar/UKR
Qu Yihan/CHN vs. #14 Anna Pushkareva/RUS

*GIRLS' DOUBLES QF*
#1 Barros/Leme da Silva (BRA/BRA) vs. #7 Frodin/Rajeshwaran Revathi (USA/IND)
Hazelitt/Newman (USA/USA) vs. Berezina/Cvetkovic (RUS/SRB)
#5 J.Kovackova/Zajickova (CZE/CZE) vs. Dorofeeva-Rybas/Pushkareva (RUS/RUS)
#8 Wobker/Zoldakova (GER/CZE) vs. Pircher/Yoshida (AUT/JPN)










...SO, IN FINAL FOUR STORYLINE SHORTHAND... ON DAY 10:

The Fighter (Gauff). Healthy/"Peak" (Muchova). The Graduate (Noskova). Inevitable (Kostyuk).



...AH, I SEE WHAT THEY DID THERE... ON DAY 10:




...TRY AS THEY MIGHT, IT'S NOT *REALLY* THE SAME, NOW IS IT?... ON DAY 10:




...WHY IT'S HARD TO GET VERY WORKED UP NO MATTER HOW HARD ESPN TRIES TO PUSH THE LIKES OF FRITZ, PAUL, TIAFOE and SHELTON AS LEGITIMATE TITLE CONTENDERS... ON DAY 10:



Though I'd still give Shelton a shot in Melbourne, maybe, some day.

So they should probably get on board with the likes of Fery, British but a former *NCAA player*, for however much longer this lasts. It might be as close as the U.S. gets anytime soon.




..."PROP PICKS" UPDATE... ON DAY 10:




WI26 "PROP PICK" PREDICTIONS
1. Serena Williams will win at least one match in her return at age 44
...NO. Considering Maya Joint's season, this seemed like a good bet. It wasn't. I should have predicted that Serena wouldn't play any doubles matches (since that's always been pretty likely... unfortunately for Venus).
2. DC Iga Swiatek will not reach the second week
...YES. Honestly, this seemed pretty easy. Eala did the deed
3. Only one of the Top 3 seeds (Sabalena-Rybakina-Swiatek) will reach the QF
...grudgingly, NO. I thought this was taking a chance, but NONE of them made it.
4. At least 2 Czechs will reach the QF
...YES. Muchova and Noskova.
5. Two "flagless" women will reach the QF
...NO. Surprisingly, none made it.
6. There will be at least one first-time major semifinalist
...YES. Hello, Ms.Noskova.
7. There will be three unseeded woman in the QF, at least one in the SF
...NO/NO. Unlike the men (in a rare situation), there was no women's Cinderella run.
8. The two finalists will have a combined seed of 22+ (unseeded would be 33 alone)
...still be determined, with one SF pitting #10 vs. #7 and the other #12 vs. #9. I guess I'd *have* to have Muchova/Kostyuk to get to 22.
9. At least one finalist will come from the #8-20 seed range
...YES. #12 Kostyuk vs. #9 Noskova in one SF will do.
10. At least one finalist will be a former major finalist, but have never reached a previous final at Wimbledon
...YES. Gauff vs. Muchova in the other SF will do.
11. The winner will be a first-time Wimbledon finalist
...YES. In fact, all four *semifinalists* are SW19 first-timers.
12. Dark Horses (at least 4r/QF??): Chwalinska (hey, Paolini followed up *her* RG final with another at Wimbledon), Samsonova (the AELTC would be a fine place to finally turn the corner on her season), Krejickova (why not?), Navarro (playing like a second-weeker), Montgomery (vs. Paolini in the 1st Rd., is 9-0 this grass season)
...NO-NO-YES-NO-NO. This one really hurt my numbers. Since they had to at least reach the second week, the 3rd Round exits of Samsonova and Navarro really cut deep into my win percentage. Meanwhile, Montgomery had Paolini in her crossheirs and let her escape, while Chwalinska's had at least a 1st Round win until the injury on MP.


With one pick still to be determined, that gives me seven wins and nine losses. Not *bad*... but I'll surely limit my dark horses next time.

Still, with the "champion" pick correct (as it counts here), that gives me three of the last four majors with a "YES" and six of nine since I left the old "pick ONE winner" format behind and went with the "group designation" route starting with the '24 Wimbledon. It's getting tougher to come up with something *unique* each major, though.























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kosova-font

*MOST WTA SF in 2026*
6 - KAROLINA MUCHOVA (3-2)
6 - Elina Svitolina (3-3)
5 - Mirra Andreeva (4-1)
5 - Aryna Sabalenka (4-1)
5 - MARTA KOSTYUK (3-1)
5 - Jessie Pegula (3-2)
4 - Elena Rybakina (3-1)
4 - COCO GAUFF (2-1)
4 - Iva Jovic (1-3)
3 - Victoria Mboko (3-0)
3 - LINDA NOSKOVA (1-1)
3 - Sorana Cirstea (1-1+L)
[nations]
26- USA (12-13)*
16- UKR (9-6)*
14- CZE (8-4)**
8 - RUS (5-3)
6 - ROU (1-5)
5 - BLR (4-1)
5 - CRO (2-3)
4 - GBR (3-1)
4 - KAZ (3-1)
4 - POL (1-3)
4 - AUS (0-4)
3 - CAN (3-0)
3 - GER (2-1)
3 - CHN (1-2)
2 - AUT (1-1)
2 - HUN (1-1)
2 - ITA (1-1)
2 - LAT (0-2)
2 - PHI (0-2)
2 - SUI (0-2)
1-0 = ESP,JPN
0-1 = ARG,COL,DEN,FRA,GRE

*RECORDS IN SLAM QF IN 2020s*
16 - Sabalenka (13-2+W)
14 - Swiatek (9-5)
11 - GAUFF (6-5)
10 - PEGULA (3-7)
9 - Svitolina (2-7)
7 - MUCHOVA (5-2)
7 - Rybakina (4-3)
7 - Jabeur (3-4)
6 - Krejcikova (2-4)

*TCH/CZE IN WIMBLEDON SF - Open era*
1981 Hana Mandlikova (RU)
1984 Hana Mandlikova
1986 Hana Mandlikova
1993 Jana Novotna (RU)
1995 Jana Novotna
1997 Jana Novotna (RU)
1998 Jana Novotna (W)
2010 Petra Kvitova
2011 Petra Kvitova (W)
2014 Petra Kvitova (W)
2014 Lucie Safarova
2019 Barbora Strycova
2021 Karolina Pliskova (RU)
2023 Marketa Vondrousova (W)
2024 Barbora Krejcikova (W)
2026 Karolina Muchova
2026 Linda Noskova

*FIRST SLAM SF AT WIMBLEDON IN 2020s*
2021 WI - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (15th slam md)
2022 WI - Ons Jabeur, TUN (21st)
2022 WI - Tatjana Maria, GER (35th)
2022 WI - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (12th)
2024 WI - Donna Vekic, CRO (43rd)
2026 WI - Linda Noskova, CZE (16th)
[2026 majors]
2026 RG - Maja Chwalinska, POL (3rd)
2026 RG - Marta Kostyuk, UKR (25th)
2026 RG - Diana Shnaider, RUS (12th)
2026 WI - Linda Noskova, CZE (16th)

*"SPIRIT OF JANA" RING OF HONOR*
Marie Bouzkova, CZE (2022)
Maja Chwalinska, POL (2026)
Barbora Krejcikova, CZE (2018, RG20, RG21, 2024)
Petra Kvitova, CZE (2025)
Nicole Melichar, USA (2018)
Karolina Muchova, CZE (2023, 2026)
Linda Noskova, CZE (2026)
Donna Vekic, CRO [Good Donna 2018, Bad Donna 2019]

*WIMBLEDON "SPIRIT OF JANA" ANNUAL HONOREES*
[2018]
Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
...Brno-born; wins WD title in first Wimbledon since ex-coach Novotna's death
Nicole Melichar, USA
...born in Brno, CZE (like Jana); wins MX title in first Wimbledon since death
Donna Vekic, CRO
..."Good Donna"
[2019]
Donna Vekic, CRO
..."Bad Donna"
[2020]
RG Special: Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
...to RG 3rd Rd. (Oct.) on Novotna's 52nd birthday; dedicates to Jana
[2021]
RG Special: Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
...wins maiden slam singles crown w/ Jana as inspiration; also wins WD
[2022]
Marie Bouzkova, CZE
...Czech with first slam QF
[2023]
Karolina Muchova, CZE
...hard-luck Czech falls and injures self (again)
[2024]
Barbora Krejcikova, CZE
...wins Wimbledon 26 years after former coach/mentor Novotna won in '98
[2025]
Petra Kvitova, CZE
...final Wimbledon for two-time champion
[2026]
Maja Chwalinska, POL
...devastating loss in 1st Rd. after having MP at 6-2/5-2 before fall injures ankle
Karolina Muchova/CZE and Linda Noskova/CZE
...latest Czechs to reach Wimbledon SF




*CAREER SLAM SF - active singles*
40 - Serena Williams, USA (33-7)
23 - Venus Williams, USA (16-7)
14 - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (8-6)
9 - Victoria Azarenka, BLR (6-3)
9 - Iga Swiatek, POL (6-3)
7 - Madison Keys, USA (2-5)
7 - Caroline Wozniacki, DEN (3-4)
6 - Coco Gauff, USA (3-2)*
5 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (4-1)
5 - Karolina Muchova, CZE (1-3)*
4 - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (3-1)
4 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE (2-2)
4 - Vera Zvonareva, RUS (2-2)
4 - Elina Svitolina, UKR (0-4)
3 - Amanda Anisimova, USA (2-1)
3 - Sara Errani, ITA (1-2)
3 - Ons Jabeur, TUN (3-0)
3 - Jessie Pegula, USA (1-2)
3 - Sloane Stephens, USA (2-1)
--
*-to play SF

[SLAM SF 2020-26]
14 - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (8-6)
9 - Iga Swiatek, POL (6-3)
6 - Coco Gauff, USA (3-2)*
5 - Karolina Muchova, CZE (1-3)*
4 - Elena Rybakina, KAZ (3-1)
3 - Ash Barty, AUS (2-1)
3 - Ons Jabeur, TUN (3-0)
3 - Madison Keys, USA (1-2)
3 - Naomi Osaka, JPN (2-1)
3 - Jessie Pegula, USA (1-2)
2 - Mirra Andreeva, RUS (1-1)
2 - Amanda Anisimova, USA (2-0)
2 - Victoria Azarenka, BLR (1-1)
2 - Jennifer Brady, USA (1-1)
2 - Simona Halep, ROU (0-2)
2 - Sofia Kenin, USA (2-0)
2 - Marta Kostyuk, UKR (0-1)*
2 - Barbora Krejcikova, CZE (2-0)
2 - Jasmine Paolini, ITA (2-0)
2 - Maria Sakkari, GRE (0-2)
2 - Elina Svitolina, UKR (0-2)
2 - Serena Williams, USA (0-2)
1 - Paula Badosa, ESP (0-1)
1 - Danielle Collins, USA (1-0)
1 - Leylah Fernandez, CAN (1-0)
1 - Caroline Garcia, FRA (0-1)
1 - Beatriz Haddad Maia, BRA (0-1)
1 - Dasha Kasatkina, RUS (0-1)
1 - Angelique Kerber, GER (0-1)
1 - Maja Chwalinska, POL (1-0)
1 - Petra Kvitova, CZE (0-1)
1 - Magda Linette, POL (0-1)
1 - Tatjana Maria, GER (0-1)
1 - Garbina Muguruza, ESP (1-0)
1 - Emma Navarro, USA (0-1)
1 - Linda Noskova, CZE (0-0)*
1 - Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, RUS (1-0)
1 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE (1-0)
1 - Nadia Podoroska, ARG (0-1)
1 - Emma Raducanu, GBR (1-0)
1 - Belinda Bencic, SUI (0-1)
1 - Lois Boisson, FRA (0-1)
1 - Diana Shnaider, RUS (0-1)
1 - Martina Trevisan, ITA (0-1)
1 - Donna Vekic, CRO (0-1)
1 - Marketa Vondrousova, CZE (1-0)
1 - Dayana Yastremska, UKR (0-1)
1 - Zheng Qinwen, CHN (1-0)
1 - Tamara Zidansek, SLO (0-1)
--
*-to play SF

[2026 SLAM SF BY NATION]
3 - UKR (0-2) - Kostyuk
2 - RUS (1-1)
2 - CZE (0-0) - Muchova,Noskova
2 - USA (0-1) - Gauff
1 - BLR (1-0)
1 - KAZ (1-0)
1 - POL (1-0)

[SLAM SF BY NATION 2020-26 / 26 events]
22 - USA (11-10)*
16 - BLR (9-7)
11 - POL (7-4)
11 - CZE (5-4)**
5 - RUS (2-3)
5 - UKR (0-4)*
4 - KAZ (3-1)
3 - AUS (2-1)
3 - JPN (2-1)
3 - TUN (3-0)
2 - ESP (1-1)
2 - FRA (0-2)
2 - GER (0-2)
2 - GRE (0-2)
2 - ITA (2-0)
2 - ROU (0-2)
1 (W) - CAN,CHN,GBR
1 (L) - ARG,BRA,CRO,SLO,SUI,ITA

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - career WI SF]
1 - Coco Gauff
1 - Marta Kostyuk
1 - Karolina Muchova
1 - Linda Noskova

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - consecutive WI SF]
none

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - consecutive Slam SF]
2 - Marta Kostyuk

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - career WI W/L]
16-6...Coco Gauff
15-5...Marta Kostyuk
13-6...Karolina Muchova
9-3...Linda Noskova

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - career Slam W/L]
85-25...Coco Gauff
58-27...Karolina Muchova
44-25...Marta Kostyuk
20-15...Linda Noskova

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - 2026 Slam W/L]
14-2...Marta Kostyuk
11-2...Coco Gauff
10-2...Karolina Muchova
7-2...Linda Noskova

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - 2026 season W/L]
34-8...Karolina Muchova
31-11...Coco Gauff
28-5...Marta Kostyuk
27-11...Linda Noskovar

[2026 WI SEMIFINALISTS - 2026 grass court W/L]
10-1...Karolina Muchova
10-1...Linda Noskova
5-0...Marta Kostyuk
5-1...Coco Gauff






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I wish just one NATO leader (or all of them) would say, "This is unacceptable. The US president has lost his mind. America come get your boy. He's broken and needs to be under a doctor's care back home." I wish someone would tell the damn truth about what's happening.

— David Rothkopf (@djrothkopf.bsky.social) July 8, 2026 at 9:31 AM









TOP QUALIFIER: Robin Montgomery/USA
TOP EARLY-ROUND (1r-2r): #1 Aryna Sabalenka/BLR (two straight sets wins; extends slam TB win streak to 21)
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): #10 Karolina Muchova/CZE (def. consecutive multi-slam winners in Krejcikova/Osaka)
TOP LATE-ROUND (SF-F): x
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1 - Anastasia Gasanova/RUS def. Varvara Lepchenko/USA 2-6/6-1/7-6(12-10) - Lepchenko led 5-3 in the 3rd, twice served for the match, led 5-1 in MTB and at 9-6 held four MP over a 5-point stretch. Gasanova wins 12-10.
TOP EARLY-RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 1st Rd. - Maya Joint/AUS def. Serena Williams/USA 6-3/6-7(6)/6-3 - 20-year old Aussie, 1-13 in her last 14 matches, defeats returning 44-year old Williams in her first singles match since 2022
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): 3rd Rd. - #9 Linda Noskova/CZE def. #17 Sorana Cirstea/ROU 2-6/6-3/7-6(11-9) - Noskova 4-2 lead in 3rd, Cirstea MP at 5-4 and Noskova 2 MP before deciding MTB; Noskova wins 11-9)
TOP LATE-RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.-WC): x
=============================
FIRST VICTORY: #11 Belinda Bencic/SUI (def. Stojsavljevic/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #20 Maja Chwalinska/POL (1st Rd. - hurt ankle/foot on MP up 6-2/5-2 vs. Sawangkaew/THA)
FIRST SLAM MD WINS: Anastasia Gasanova/RUS (2nd MD), Tyra Grant/ITA (1st MD), Mananchaya Sawangkaew/THA (2nd MD), Lanlada Tararudee/THA (2nd MD)
UPSET QUEENS: Czech Republic
REVELATION LADIES: Southeast Asians
NATION OF POOR SOULS: GBR (1-7 1st Rd., after 0/7 through qualfiying; Kartal DNP, Raducanu w/d and started 0-7 in MD play)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Ashlyn Krueger/USA (4th Rd.)
LAST WILD CARD STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
PROTECTED RANKING WINS: Karolina Pliskova/CZE, Sara Sorribes Tormo/ESP (both 2nd Rd.)
LUCKY LOSERS: Darja Semenistaja/LAT(L)
LAST BRIT STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
Ms. OPPORTUNITY: Nominees: Noskova, Kostyuk
IT "Filipina": Alex Eala/PHI (first PHI to slam Round of 16)
COMEBACK PLAYER: Jasmine Paolini/ITA
CRASH & BURN: #2 Elena Rybakina/KAZ, #3 Iga Swiatek/POL and #6 Amanda Anisimova/USA ('22 champ and both '25 finalists lose in 3rd Round on middle Saturday)
ZOMBIE QUEEN OF LONDON: Linda Noskova/CZE (3r- saved MP vs. Cirstea)
DOUBLES STAR: x
VETERAN PLAYER (KIMIKO CUP): x
LAWN COURT ROLLER: x
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: x
SPIRIT OF JANA (NOVOTNA) HONOREES: Maja Chwalinska/POL (devastating loss in 1st Rd. after having MP at 6-2/5-2 before fall injures ankle); Karolina Muchova/CZE and Linda Noskova/CZE (latest Czechs to reach Wimbledon SF)








All for Day 10. More tomorrow.