Petra Kvitova Lesia Tsurenko Bianca Andreescu Jessica Pegula Ana Bogdan Ukraine Italy Usa Tunisia as Petra Kvitova Lesia Tsurenko Bianca Andreescu Jessica Pegula Ana Bogdan Ukraine Italy Usa Tunisia

Wimbledon 2023: Ons Jabeur and Jessica Pegula cruise through as Lesia Tsurenko makes history with epic tie-break

eurosport.com

Ons Jabeur stormed into the third round of Wimbledon with a 6-1 6-1 thrashing of Zhouxuan Bai that took just 45 minutes. The Tunisian is looking to go one step better than her runner-up finish at the All England Club last year, and faces Bianca Andreescu next.

Ad Jabeur, seeded sixth at SW19, was untroubled in her victory on Court No.1, earning five breaks and staying solid on serve with six aces and 87% of first serve points won.

WimbledonBig Three or bust? Assessing the leading women's title contenders at Wimbledon29/06/2023 AT 09:01 “It was a good game.

She [Bai] played the qualifier here, I believe she had a great tournament and I wish her all the best. I try to play like a top-10 player," Jabeur said.

Related News
Wimbledon saw Carlos Alcaraz dethrone Novak Djokovic, Marketa Vondrousova take a surprise women's title while there was also rain, records and royals. Here's a look at Top 10 highlights from this year's Grand Slam tournament which wrapped up on Sunday:
Tunisian star Ons Jabeur's wait for a maiden Grand Slam title continued as she lost to Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic 4-6, 4-6 in the Wimbledon final on Saturday.
A distraught Ons Jabeur described her second straight Wimbledon final defeat as “the most painful loss of my career” but vowed to return and lift the trophy in the future. The sixth seed was aiming to become the first African or Arab woman to win a Grand Slam singles title and avenge her defeat to Elena Rybakina in last year’s final. Ad But she was far from her best as Marketa Vondrousova claimed a 6-4 6-4 victory to claim her maiden major.
Ons Jabeur hopes it will be third time lucky when she attempts to become the first African or Arab woman to win a Grand Slam singles title at Wimbledon on Saturday. The 28-year-old Tunisian takes on Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic, hoping to go one better than last year when she was defeated by Elena Rybakina in the final at the All England Club and lost to world number one Iga Swiatek at the US Open later in the year.
Ons Jabeur says her only goal is to become the first African or Arab Grand Slam singles champion as she prepares for another crack at history on Saturday.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.