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Three British players win but 14 out in first round
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Katie Swan, Jacob Fearnley and Arthur Fery ensured there will be British representation in the Wimbledon singles second round – but 14 home players fell to opening-round defeats for the first time in 32 years.
The 10 defeats for British players on the opening day of their home Grand Slam was the most at SW19 since daily records began in 2000.
Further defeats for Katie Boulter, Jack Pinnington Jones, Billy Harris and debutant Harry Wendelken on Tuesday meant the total number of first-round losses for home players reached 14 for the first time since 1994.
But Swan, who considered retiring from tennis in 2024 because of a persistent back injury, avoided the same fate in her first Grand Slam appearance for three years as she became the first British player to progress this year with a 6-4 6-4 victory over Romania’s Irina-Camelia Begu.
The 27-year-old threw herself to the ground as she celebrated the win – her first in the main draw of a major since she beat the same opponent at Wimbledon in 2018.
Fery battled back from a set down to secure an impressive victory over Bosnia’s Damir Dzumhur, losing just five of the final 23 games in a 3-6 6-2 6-2 6-1 win.
Fearnley appeared set to become the latest British player to exit when he trailed American Alex Michelsen by two sets, but the world number 159 produced a superb comeback to prevail 3-6 4-6 6-2 6-3 6-2 after three and a half hours.
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In an abysmal opening day for home hopes, Cameron Norrie, the highest-ranked Briton, was among 10 British players who quickly toppled out of the tournament.
There was further disappointment when Jack Draper announced his withdrawal 24 hours before his opening match because of injury.
That followed Emma Raducanu‘s withdrawal on the eve of the Championships with a stress fracture in her right leg.
But Swan offered a glimmer of hope for British interest with a clinical serving performance on Court 16 before further successes for Fery and Fearnley.
Swan, who won 88% of her first-serve points, did not face a break point until she was serving for the match – but she held her nerve to seal a hard-fought win on her fifth match point.
Her reward is a second-round meeting with either 2025 Australian Open champion Madison Keys or American qualifier Kayla Day.
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More British players fall at first hurdle
Boulter was among the British hopes to fall at the first hurdle on day two as she lost 6-2 6-4 to Italian teenager Tyra Caterina Grant.
It is the first time since 2017 that Boulter has lost in the opening round at Wimbledon in what is her first loss to a qualifier at a Grand Slam tournament.
It comes just 18 days after she achieved the biggest win of her career by ranking, when she defeated world number two Elena Rybakina in a stunning performance at Queen’s.
Seeking to push back against unwanted British history on court three, Boulter got off to the worst possible start as the 18-year-old Grant, who had never contested a singles match on grass at any level prior to Wimbledon qualifying this year, went an early break up.
Boulter could not respond as the opening set slipped away and she was unable to recover from another setback early in the second.
The Briton did not force a single break point in the match, with Grant, making her Grand Slam main-draw debut, dropping just three points across her final four service games as she comfortably served out victory.
Last year, 13 British players went out in round one. Not since 1988 have as many as 16 fallen at the first hurdle.
Pinnington Jones played just five games after returning to complete his match against American 28th seed Brandon Nakashima, losing 6-3 7-6 (7-5) 7-5 after trailing 4-3 in the third set when play was suspended late on Monday.
Harris took a set off Russian 19th seed Karen Khachanov but ultimately fell to a 6-3 5-7 6-3 6-3 loss.
Wendelken, ranked 202nd in the world, took the first set against French world number 75 Valentin Royer but eventually lost 4-6 6-3 6-3 6-3.
Nine British players are in action in total on Tuesday, with Eastbourne semi-finalist Toby Samuel facing 15th seed Jakub Mensik, and British number two Jan Choinski taking on Vit Kopriva.
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Published21 hours ago
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Published8 June

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