Dane Sweeny Qualifies for Wimbledon Main Draw After Four-Hour Battle
Quick Look
- Australian Dane Sweeny battled for four hours in searing heat to defeat Chile's Tomas Barrios Vera, securing his first Wimbledon main draw spot.
- His victory continues Australia's 14-year tradition of having at least one player qualify for the tournament.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Dane Sweeny's victory in the Wimbledon qualifying rounds continues a 14-year Australian tradition of having at least one player advance to the main draw. This marks Sweeny's first overseas Grand Slam qualification after two Australian Open appearances.
Never-say-die Dane Sweeny has kept a fond Australian tradition going by battling through qualifying to reach the Wimbledon main draw after a brutal four-hour slog in searing heat.
The diminutive Penrith-born player with the big heart roared back after getting whitewashed in the fourth set against Chile's Tomas Barrios Vera, before going on to win 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7-5), 0-6, 6-2.
Sweeny's victory ensured that Australia's proud recent tradition of always having at least one player make it through all three rounds of qualifying at Roehampton to nail down a coveted Wimbledon place has continued for a 14th-straight edition.
"To do it in Wimbledon, the most special tournament in the world, maybe besides the Australian Open, it's amazing. Yeah, incredibly special moment," Sweeny said.
Things had looked grim earlier when Tristan Schoolkate and Chris O'Connell had both been beaten in straight sets in their qualifying deciders, leaving 25-year-old Sweeny the last one standing of the 11 Australian men and women who had entered qualifying.
But Sweeny, who had been a set and 5-2 down in his second-round, three-set match against rising US star Darwin Blanch on Wednesday, was again proud of himself for showing real spirit in stifling conditions, with temperatures hitting the mid-thirties.
He proved far the stronger of the pair in that final set, as the Chilean's game began to unravel in the furnace with 15 unforced errors.
It meant Sweeny has qualified for his first overseas grand slam after two Australian Open appearances, this year and in 2024.
He also continued a breakthrough 2026 in which he beat Gael Monfils in Melbourne for his first grand slam win and which has since seen him reach a career-high ranking of 126 after reaching the recent grass-court Ilkley Trophy semi-finals in England.
"Historically, I've actually struggled a bit overseas and it was something I really wanted to get over because obviously being Australian you have to play 80 per cent of the year, maybe 90 per cent, overseas," he said.
"I think I showed I had the level a few weeks ago in Ilkley and I've been playing really good.
"To be able to now have an opportunity to compete against the world's best on the biggest stage, I'm really excited — and I think I deserve it after three really tough matches in qualifying."
O'Connell's great run, which had featured seven wins on the trot including victory for the Nottingham Open crown at the weekend, came to an end at exactly the wrong moment as experienced Californian Mackenzie McDonald proved too strong in a 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 win.
Schoolkate, who had ended the singles career of British favourite Dan Evans the day earlier, went down 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to Colombian Nicolas Mejia.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Dane Sweeny will compete in the Wimbledon main draw.
Very likely · Within days
Open Questions
- Who will Dane Sweeny play in the first round of Wimbledon?
- How far will Sweeny advance in the main draw?
- What is the full list of Australian players in the Wimbledon main draw?

