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BackKrejcikova Edges Andreeva in Thrilling Wimbledon Encounter
Krejcikova Edges Andreeva in Thrilling Wimbledon Encounter
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Guardian Sport7/1/2026Sports4 min read

Krejcikova Edges Andreeva in Thrilling Wimbledon Encounter

Quick Look

  • Barbora Krejcikova defeated Mirra Andreeva 4-6, 7-5, 6-4 in a hard-fought three-set match at Wimbledon.
  • Despite Andreeva's strong performance, Krejcikova secured the win after two-and-three-quarter hours, enhancing her reputation.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Mirra Andreeva, at 19, had hopes of joining an elite group of women who won Grand Slam singles titles at both Roland Garros and Wimbledon before their 20th birthdays. Barbora Krejcikova, already a winner of both, faced Andreeva at Wimbledon.

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Just four women in the post-1968 Open era have won singles titles on the slow red clay of Roland Garros and Wimbledon’s lightning-fast grass before their 20th birthdays. And as Mirra Andreeva, the 19-year-old winner of last month’s French Open, walked on to Centre Court here on Wednesday to face Barbora Krejcikova – herself already a winner of both European grand slams – she had fair hopes of joining Maureen Connolly, Evonne Goolagong, Chris Evert and Steffi Graf as the fifth name on the list.

Andreeva left with those hopes extinguished after a hard-fought three-set success for Krejcikova – the 2024 champion here – 4-6, 7-5, 6-4, but with her reputation as a scrapper and shot-maker much enhanced, having shown many of the attributes she will need to succeed at Wimbledon in the years to come.

The midsummer switch from clay to grass is tricky enough at the best of times, although a run to the quarter-finals last year was early evidence that the surface itself should hold few fears for Andreeva. Against a player with a champion’s attitude to match her own, however, it proved more difficult still, although this was a contest that remained in the balance until the final net-cord winner that got Krejcikova over the line after two-and-three-quarter hours.

Quite literally in the balance, in fact, in an astonishing ninth game in the deciding set, as Krejcikova served for the win at 5-3. Already, she had hauled herself back from a set down, having been largely outplayed by her younger opponent for the first set-and-a-half, before finding her rhythm and range on forehand to carve out the break required to level the match.

Now, with victory close enough to touch, she raced to 40-0, saw her first match point after offering up an easy overhead to Andreeva, and then watched in despair as a forehand hit the cord, hit it again on the way back – and dropped on her side of the court. The double-fault that followed felt almost inevitable.

Three more match points came and went as Andreeva threw caution to the wind and found the lines with a series of forehands, including one that, on the evidence of the Close Call replay, was a millimetre away from being her last shot of the match. And her resilience was rewarded as Krejcikova sent a weak second wide on the seventh advantage of the game.

It felt like a potential turning point, with the final set now back on serve and surely heading for a 10-point tie-break, only for Krejcikova to summon a final effort and get the decisive break in the next game. Andreeva hurled her racket from the baseline to her chair as her desperate attempt to get the Czech’s net-cord back into play sailed long.

“The atmosphere was great and we’ve been fighting for almost three hours,” Krejcikova said afterwards. “What a match. I think this is the fifth time I’ve played with Mirra, and it’s always been a huge fight. She is such a young and unique player, she has everything in front of her.

“I’m really happy that we were able to put on a great show and that we were fighting until the final point, and I’m extremely proud that I’ve managed to win on this beautiful Centre Court.”

Krejcikova has dropped from a high of No 2 in the world in 2022 to a current ranking of 38, but will hope to build on Wednesday’s win to return closer to her previous lofty status.

“It’s definitely very special,” she said. “I’ve been through a lot with injuries and also in my personal life in the last couple of months, and it was really hard to get through with all the emotions and everything that happened. But I put in a lot of work and dedication every single day and try to go day by day.”

Andreeva was in tears in the post-match media conference, still struggling to accept that she had let the match slip. “It’s going to take some time,” she said, having needed 30 seconds to compose herself after being asked how difficult it is to process the emotions after such a narrow defeat.

“I think she played well today,” she went on. “She’s a tricky opponent, especially to play against her on grass. She changes the rhythm a lot. The slices and drop shots, here they stay low, they don’t bounce. I’ve had some trouble with that, as well, [and] a lot of mistakes today also. She played well, but I felt like I could have also played better.

“I felt as soon as I won that [ninth] game, I had a lot of great chances to make the score even with my serve. I felt like yes, it could have been a turning point. As you can see, it didn’t work and it wasn’t the turning point in the end.”

Open Questions

  • Will Andreeva achieve her Grand Slam goals in the future?
  • Can Krejcikova regain her previous world ranking?

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This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

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