

Belarus’s Aryna Sabalenka celebrates after winning against Britain’s Emma Raducanu during their women’s singles third round tennis match on the fifth day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships at The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, southwest London, on July 4, 2025. (AFP)
LONDON – Aryna Sabalenka overcame a fierce challenge from Emma Raducanu and a partisan Centre Court crowd to stay on track for her first Wimbledon title on Friday.
“I had to fight for every point like crazy,” said Sabalenka, who has never been beyond the semi-finals at the All England Club.
“I’m super happy with the win of course. I’m super happy to see her healthy and back on track. I’m pretty sure that she will be back in the top 10 soon.”
Crowd noise
The Belarusian, 27, said she had had to battle against the crowd.
“What an atmosphere,” she said. “My ears are still hurting, honestly. It was super loud. Every time you were cheering her, I was trying to tell myself to just pretend that you were just cheering for me. I had goosebumps.”
Raducanu, who is ranked 40th in the world, wasted little time signalling her refusal to be intimidated by her big-hitting opponent.
Sabalenka went for the kill, but when she amassed seven set points on Raducanu’s serve in a marathon 10th game, the Briton nervelessly saved them all.
Raducanu seized on Sabalenka’s visible frustration as she broke in the next game, only for the top seed to immediately break back.
A rollercoaster tie-break finally swung Sabalenka’s way when she saved a set point, then caressed a deft volley to move ahead in the match.
The British player, 22, clawed back the initiative, breaking in the fourth game of the second set and then held to wild cheers from a captivated crowd.
Sabalenka, her grunts amplified under the roof, saved a break point in the sixth game to stay alive in the second set.
But Raducanu failed to take her chances in the following game and went long with a forehand to hand back her break of serve.
Now Sabalenka stepped up a gear, lacing a backhand down the line before thundering down an ace, pulling level at 4-4.
A couple of careless errors in the following game gave Raducanu a mountain to climb and she was broken again.
Sabalenka served a double fault to give her opponent hope but the British player then netted to spark celebrations from the top seed, who is now a red-hot favourite to win the tournament.