Dazed
champion Muguruza ambushed in Wimbledon second round
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[July 06, 2018]
By Pritha Sarkar
LONDON (Reuters) - When Garbine
Muguruza clutched her temple with both hands and shook her head
repeatedly, she laid bare the throbbing pain racing through her body
as her Wimbledon title defense was hijacked by a little-known
Belgian on Thursday.
Alison van Uytvanck produced a fearless brand of hard-hitting tennis
to topple the champion with a 5-7 6-2 6-1 hammering in the second
round.
While van Uytvanck confessed that "inside I was dying", she never
allowed those nerves to betray her as she completed the biggest
upset at this year's championships.
With the evening shadows creeping across Court Two, a beaming van
Uytvanck let out a roar and raised her arms to celebrate the most
notable win of her career.
In stark contrast, Muguruza could scarcely believe she had become
the fifth of the top six women's seeds to perish within the first
four days of the grasscourt major.
The Spanish third seed often appeared dazed and confused as she
headed toward defeat but once her torturous on-court ordeal was
over, she had a clear idea of how it all went so wrong.
"She played big today. She took a lot of risks, and it worked for
her," said Muguruza, who suffered the earliest exit of a defending
women's champion at the All England Club since German great Steffi
Graf was beaten in the first round in 1994.
"I also think that my level today was not where I wanted it to be.
That's also why she could develop that kind of level. It's a little
bit sad... but she played great."
There was no doubt about that.
UNFOLDING DRAMA
A blazing crosscourt winner on break point gave van Uytvanck a 4-2
lead but Muguruza hit back to take the next three games and somehow
survived the nervy first set when her whipped forehand licked the
baseline on set point.
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Belgium's Alison Van Uytvanck shakes hands with Spain's Garbine
Muguruza after winning her second round match. REUTERS/Toby Melville
However, there was no let off in the next two sets and the third
seed could barely believe the drama unfolding before her eyes as van
Uytvanck bombarded the Spaniard with serves that often exceeded
110mph, with the fastest clocked at 115mph.
But it was not just the serve that caused mayhem for Muguruza. She
slipped and fell heavily on her shoulder while chasing down a drop
shot as the final set ran away from her in the blink of an eye, a
netted service return ending her ordeal.
The 47th-ranked Belgian won 10 of the last 11 games as Muguruza
seemed at a loss to come up with anything that could throw van
Uytvanck off her stride.
It was not as if Muguruza played badly, as she only produced 23
unforced errors during the one hour 52 minute contest.
She simply came up against a player who kept believing - whether it
was with her serve, groundstrokes or net play.
While Van Uytvanck's reward was a place in the Wimbledon third round
for the first time, Muguruza was off to join the snaking checkout
queue - a line that already includes beaten Grand Slam champions
Caroline Wozniacki and Petra Kvitova.
(Reporting by Pritha Sarkar; Editing by Rex Gowar and Ken Ferris)
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