No. 2 Novak Djokovic-Hubert Hurkacz match suspended until Monday
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[July 10, 2023]
World No. 2 Novak Djokovic is one set from reaching the
Wimbledon quarterfinals, but will have to wait until Monday to
resume his match against No. 17 Hubert Hurkacz after play was
suspended Sunday due to a curfew.
Djokovic, who is attempting to match Roger Federer's mark of eight
Wimbledon men's singles titles, will have a 7-6 (6), 7-6 (6) lead
when play resumes.
Djokovic, 36, has yet to lose a set at this year's event but had to
rally from a 6-3 deficit in the first-round tie-breaker. The Serbian
star won five straight points as the 26-year-old from Poland let
three straight set points slip away.
Hurkacz, who beat Federer in the Swiss legend's last Wimbledon
appearance in 2021, produced 22 aces in the opening two sets as his
serve reached 139 mph, but he also dropped the second-round
tie-breaker.
The winner will face Andrey Rublev of Russia, who reached his first
Wimbledon quarterfinal with a five-set victory over No. 23 Alexander
Bublik of Kazakhstan.
Rublev, the No. 7 seed, posted a 7-5, 6-3, 6-7 (6), 6-7 (5), 6-4
win, securing the penultimate point of the match with a dive to his
right that earned him a standing ovation.
"It was the most lucky shot ever," said Rublev. "It was luck,
nothing else. I don't think I can do it one more time."
Three-time Wimbledon champion John McEnroe, handling commentary on
BBC TV, said it was "one of the great shots" of recent years at
Wimbledon and "an electric way" to end the match.
In other men's action Sunday, world No. 92 Roman Safiullin of Russia
came back from a set down to upset No. 26 Denis Shapovalov of
Canada, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, 6-3.
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Battling a knee injury, Shapovalov was limping as
he walked off the court following the loss.
"I felt sore the whole time. ... It was getting worse and worse," he
said. "I think as soon as other parts get tired, just have more and
more impact on the knee. As the match went on, it just became
unbearable."
Safiullin had never advanced past the second round of a Grand Slam
event, but now he will face No. 8 Jannik Sinner of Italy, who
defeated Colombia's Daniel Elahi Galan, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 6-3.
"Today was a tough day," Sinner said. "I was not feeling great on
the court but I managed to win the most important points. Usually
I'm calm but sometimes it happens. There were some tough calls on my
side."
Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov, the No. 21 seed, had to wait until
Sunday to finish off American Frances Tiafoe, the 10th seed, in
straight sets, 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. Dimitrov was up two sets Saturday when
rain forced the match to be suspended. Dimitrov will face No. 6 seed
Holger Rune of Denmark on Monday.
"This was a really bad match. Horrible, horrible stuff," Tiafoe
said. "To play this poorly is very depressing, especially at
Wimbledon. I genuinely think I am one of the best grass-court
players in the world but I didn't show it at all. I have to live
with that."
--Field Level Media
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