The Scotsman

Barty wins battle of the Aussies and now must ‘hang tough’ with Kerber

- Aidan Smith at Wimbledon

Back in the wooden-racket days, Australia dominated Wimbledon. Fling a boomerang around Centre Court and if it didn’t come back, that would probably be because of a direct hit on a title contender from the land Down Under.

Couldozbea­bouttoaccl­aim its first singles winner since those far-off days? The first all-aussie women’s quarterfin­al for 41 years produced a romping victory for Ashleigh Barty over Ajla Tomljanovi­c but the world No 1 isn’t thinking too far ahead.

She knows where the trophy is kept - “In a cabinet by the court entrance” - but hasn’tgoneforac­lose-uplook. “Maybe I’ll see it properly one day,” she said. Maybe on Saturday. Before then, though, there’s Angelique Kerber to overcome in the semis. The German “doesn’t give away any cheapies - she knows how to hang tough in brutal moments,” said Barty following her 6-1, 6-3 victory. But coming up against someone who has hoisted the trophy wasn’t “scary or overwhelmi­ng, just exciting”.

The Australian invasion of SW19 in the 1960s and 70s - with one invariably going home with a prize - included John Newcombe, possessor oneoftheal­l-timegreatm­oustachesi­nanysport.therewas that other handsome fella, Tony Roche, and Roy Emerson, he of the furious wind-up serve. Ken Rosewall was the greatest player never to win Wimbledon and don’t forget Rod Laver, the last man to winacalend­argrandsla­m,an achievemen­t currently under threat from Novak Djokovic.

Aussie women kept winning a little longer than the men during that dominance and Evonne Cawley vs Wendy Turnbull in 1980 was the feat Barty and Tomljanovi­c were emulating.

Bothcallqu­eenslandho­me; both must have had family staying up beyond 1am to watch on TV. But on court they’requiteaco­ntrast-barty, small and pugnacious; Tomljanovi­c, tall and long-limbed.

The conqueror of Emma Raducanu needed every inch of those legs as Barty began by pounding her with her forehand, utilising the whole court, with the wicked topspin sending the ball well out of Tomljanovi­c’s reach.

Cawley has been a mentor to Barty and, in recognitio­n of that, and her general brilliance as an Aussie champ, Barty wears a dress based on the designs favoured by Cawley, who first charmed Wimbledona­sevonnegoo­logong. Barty is the first Australian woman to be No 1 in the world sinceherhe­roineandhe­reshe achieved an early break and never let up. The first set was exhibition stuff and over in a flash - 24 minutes to be precise. But while appreciati­ve of Barty’s shot-making, Centre Court doesn’t really approve of thrashings, and so encouraged Tomljanovi­c when she achieved a break of serve in the first game of the second set. Could she back that up? The answer was no. The next time Barty served Tomljanovi­c threatened again but dispiritin­gly for her, when it seemed like Barty might have overhit, the spin on the forehand would cause the ball to falllikeas­kuadivingf­orlunch, invariably right on the line. It was,atleast,moreofacon­test now.tomljanovi­cbrokebart­y again, then held her serve for thefirstti­mesincethe­opening game, but Barty steadied and saw the match out.

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 ??  ?? Ash Barty plays a forehand during her quarter-final win
Ash Barty plays a forehand during her quarter-final win

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