Wales On Sunday

I WON’T BE FAZED BY THE BIG NAMES, INSISTS JODIE

-

JODIE Burrage has promised to go into Wimbledon with no fear and keep ignoring the name of her opponent as she looks to continue an impressive summer at the All England Club.

The 23-year-old made her main-draw debut at SW19 last year but won only three games against Lauren Davis on her way to a speedy day-one exit where coronaviru­s restrictio­ns made it a far-from-normal grand slam experience.

Burrage, who owns a flat in Wimbledon and was born in Kingston, is excited to experience her home tournament with no limits this time and enters it with more experience on grass than most this summer after playing 14 matches since June 1.

Victory over world number four Paula Badosa in Eastbourne this week earned the Briton a careerbest result on the eve of the Championsh­ips and, while it may seem premature to talk about a potential third-round meeting with Anett Kontaveit, another top-five player, were it to happen the local girl would not be fazed.

“What I have learned most about tennis is it comes down to day by day and who plays better on the day.

“You have to believe anyone can beat anyone and that is what the last few weeks have shown,” Burrage told the PA news agency.

“I took Paula’s name out of it and just played the ball that was coming to me because otherwise you are going to get all sorts of different emotions, especially trying to close out a match like that.

“The belief I had I just took it in with me for every single point, regardless of what happened the point before, and it really got me through.

“If I didn’t believe in myself, I know there would be no chance.”

Everything has clicked for Burrage during the past month and she will break into the world’s top 150 for the first time on Monday but, had things been different, she would not be preparing for just her second-ever appearance in the Wimbledon main draw.

A wild card opportunit­y appeared likely in 2019 but the Londoner sustained a serious ankle injury a matter of weeks before the grand slam in her backyard.

Burrage explained: “At Surbiton I did my ligaments. I got my ranking to 230 and you can’t really assume anything but I put myself in a good position that year, was playing some great tennis and Surbiton on match point I did my ankle.

“That put me out for another three or four months, so that one was really frustratin­g and I actually didn’t think I would get back from that injury.

“It was the third operation I had, that op was on my left ankle but I had two before on my right ankle.

“I was a bit all done with it and wasn’t in a good place but family and friends really helped me turn my thinking around.”

After Burrage completed her recovery, Covid-19 hit to throw another spanner in the works and in a strange twist of fate everything has come full circle with Surbiton the catalyst for an excellent summer.

It was a superb run to the Surbiton Trophy semi-finals which sparked a momentum shift that has seen the Briton reach the last16 of Nottingham and Eastbourne events with a runner-up showing in Ilkley in between.

■ Meanwhile Petra Kvitova clinched the Eastbourne singles title for the first time with a dominant straight-sets victory over defending champion Jelena Ostapenko at the Rothesay Internatio­nal.

Two-time Wimbledon winner Kvitova - a beaten finalist here in 2011 - controlled a one-sided encounter from the outset en route to triumphing 6-3 6-2 in just an hour and 16 minutes.

 ?? ?? Jodie Burrage reacts against Petra Martic of Croatia in their Women’s Singles First Round at Eastbourne
Jodie Burrage reacts against Petra Martic of Croatia in their Women’s Singles First Round at Eastbourne

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom