Houston Chronicle

Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova loses in second round.

Brengle surprises herself in beating ex-champ on mend from knife attack

- By Howard Fendrich

LONDON — Madison Brengle knew, of course, that her opponent, Petra Kvitova, was a two-time Wimbledon champion and a popular pick to win the title again this year.

Brengle also was aware, of course, that she herself never had won so much as one main-draw match at the All England Club until this week.

This, instead, is all the 27-year-old from Dover, Del., was focused on as she began playing Kvitova on Wednesday evening on Court No. 2: Please just let me win a game. The 95thranked Brengle did just that — and much, much more, stunning the 11thseeded Kvitova 6-3, 1-6, 6-2 to reach the third round at Wimbledon.

The reason for Brengle’s preoccupat­ion with taking merely a single game? In her Wimbledon debut in 2015, she lost to Venus Williams 6-0, 6-0.

“That’s always in my head when I’m out here,” Brengle said, pointing a finger at her right temple. “It’s like, ‘Oh, my goodness, don’t do that ever again!’ That was really tough for me.”

Turned out, she didn’t need to stress about a shutout for too long. Brengle broke the strong-serving Kvitova to take the very first game.

“As long as I got on the board to start, then I could relax,” Brengle said with a smile, “because, trust me, an ‘O-and-O’ stays with you.”

Now she’ll have this victory to cherish, along with another one from this year that also holds some significan­ce: Brengle beat Serena Williams at a tuneup tournament at Auckland, New Zealand, back on Jan. 4. Williams went on to win the Australian Open later that month and hasn’t played since — she is pregnant and taking at least the rest of this year off — so Brengle is, for the moment, the last woman to defeat the 23-time Grand Slam champion.

“That’s my thing,” Brengle said, holding up a fist and laughing. “I’m going to hold on to that one forever.”

Kvitova, who won Wimbledon in 2011 and 2014, had been favored by some British bookmakers to lift the trophy at fortnight’s end, despite competing in only her third tournament of her comeback. She was attacked by a knife-wielding intruder at her home in the Czech Republic in December and needed surgery on her left hand, the one she uses to hold a racket.

Still without full strength in that hand — clenching it for a celebrator­y fist pump remains difficult — Kvitova returned at the French Open in May, losing in the second round there. But then she won a grass-court title at Birmingham in June.

“I feel just really empty right now,” she said. “I know my body; it’s not great. But mentally I’m really glad that it’s over. I mean, it was kind of a fairy tale, but on the other hand, it was very tough. I just need to look forward.”

Kvitova said she felt ill Wednesday, and she was visited by a trainer in the third set.

The temperatur­e soared toward 85 degrees after being in the low 70s the prior two days.

“When the match (got) longer and longer, I felt a little bit sick and tired. So I couldn’t really move. I was so slow,” she said. “I felt like, I don’t know, like an animal. But a very slow animal.”

 ?? Glyn Kirk / AFP/Getty Images ?? By the end of Wednesday’s match, Madison Brengle, left, was beaming and Petra Kvitova was hurting from the effects of an illness and temperatur­es in the 80s.
Glyn Kirk / AFP/Getty Images By the end of Wednesday’s match, Madison Brengle, left, was beaming and Petra Kvitova was hurting from the effects of an illness and temperatur­es in the 80s.
 ?? Kirsty Wiggleswor­th / Associated Press ??
Kirsty Wiggleswor­th / Associated Press

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