Los Angeles Times

Wimbledon’s soggy first round finally ends with Zverev victory

The German beats Dutch qualifier on Day 4 of the event as wet weather subsides.

- associated press

WIMBLEDON, England — Let the record reflect that the rain-logged first round of Wimbledon 2023 finally concluded at 3:23 p.m. local time on Thursday, Day 4 of the tournament, 48 hours later than originally planned, when Alexander Zverev finished off his 6-4, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (5) victory over Dutch qualifier Gijs Brouwer.

Zverev was supposed to start and, naturally, finish, on Tuesday. Instead, he didn’t take the court to play his first point of the fortnight until about 171⁄2 hours after Novak Djokovic already had made his way into the third round.

“Took me three days,” Zverev joked, “but I’m here.”

For once this week, the sun was out at the All England Club, and the showers were nowhere to be found.

Instead, there was plenty of play, plenty of results — 56 in all — and plenty of drama, perhaps none more than in one much-hyped showdown that did not conclude: Twotime Wimbledon champion Andy Murray vs. two-time major finalist Stefanos Tsitsipas was suspended at 10:40 p.m. and will resume Friday.

Played with the roof closed at a loud Centre Court filled with “Let’s go, Andy! Let’s go!” chants from fans, that one was stopped just after Murray took a twosets-to-one lead. Tsitsipas took the opening set 7-6 (3), but Murray took the next two 7-6 (2), 6-4. Murray, 36 and with an artificial hip, slipped and fell behind the baseline but arose and finished that third set just before play was halted.

There were tears for Alizé Cornet, who slipped to the turf and hurt her leg at 5-all in the second set of what would become a 6-2, 7-6 (2) loss to defending champion Elena Rybakina.

There were tears for Donna Vekic too, and she won. She came back from a set and 5-2 down in the second to oust 2017 U.S. Open champion Sloane Stephens.

“I was losing,” Vekic said later. “Not that I was just losing — I felt like I was getting killed.”

There was realism for Stan Wawrinka, a three-time Grand Slam champion who is now 38, coming off years of injuries and operations, and, while he was pleased to defeat Tomás Martín Etcheverry 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2, knows what comes next: a matchup against Djokovic, who has won seven of his men’srecord 23 major championsh­ips at this event.

“There’s zero opportunit­y to win Wimbledon for me, I think,” Wawrinka acknowledg­ed.

There was new ground for a group of men who reached Wimbledon’s third round for the first time: No. 14 seed Lorenzo Musetti, qualifier Maximillia­n Marterer, Mikael Ymer, Quentin Halys and Roman Safiullin.

Two American men stuck around for the next round by winning: No. 10 Frances Tiafoe, a semifinali­st at the U.S. Open in September, and No. 16 Tommy Paul, a semifinali­st at the Australian Open in January.

They were joined in the third round by two U.S. women, No. 4 Jessica Pegula and 2020 Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin.

 ?? Alastair Grant Associated Press ?? GERMANY’S ALEXANDER ZVEREV plays a return to Gijs Brouwer of the Netherland­s during a match won by Zverev. Two American men, No. 10 Frances Tiafoe and No. 16 Tommy Paul, were also winners.
Alastair Grant Associated Press GERMANY’S ALEXANDER ZVEREV plays a return to Gijs Brouwer of the Netherland­s during a match won by Zverev. Two American men, No. 10 Frances Tiafoe and No. 16 Tommy Paul, were also winners.

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