KAROLINA MUCHOVA WON THIS POINT
— The Tennis Letter (@thetennisletter.bsky.social) July 9, 2026 at 10:03 AM
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We knew that it was going to be good. We knew that it would include every shot known (we get that from Muchova alone). But maybe we didn't know just how crazy dramatic the Wimbledon semifinal--and, to be specific, the third set tiebreak--played by Coco Gauff and Karolina Muchova, would be. Muchova, already known for her artistry on the court (but also known for her hard hitting and excellent serve), put on one of her best shows, which included hitting a winner from a complete dive. But she also experienced transient abdominal pain on her right side, and--toward the end--she slipped and fell while reaching for a volley.
As for Gauff, she repeatedly flummoxed her opponent, just when Muchova gained momentum. In other words, she was Coco Gauff. The scoreline pretty much defines the match: 6-2, 1-6, 7-6 (10). Muchova dominated, then Gauff dominated, and then they went after each other as though, well--as though a spot in the Wimbledon championship match depended on it.
Muchova, who saved a match point, won the two hour and thirty-five minute match, and--while I don't like to say it--the Czech star's abdominal pain doesn't register the way it might if another player experienced it. Muchova's career stats, in my opinion (and I'm not alone), should have some majors listed. But years of chronic injury (the Czech Curse) have kept her from achieving so many things. Let's hope that, this time, this is just a routine stitch that will heal with rest and treatment.
Prior to today, Muchova was 1-6 against Gauff. This is her second major final. In 2023, she reached the final of Roland-Garros, in which she was defeated by Iga Swiatek.
The second semifinal featured another Czech player, Linda Noskova, and Ukrainian star Marta Kostyuk. And, while Kostyuk's performance throughout the tournament has been outstanding, there were too many times today when "the old Kustyuk" made an appearance on the court. She was up against an opponent who was both powerful and deadly accurate, and she struggled to figure out how to handle her. That struggle appeared to take away some of Kostyuk's confidence, and--though she had some brilliant moments--she was unable to solve the problem that was Noskova, who kept her under constant pressure.
Muchova and Noskova have played each other only once, at last year's U.S. Open, and Muchova won that match.
Paths to the final:
KAROLINA MUCHVOVA (10)
round 1--d. Anastasia Zakharova
round 2--d. Zhang Shuai
round 3--d. Mananchaya Sawangkaew (Q)
round of 16--d. Barbora Krejcikova
quarterfinals--d. Naomi Osaka (14)
semifinals--d. Coco Gauff (7)
LINDA NOSKOVA (9)
round 1--d. Ella Seidel
round 2--d. Camila Osorio
round 3--d. Sorana Cirstea (17)
round of 16--d. Madison Keys (26)
quarterfinals--d. Elise Mertens (25)
semifinals--d. Marta Kostyuk (12)
Gauff and Muchova weren't the only ones locked in to a tight third set tiebreak. Six-time Wimbledon champion Diede de Groot was pushed hard by her doubles partner, Aniek Van Koot, in the quarterfinals of the women's wheelchair singles competition. de Groot, seeded 2nd, defeated Van Koot 6-4, 7-6 (12). She will face 3rd seed Li Xiaohui.
In doubles, Guo Hanyu and Kiki Mladenovic, seeded 10th, will play Jiang Xinyu in the semifinals. In the other semifinal match, 13th seeds Shuko Aoyama and Liang En-Shuo will compete against 2nd seeds Gaby Dabrowski and Luisa Stafani. Guo and Mladenovic upset top seeds Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend in the quarterfinals. (Back in the day, I used to say that Anybody and Mladenovic was a winning team. It's interesting that here she is, taking out Siniakova in a major.
Arevalo/Ostapenko take the Mixed Doubles Title after a 4-6, 7-5, 6-2 win over Polmans/Hunter First Wimbledon title for both.
— Tennis Updates (@tennisupdates.bsky.social) July 9, 2026 at 2:50 PM
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Finally, we have winners! Alona Ostapenko and Marcelo Arevalo, seeded 2nd, won the mixed doubles title today when they defeated Storm Hunter and Marc Polmans 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 in the final. This is Ostapenko's first mixed doubles title. She and Lyudmyla Kichenok won the U.S. Open women's doubles title in 2024.