By Richard Pagliaro | @Tennisnow | Friday, July 4, 2025
Photo Credit: Kirill Kudryatsev/AFP/Getty
Wimbledon—Lat in the second set, Madison Keys The nose came to the nose with her nemesis in the net.
Trying to close the gap Laura Sigemund, Keys saw the cunning German loop a lobster straight up in a Green grass space.
This exchange printed Siegemund’s 6-3, 6-3 bored of keys in court no. 2 today.
When the oldest woman still stood in the equalizer was not pulling the keys to unclear areas, she played over her head at the highlights.
The 37-year-old Siegemund won 12 of 15 net points and broke five times to advance in Wimbledon’s fourth round.
“Of course you can’t be happy when you beat a great player like Madison,” Siegemund said. “It was not easy today – the conditions were windy and swirly sometimes not the best quality, but in the end I kept my nerves.
“There are always nerves. I think if you don’t have nerves at the moment you probably died.
“So you take a deep breath and just remember what your strategy is. Technically there is no pressure for me. I try to remember that I just play for myself. I don’t feel like trying anything anymore.”
This annoyed proved that the seeds remain on unstable soil.
Kysesels with the sixth seed are the sixth and top 10 seeds that fall before the fourth round. It joins no. 2 seed Coco Gauff, Third Jessica Pegula, the fourth finalist of 2024 Jasmine Paolini, fifth of Zheng Qinwen and no. 9-Mean Paula Badosa declining from equation.
This leaves only the world No.1 Aryna Sabalenka, Mirra Andreeva with the Seventh Seed, IgA Swiatek with eighth and 10th with single single seeds as the only 10 seeds still standing.
On the letter, Keys was in a quarter -finals course with sabalenka, but Siegemund knocked down the script and sliced the powerful American with short, soft balls and balls.
However, today’s loss-for once twice Wimbledon doubles the quarter-finalist who had never been beyond the third round in six appearances of a single will likely hold keys for some time.
A brave frugal key scoring point in 5-6 shocking IgA Swiatek 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (8) in a pulsating and wild victory that drives it to its first Australian Open final. Then the keys destroyed the defensive champion twice the Arna Sabalenka 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 in an inspirational show of the Ao Showdown Power Power that escalated into stunning slugfest in Rod Laver Arena.
In SW19, Keys admitted that she “avoided a bullet” in her 6-7, 7-5, 7-5 victory over the Russian Elena-Gabriela in the first round, but never really found freedom in her game against Siegemund.
US Open will remember Siegemund almost as soon as Coco Gauff knocked down in 2023 US Open before Gauff won a 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 deceitful victory.
Today, Siegemund withdrew the keys with repeated shots. Germany six shooters shoot clean and sometimes used the combination of shot-lob with bamboo keys.
Siegemund weird presents a crazy mental challenge as well. Siegemund plays with two yonex races – one to serve and one to get – becoming repeated “Come!” To take into account the opponent’s services and prefers to direct the service clock down to the end.
When Siegemund was hit with a warning of time breaking before serving at her fourth point of match, a fan scream “Thank you!” cheering the call of the umpire chair.
However, you have to hand over the 37-year-old Siegemund by imposing her style of play on the quarter-finalists twice. These falling shots certainly received a fee while Keys were trying to squeeze the discs closer to the lines sometimes pulling the foot prematurely in an effort to end the point. Keys denied three direct points of the match by bursting a great service to hold for 3-5 in the second set.
Fans burst while Keys opened a LOVE-30 lead in the next match-point from returning to service. Then Siegemund threw her sixth winner for 15-30. That devoted combination of lobby Shots froze the keys that gave the German a fourth point of the match.
When Keys’ last return went to ASKEW, Siegemund cast her blue racuet and was constantly thrown out of joy.