Venue: All England Club Dates: 27 June-10 July |
Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. |
Britons Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid’s remarkable run of 10 consecutive Grand Slam wheelchair doubles titles was ended by Gustavo Fernandez and Shingo Kunieda in the Wimbledon final.
Japan’s Kunieda and Argentine Fernandez defeated the top seeds 6-3 6-2.
Hewett and Reid, 15-time Grand Slam doubles champions, had not lost a major final since Wimbledon in 2019.
Earlier, Dutch top seed Diede de Groot beat Japan’s Yui Kamiji to claim an eighth successive Grand Slam title.
De Groot, 25, won 6-4 6-2 to secure her 15th Grand Slam singles title and a fourth Wimbledon triumph.
Having become the first women’s wheelchair player to complete a calendar Grand Slam last year, the straight-set victory also extended her remarkable winning streak to 56 matches.
Hewett and Reid’s incredible run comes to an end
Four-time Wimbledon champions Hewett and Reid had won four of the past five doubles titles at SW19 since first teaming up at Wimbledon in 2016.
On a dramatic Friday at the All England Club, Hewett produced a stunning comeback against Fernandez to reach his first Wimbledon men’s wheelchair singles final, before he and Reid prevailed in a tense final-set tie-break against Dutchman Tom Egberink and Belgium’s Joachim Gerard.
The pair finished playing at 22:00 BST, with Hewett clocking a total of five hours 49 minutes on court in an exhausting day.
Reid’s participation at Wimbledon had been in doubt after the Scot ruptured a tendon in his wrist during their successful French Open campaign.
“Congratulations to Shingo and Gustavo. They deserved to be the winners today. Under the circumstances, with what happened yesterday and the lack of time I’ve had on court recently, this was one ask too many,” Reid said following Saturday’s defeat.
Hewett said: “They’ve been desperate to beat us for some time now – the last time we lost in a Grand Slam was here in 2019 – but obviously yesterday was a massive day for us.”
He added: “It was an incredible day that I will always remember and today it was challenging to get up and go again.
“We’ll be back hopefully stronger than ever next year.”
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at BBC Sport – Tennis…