Carlos Alcaraz found his best form after a shaky start to beat Andrey Rublev and reach the Wimbledon quarter-finals on Sunday as hot favourite in the women’s draw Aryna Sabalenka also progressed.The Spaniard, hunting a third straight title at the All England Club, has taken his fans on an emotional rollercoaster but is into the last eight after a 6-7 (5/7), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 win.While Alcaraz’s main rivals, seven-time winner Novak Djokovic and world number one Jannik Sinner, are in ominous form, the second seed has blown hot and cold so far.Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer.He will next face Cameron Norrie, who is the last British player standing at Wimbledon after beating Chile’s Nicolas Jarry in five gruelling sets.Alcaraz lost three sets across his first three matches and fell behind against Russian 14th seed Rublev under the Centre Court roof.But he turned the match around in style, producing some of his best tennis in front of his adoring fans.“I think I played intelligent and smart today against him, tactically,” said the 22-year-old. “A really good match, which I’m really proud about.” The five-time Grand Slam champion said he always believes in himself, even when facing adversity.“One point can change the match completely, turn everything around. “In tennis, you have to stay there all the time. Being strong mentally, to stay there. I knew that I was going to play better.”Norrie dropped to the ground after outlasting Jarry 3-6, 6-7, 7-6, 7-6, 6-3 across four-and-a-half hours in a heated encounter.“I’ve been a dedicated professional and good team around me. These moments, it’s the icing on the cake. It was a well-deserved fall to the floor I think,” Norrie said after sealing his return to the final eight for the first time since 2022.The pair exchanged words at the net after match point, with chair umpire Eva Asderaki even preparing to separate them, but it never got to that point.Jarry was frustrated by Norrie’s shouting of ‘c’mon’ in celebration, after earlier being annoyed by Norrie’s bouncing of the ball between first and second serves.Replays showed Norrie bounced the ball 25 times between his first and second serves on the third point of the second set tie-break.Jarry then mocked the Brit, bouncing the ball 23 times himself, to which Norrie responded with 23 bounces himself.“Is there a rule? Do you have to intervene or do I have to suck it up?” Jarry asked chair umpire Asderaki after the second set finished.“He can stop doing it,” Jarry added. “It’s not a nervous tic, it is something he can control.”Asderaki replied that she could only take action if she felt it was a case of deliberate gamesmanship.Jarry replied, “It affects me, so if the rule says you have to do something if it affects me, then do it.”- Sabalenka power -Women’s world number one Sabalenka has yet to drop a set in four rounds at the All England Club as every other top six seed has fallen, but was given a tough workout by Belgian world number 23 Mertens.The Belarusian came through 6-4, 7-6 (7/4) against her former doubles partner to set up a clash against Germany’s Laura Siegemund.The three-time Grand Slam champion is making up for lost time after missing last year’s Wimbledon due to a shoulder injury. She was excluded in 2022 as part of a blanket ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes.“With your support guys I think everything is possible,” said Sabalenka, who has never been beyond the semi-finals. “I don’t know. It’s such a beautiful tournament.“I always dreamt of winning it. Every time I’m here I’m trying to give my best and really hope for the best.”Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova also progressed at the expense of Britain’s Sonay Kartal, but had to mentally reset after a bizarre electronic line-calling failure.At 4-4 in the first set, Pavlyuchenkova held game point when a Kartal backhand landed clearly over the baseline but no call came and the umpire ordered the point be replayed.Kartal went on to break for a 5-4 lead.Pavlyuchenkova angrily made her case to the umpire, saying: “They stole the game from me, they stole it”. But she broke back and won the tie-break, which proved a launch pad for a 7-6 (7/3), 6-4 victory.The technology glitch in the fourth-round match follows concerns raised by other players.The All England Club released a brief statement on the incident. “Due to operator error the system was deactivated on the point in question,” said an spokesman. “The chair umpire followed the established process.”Russia’s Karen Khachanov was the first winner of the day, brushing aside Polish player Kamil Majchrzak 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 on Court Two.The 17th seed will face US fifth seed Taylor Fritz, who was only on court for 41 minutes before Australia’s Jordan Thompson retired injured, trailing 6-1, 3-0.America’s Fritz faced gruelling five-set battles in his opening two matches but it was a different story in his fourth-round encounter on Court One.The Eastbourne champion broke Thompson twice to seal the first set in just 21 minutes and led 3-0 in the second set when the Australian decided he could not go on, due to an apparent thigh injury.
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