Yara El-Shaboury at Wimbledon 

Big-hitting Linda Noskova sees off Madison Keys to reach last eight

Ninth seed Linda Noskova moved into the quarter-finals of Wimbledon with a 6-4, 7-6 (2) victory over Madison Keys
  
  

Linda Noskova plays a forehand
Linda Noskova plays a forehand during her win over Madison Keys. Photograph: Victoria Jones/Shutterstock

The ninth seed Linda Noskova produced a composed display under pressure to end Madison Keys’ Wimbledon run in straight sets, sealing a 6-4, 7-6 (2) victory on Court One to reach the quarter-finals of a grand slam for just the second time in her career.

Keys had arrived full of confidence after knocking out last year’s finalist Amanda Anisimova in the third round. A former Australian Open champion and twice a Wimbledon quarter-finalist, the American was bidding to reach the last eight for the third time in four years. Noskova was chasing her own breakthrough having battled through consecutive three-set matches to return to the fourth round.

The opening exchanges offered first-strike tennis of the highest quality. Service games flew by, aces rained down and rallies were kept to a minimum as both players aimed to dictate from the very first ball. Court One – baking under soaring temperatures – struggled to find much atmosphere as the points were over almost as quickly as they began.

Keys was untouchable behind her serve for much of the opener, firing ace after ace. She had not faced a break point throughout the Championships coming into the match while Noskova calmly matched her from the opposite end with precise serving and clever placement. Neither player blinked until the pivotal 10th game. Serving to stay in the set at 5-4, Keys raced to what looked an unassailable 40-0 lead but Noskova began to step inside the baseline to hammer returns back at Keys’ feet and five consecutive points disappeared from the American’s grasp as forehands drifted long, volleys found the net and the Czech completed a break from nowhere to steal the opening set 6-4.

The frustration lingered into the second set. Keys slapped her racket against her foot after another missed return while Noskova sensed an opportunity, immediately breaking before extending her lead to 3-0.

Three double faults in a single service game handed Keys a route back into the contest and she gladly accepted, breaking before roaring through a dominant hold to level at 3-3. Noskova began to mix heavy serving with subtle touches, including cleverly disguised forehand drop shots that repeatedly dragged Keys out of her comfort zone deep behind the baseline. The Czech held to love to edge back in front before Keys responded with another nerveless service hold.

The second set inevitably headed for a tie-break. Noskova took control immediately. A cleverly disguised, slower second serve caught Keys off guard to open a 2-0 lead before the American compounded her problems with a costly double fault. Noskova briefly blinked with an unforced error and another missed return which allowed Keys to claw back to 4-2 but the American’s serve deserted her again at the worst possible moment with a second double fault of the tie-break handing Noskova a commanding 5-2 cushion. Serving with authority, she reeled off the final two points to complete the tie-break win.

“It is very special to play on this court,” Noskova said during her on-court interview. “I played here last year and it was not as happy of an ending as today. Madison is a tough player and I am glad I survived some of her serves.”

Earlier in the day, Marta Kostyuk became the first woman through to the quarter-finals with a composed 6-4, 6-4 victory over the American qualifier Ashlyn Krueger.

The Ukrainian, fresh from reaching the French Open semi-finals, overturned a 4-2 deficit in the second set to secure her maiden Wimbledon quarter-final and improve her remarkable 2026 record to 10-0 against American opponents. She will face Jasmine Paolini for a place in the semi-finals.

“I adapt really well,” Kostyuk said on her grass-court form. “Today, you could see how I was trying to change pace, I was not trying to overhit and give her more balls. Giving myself this freedom of trying different things is definitely helping.”

Meanwhile, Elise Mertens continued her outstanding fortnight by following up her victory over the second seed Elena Rybakina with another assured performance, defeating the Czech 21st seed Marie Bouzkova 6-4, 6-4. The Belgian recovered from an early break in the opening set before controlling much of the contest, saving 10 of the 13 break points she faced and producing another composed display to finally break through to the last eight at the All England Club on her ninth attempt.

 

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