UK News
Teen jailed for belonging to banned neo-Nazi group
The boy, 16, from Northumberland is jailed for three-and-a-half years, plus a year of supervision.
Source link
UK News
Robinson’s three-wicket over revives England after New Zealand skittle hosts | England v New Zealand 2026
It took two years for Ollie Robinson to force his way back into the England set-up and then about five minutes to win over their supporters. Steaming in from the Nursery End, Robinson produced a devastating three-wicket first over – and four overall – to cap an absurd opening day against New Zealand.
Some 16 wickets fell across only 60 overs of rain-affected play and, if this Test was being played in Australia, the groundsman might be feeling twitchy about having to give a press conference on Saturday. The pitch may ease up before then, even if the quicks on both sides will be hoping it stays just as fruity.
Kyle Jamieson was the initial seamer in his element here, figures of five for 62 helping roll England for 140 all out to see the post-Ashes reset fall flat. But it turned out this was just for starters, with Robinson then making up for lost time by tearing through New Zealand’s top order to leave them 61 for six at stumps.
Perhaps it was fitting that Jimmy Anderson’s old song should be repurposed by the fans as he set off on his spree. Robinson was the man earmarked to take the baton from Anderson back in 2024, only to fall foul of England’s standards regarding preparation – some feat, in hindsight – and fear there was no coming back.
How the 32-year-old backs up this initial return will be the true acid test, because the skills were never in doubt. Here they were on full show, trapping Devon Conway lbw with his third ball, getting Kane Williamson caught at short leg with his fifth, then signing off the over with another pad-thumper to Rachin Ravindra.
Robinson’s harrying six-over spell went on to feature Daryl Mitchell being bowled shouldering arms, with Gus Atkinson and Josh Tongue striking either side. These were ideal bowling conditions, with clouds all day and the Dukes ball moving lavishly. Even so, it was some handbrake turn given where England were at the changeover.
Perusing that first innings scorecard, it would be easy to assume that the Bazballers had crumbled once more amid a flurry of swipes, yahoos, and reverse-scooped madness; perhaps offer a tut about yet more recklessness.
But save for Harry Brook holing out on 56 – and only then when with the tail, and reasoning it was time to step on the gas – this was a less frenetic collapse than usual. It was suboptimal all the same, not least after New Zealand lost their attack leader, Matt Henry, to back spasms following his opening spell.
Among it all was a heartwarming story. Playing his first Test for more than two years after a battle with lower back stress fractures, Jamieson’s reward for all that rehab and gym work was to etch his name on the Lord’s honours board.
Yet as excellent as the tourists were – see also a sublime one-handed slip catch by Williamson to remove Ben Stokes – there was a degree of timidity to England’s approach. It pointed to a team struggling to recalibrate after seeing four years of dogmatic brain-training go down the gurgler in Australia.
Perhaps Ben Duckett leaving the first two deliveries of the morning was the red flag. Duckett loves to feel bat on ball and had made it a virtue until Mitchell Starc got to work. Like a number of his colleagues, the sense is that Duckett wants to be more responsible this year. Whether it will suit him is another matter.
Fresh from being presented with his England cap by Alastair Cook – his fellow Bedford School alumnus and not dissimilar in terms of set-up – Emilio Gay could scarcely have wished for a friendlier first delivery in Test cricket: a full toss from Jamieson was drilled through cover for four to open his account.
But during the 45 minutes of play before the first two-hour stoppage for rain, the left-hander could only add one more boundary – a crisp on-drive – before Jamieson located his radar, squared him with a ball from around the wicket that nipped away, and sent a low catch to first slip. Welcome to Test cricket.
No Henry was no problem for New Zealand after the restart as, from 31 for one, England lost three wickets in the space of 14 deliveries. Jamieson took the plaudits at the end but it was Nathan Smith and Will O’Rourke who did the damage here, combining nibbling outswing and 90mph pace to great effect.
First went Duckett, pinned lbw for 19 to a ball from Smith that jagged in. Jacob Bethell soon went the same way to O’Rourke, albeit trying to drive down the ground and missing the ball by some margin. The big one was Joe Root, undone for one by some bounce from O’Rourke as he opened the face of the bat and edged behind.
The most telling dismissal was that of Jamie Smith for one, bowled shouldering arms to Jamieson to make it 55 for five. The ball decked in a mile here, making it less galling than that previous brain fade in Sydney in January when he slapped Marnus Labuschagne to cover. Equally, it was a bad misjudgment.
Much like in Melbourne and that notorious two-day Ashes Test, Brook was showing the way, meeting the challenge with a more positive half-century. Granted he was dropped twice but the right-hander was still playing his natural way.
What that is for Stokes these days is harder to discern given that mid-Ashes move to drop anchor and the broader struggle that has dropped him to No 7. Still, as meek as the prod to Jamieson on 12 was, Stokes could console himself with the fact that Williamson’s flying pouch at third slip was a genuine jaw-dropper.
Jamieson was also proving a serious handful. There was a bit of defiance from England’s tail, Tongue and Shoaib Bashir making 10 and 14 respectively, but not before New Zealand’s 6ft 8in trebuchet had completed his five by trapping Atkinson in front and tickling a light under-edge from Robinson.
In turn, the movement on offer was only ever going to be catnip for a bowler such as Robinson. And as England left the field at stumps and their supporters filtered out of the gates, they were grateful for this particular aspect of the reset.
UK News
London Tube strike usage higher than Tuesday, TfL says
Figures based on Oyster and contactless data show mixed trends compared with the same day last year: London Underground travel was down 43%, while use of the London Overground rose 12%, the Elizabeth line increased 18%, and the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) saw a 9% rise.
UK News
Chwalinska battles past Shnaider to set up final against Andreeva: French Open semi-finals – live | French Open 2026
Key events
Right, that’s it from me for today, but do come back tomorrow for the men’s semi-finals, with Alexander Zverev v Jakub Mensik in the afternoon session, and the all-Italian affair between Flavio Cobolli and Matteo Arnaldi in the evening. I, for one, won’t be attempting to make any predictions after a fortnight that has defied logic. À bientôt!
I’m in total awe of Chwalinska. The way she kept her composure … the way she hits that drop shot … the way she’s able to counter bigger hitters … the way she’s grasped this most unexpected of opportunities … the way she was able to bounce back from whatever her medical problem was early in the second set. She’s right, whatever happens from here on in, she deserves to enjoy this moment and bask in an achievement that no one thought was possible, in a tournament previously dominated by her much more vaunted vaunted fellow Pole. But Iga Swiatek departed days ago, and now Chwalinska, implausibly, improbably, incredibly is a grand slam finalist.
“MAJA! MAJA! MAJA!” chant the crowd as she prepares to speak. “This is a dream, I don’t know what’s going on,” she says with a look of utter disbelief and her head in her hands. “I’m just very happy. I’m not feeling great, I’m not going to lie. I try to stay composed as I know it is the best way for me. Inside there is a storm. But I’m not complaining at all. I watched Mirra playing before us, it was incredible. [Saturday’s final] will be another great experience for me. I just want to enjoy it today and then just recover as much as I can, to be able to give it my all.” She looks as if she doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
Chwalinska defeats Shnaider 7-6, 6-4!
The umpire calls for calm as Chwalinska steps up to serve. Every time Chwalinska has broken in this match, Shnaider has broken straight back. Will the pattern continue? No, because from 15-all Chwalinska bashes a backhand winner down the line, Shnaider then slams long and on the first match point, at 40-15, Chwalinska fizzes a forehand pass down the line! In this wildest of French Opens, the qualifier is into the final having only won one match at a major previously, and she’s one victory away from doing an Emma Raducanu! Incroyable.
Chwalinska breaks: Shnaider 6-7, 4-5 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
Shnaider looks absolutely spent when Chwalinska moves 0-15 and then 15-30 ahead. “KEEP GOING TO HER FOREHAND,” screams Bajin. But Shnaider doesn’t really listen, and comes off second best once again after Chwalinska cuts her into pieces with what feels like a 6789th drop shot! 15-40, two break points … yet another drop shot … and Shnaider nets! Chwalinska breaks and the qualifier, unbelievably, will serve for a place in the French Open final!!
Second set: Shnaider* 6-7, 4-4 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
Now it’s Shnaider’s turn to call for help; it appears the Russian’s bothered about her lower back, or perhaps it’s a hip problem. It’s no surprise both players are struggling, given the tension they must be feeling on this biggest of occasions, and it’s also been attritional stuff. The opening set took about the same amount of time as the entire of the first semi-final. A medical timeout is called as Shnaider receives treatment from the trainer, and when they resume the Russian looks to be feeling it as Chwalinska accelerates to 40-15. A double fault doesn’t stop Chwalinska from closing the game out.
Second set: Shnaider 6-7, 4-3 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
Chwalinska isn’t moving as willingly now. It wouldn’t be a surprise if tiredness is creeping in, given she’s already played eight matches to get this far. But the qualifier gamely holds for 3-3, before Shnaider surges through to 15 to nudge ahead once more.
Second set: Shnaider 6-7, 3-2 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
A rare drop shot/lob miss from Chwalinska, and Shnaider secures a simple hold, as the sun sneaks through the Chatrier roof. They’ll continue playing under it, even though the rain has stopped.
Second set: Shnaider* 6-7, 2-2 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
Shnaider, maintaining an impressive emotional equilibrium despite losing the first set, holds to 30. Sascha Bajin, maintaining not such an impressive emotional equilibrium, is screaming instructions at Shnaider after Chwalinska calls for the doctor, but it’s not clear what the problem is. Chwalinska’s I mean, not Bajin’s. Chwalinska doesn’t seem impeded as she holds to 15.

Tumaini Carayol
Mirra Andreeva took a significant step towards fulfilling her boundless talent as she produced a brilliantly composed and mature performance to reach her first grand slam final at Roland Garros. Andreeva viciously dismantled a painfully nervous Marta Kostyuk 6-1, 6-3 in the most high-profile encounter between a Russian and Ukrainian player since Russia invaded Kostyuk’s homeland four years ago.
Andreeva will attempt to become just the third-youngest first time grand slam champion in the 21st century, behind only 17-year-old Maria Sharapova and an 18-year old Emma Raducanu. Still only 19, Andreeva has been competing at the highest level since she was 15 and it has taken some time for the Russian to manage her temper, emotions and the pressure that accompanies her massive ambition. Finally, it appears that she is ready to step forward and stake her claim for the biggest titles.
At the same time that the women’s draw has steadily opened up – with Aryna Sabalenka’s shock defeat to Diana Shnaider on Wednesday ensuring that a new grand slam champion would be crowned – the focus has increasingly narrowed on the geopolitical topic that has never been far from the surface during this event: Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Kostyuk’s tournament started 11 days ago as she woke up to the news that a Russian missile had landed around 100 metres from her family home in Ukraine, where her mother, sister and great aunt were staying, on the morning of her first round match. After the best grand slam showing of her career, it ended at the hands of one of her most prominent Russian rivals.
Although not as forcefully as her compatriot Oleksandra Oliynykova, who insisted that the eventual semi-finalist Shnaider should be sanctioned for competing in a St Petersburg exhibition backed by Gazprom, an act she compared to a player competing in Nazi Germany, Kostyuk had made her opinions on her opponent felt before the match: “I wish there was some more clear stance on what’s going on, especially when your country is killing other people,” said Kostyuk. “I don’t know how you can sleep at night peacefully when you know that this is going on, and you have nothing to say about it.”
Still, the strength of each country on the WTA tour also means that Ukrainian and Russian players have long grown accustomed to facing each other over the past four years. Ahead of the match, the two players posed separately for photos with the two child mascots on court for the coin toss and Kostyuk naturally opted not to shake Andreeva’s hand after the match. Otherwise, this was business as usual as both players desperately tried to take advantage of the biggest opportunity of their careers. As she came to terms with a potentially career-defining victory, Andreeva even slowed her walk towards the net after the match to ensure that the two players did not meet there.
You can read the rest of Tumaini’s report here:
Shnaider breaks: Shnaider* 6-7, 1-1 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
Shnaider gets an immediate chance to break back, at 30-40, and she knows that, for all of Chwalinska’s slice and spin and drop shots and lobs, her forehand is the most powerful weapon in this match. Shnaider unleashes one to immediately get back on level terms.
Chwalinska breaks: Shnaider 6-7, 0-1 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
The last qualifier to reach a grand slam final was Emma Raducanu at the US Open in 2021. And we all know what happened then. Not that Chwalinska will probably want to ponder on what happened after. Anyway, Chwalinska starts the second set just as she finished the first, with another drop shot and lob that leaves a scampering Shnaider chasing shadows, and Chwalinska charges to 15-40 on Shnaider’s serve and breaks after yes, you’ve guessed it, another drop shot. Shnaider will be seeing those in her sleep tonight.
Chwalinska wins the first-set tie-break 7-4!
The mini-break is conceded for 4-3 … and Chwalinska shows great hands with the sneakiest of shots for 4-4! Chwalinska’s third point in a row means she leads the breaker for the first time at 5-4 … and a drop-shot/lob combo brings up two set points at 6-4! Shnaider slashes wide and this craziest and most chaotic of French Opens takes a new twist as Chwalinska, the 24-year-old qualifier who’d only won grand slam match before this tournament, moves to within a set of the final! She calmly walks back to her chair as if she’s still playing in qualifying.
With Shnaider slipping on the clay, Chwalinska has most of the court to aim into, but thrashes well out! 3-1. 3-2, when Chwalinska’s drop shot trickles over and Shnaider’s response clips the net cord before agonisingly falling back on to her own side of the court. Sensing the moment, Shnaider is throwing absolutely everything at Chwalinska on the sixth point … and Chwalinska’s resistance eventually ends! So it’s 4-2 Shnaider at the change of ends …
Shnaider seizes the opening point, against serve, but then promptly loses the first point on her own serve. 1-1. 2-1, when Chwalinska flings her forehand into the tramlines ..
First set: Shnaider 6-6 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
Shnaider, once again knowing she must hold serve to extend the first instalment of this chess match, is taken to 30-all, before a cross-court backhand duel ends in her favour. 40-30. Game, with the help of a fortunate net cord. After 67 minutes (!! That’s Rafa v Novak levels), we’ve got ourselves a tie-break. Which is exactly what this set deserves.
First set: Shnaider* 5-6 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
Shnaider, serving to stay in the set, holds with little fuss, to 15. This has been such a tight set – neither player at this stage deserves to lose it. The bandanaed Shnaider smacks a ball into the court after losing the opening point on Chwalinska’s serve, but shows controlled aggression to take the second, so it’s 15-all. Shnaider thinks she’s pulled off the pass on the next point but the diminutive 5ft 5in Chwalinska stretches to produce a winning volley! Shnaider waves her arms in exasperation, but is happier when she recovers from 30-15 to deuce. The pressure is ramping up on Chwalinska … and she double faults! Shnaider goes for too much on the break point, gets herself a second with a delicious drop shot, but again her backhand goes long! And Chwalinska doesn’t give the Russian another look-in.
First set: Shnaider* 4-5 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
“Breathe,” is the instruction from Sascha Bajin, Shnaider’s coach, who previously worked with Naomi Osaka and was Serena Williams’s longtime hitting partner. Speaking of whom … look who’s back!
Allow content provided by a third party?
This article includes content hosted on platform.x.com. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as the provider may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click ‘Allow and continue’.
But even Queen Serena can’t quite take all the attention away from this match, as Chwalinska brings up game point at 40-30 with a clay-court point of the highest order. The qualifier wins a more straightforward exchange on the next point to hold.
First set: Shnaider 4-4 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
15-0, 30-0, 40-0, game. The most straightforward of this semi-final so far. Chwalinska skips back to her chair. Having remarkably dropped only one set in eight matches, upsetting the Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen, Elise Mertens, Maria Sakkari and Anna Kalinskaya along the way, the qualifier is looking just as smooth here. But Shnaider, not to be outdone, replies with a love hold of her own.
First set: Shnaider 3-3 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
Oohs and aahs and more oohs and aahs and eventually cheers at deuce on Shnaider’s serve, as a 20-shot rally concludes with Chwalinska fizzing a forehand down the line! A rare bit of sheer power to add to all that finesse she has. But Chwalinska undoes her good work but sending her backhand long on the break point, and doesn’t get another opportunity. Andreeva’s coach Conchita Martinez is watching in the stands, and I wonder what she’s made of her player’s potential final opponents so far.
Shnaider breaks: Shnaider* 2-3 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
Chwalinska reaching the semi-finals has echoes of Lois Boisson’s unlikely run to the last four last year as a home wildcard. At that point Boisson came unstuck, losing 6-1, 6-2 against Coco Gauff, so that’s where the comparisons end, given the way Chwalinska has started this match. But at 30-40, a cross-court face-off ends when Chwalinska tries to finish it off with a drop shot that lands wide. So they’re back on serve.
Chwalinska breaks: Shnaider 1-3 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
Both players are handling the occasion better than Kostyuk did in the first semi-final, and the first three games have taken nearly as long as the whole of the first set did earlier. This match has got a very different feel to it too: it’s full of craft and guile and, after Chwalinska holds to 30, a wonderful game of cat and mouse ends in the Pole’s favour for 0-30 on Shnaider’s serve. Soon it’s 0-40. And Shnaider smacks long!
First set: Shnaider 1-1 Chwalinska* (*denotes next server)
I wonder if Chwalinska got any tips from Swiatek before this semi-final – her drop shot to get to 15-30 is certainly played with the finesse of a four-times Roland Garros champion. And 15-30 then develops into 30-40. After tipping Kostyuk against Andreeva in the first semi-final, Chwalinska is making a mockery of my prediction in this one too. But if this tournament has taught us anything, it’s that we should make predictions at our peril. Anyway, Shnaider recovers to her advantage, but Chwalinska just isn’t going away, and plays the point of the match so far with another fine drop shot, backed up by a winning volley, for deuce No 2. Shnaider holds from there but credit to Chwalinska for the way she’s started this match.
First set: Shnaider* 0-1 Chwalinska (*denotes next server)
A cagey opening game between these two lefties goes to deuce. Shnaider, standing right on the baseline, is the aggressor; but Chwalinska, retreating some way behind it, defends well to edge to her advantage. A second deuce and second advantage to Chwalinska follow, and the Pole who no one expected to get this far gets her side of the scoreboard moving when Shnaider’s backhand flies beyond the baseline. Speaking of the Pole who everyone did expect to be here, there’s a lovely video of Iga Swiatek as a 15-year-old with Chwalinska, before their careers dramatically diverged:
For the 22-year-old Shnaider, the 25th seed and Andreeva’s doubles partner, she’s been ranked around the world’s top 20 for the past couple of years but hasn’t been able to really announce herself at the biggest tournaments. Until now. And she goes into her first slam semi-final in the very strange position of being the favourite. Her greater firepower should see her through here, but Chwalinska’s craftiness can undoubtedly cause her problems. Though the way Shnaider ripped through Aryna Sabalenka and Madison Keys 6-0 in the deciding sets in her past two matches suggests she’ll be able to stay on top of her nerves.
The 24-year-old qualifier Chwalinska had won only two tour-level matches on clay and one grand slam match (at Wimbledon in 2022) before this tournament, which is only her third major, having taken an indefinite break from tennis five years ago because of depression. She has said she associated the sport with “pressure, stress and crying” but now has a more balanced approach: “The results don’t define me as much as they did before. I just couldn’t differentiate Maja and tennis player. I was just one.”
Maja Chwalinska and Diana Shnaider are waiting in the wings. Chwalinska is the first to be announced to the Chatrier crowd, and now here comes Sabalenka sorry Shnaider; the biggest moment of both of their careers. This battle of the first-time grand slam semi-finalists sums up the sheer craziness of this year’s Roland Garros.
That was hugely impressive from Andreeva, who showed maturity beyond her years to deal with the magnitude of the match, with her level hardly fluctuating from start to finish. She dominated on serve and from the baseline, and it’ll bring her immense satisfaction that she did so against a player who beat her in the Madrid final only a month ago. For Kostyuk, her 17-match winning run is over. With all that is going on in her homeland, she’ll be able to put this defeat into perspective, but equally it’ll hurt so much: she wanted to do this to deliver hope and joy to Ukraine.
“I’m super happy with the way I played,” Andreeva says with such giddy, infectious excitement. “I’m also happy I got my revenge from the Madrid final, then I’m happy I’m in my first grand slam final. All of these feelings combined, it’s amazing, I’ve never felt anything like this before.” Marion Bartoli then askes her what she and Martinez will be plotting for the final against Diana Shnaider (Andreeva’s longtime doubles partner) or Maja Chwalinska. “Keep it the same, don’t change anything,” she replies. “We’re going to prepare our best. I’m nervous, but at the same time, I’m very, very excited.” She knows she’s the favourite and that the title is there for the taking.
Andreeva beats Kostyuk 6-1, 6-3!
Andreeva, serving for a place in her first grand slam final, takes the first point with a foray to the net. Her coach, the former Wimbledon champion Conchita Martinez, stands up and applauds. Martinez’s charge is three points away. Make that two, because it’s 30-0. Kostyuk provides some resistance with a backhand pass, but it turns out to be futile as Andreeva’s forehand drops just in to set up two match points and then Kostyuk goes long! At 19 years of age, Andreeva is into her first slam final – something that has been expected of her since the prodigy announced herself by reaching the last four in Paris two years ago – and Kostyuk’s emotional run is over. There’s no handshake between the two, as is normal between Ukrainian and Russian players.
Andreeva breaks: Kostyuk 1-6, 3-5 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
But no sooner does Kostyuk break, than she’s in danger of being broken. 0-30. Then at 15-30, she goes for broke with a cross-court forehand, but blazes wide. She smiles wryly. Andreeva has two break points but only one is needed, as Andreeva does what Kostyuk couldn’t on the previous point by landing a forehand winner! Andreeva is a game away.
Kostyuk breaks: Kostyuk* 1-6, 3-4 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
Jannik Sinner, remember, was two sets and 5-1 up in the second round before losing, and Aryna Sabalenka was a set and a double break ahead yesterday before self-imploding, so we shouldn’t assume this is over. Kostyuk certainly doesn’t, as she rips through Andreeva’s serve from 0-15, 0-30 to 0-40, the highlight a 26-shot rally, the longest of the semi-final so far, which has just about everything before Kostyuk settles matters with a cute drop shot! Finally she’s thinking clearly. And Kostyuk breaks for the first time to get this second set back on serve!
Second set: Kostyuk 1-6, 2-4 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
Yet another break chance for Andreeva as 30-40. Take this and the Russian will be serving for a place in the final. But Andreeva hoiks a forehand wide on the break point … and Kostyuk charges through the next three points to hold! At least she’s asking a question of Andreeva, but is it too late?
Second set: Kostyuk* 1-6, 1-4 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
Kostyuk, buoyed by winning the previous game, works her way to 15-30. But Andreeva isn’t having any of it. 30-all, 40-30, game. The 19-year-old roars, perhaps as much to silence the crowd as celebrate the game. And the roof is being closed because of an imminent threat of rain, just to add to the drama. But it’s questionable whether this match will still be going by the time it’s shut. Andreeva is two games away.
Second set: Kostyuk 1-6, 1-3 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
More looks of despair and desperation from Kostyuk as Andreeva takes her to deuce. Kostyuk could do with landing some more first serves here; her first-serve percentage is down at 48%. And on her third advantage, Kostyuk takes the game! The crowd are roaring; how much of that is because she’s the underdog and how much of that is because of what she’s going through as a Ukrainian is unclear. But Andreeva did fall apart in the face of some partisan Parisian support for Lois Boisson in the quarter-finals last year, so if Kostyuk can build on this game, and the crowd continue to get behind her, Andreeva may start to struggle.
Second set: Kostyuk* 1-6, 0-3 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
A quick hold to 15 from Andreeva, who, it has to be said, has the look of a player who knows this title is hers for the taking. And with Diana Shnaider or Maja Chwalinska playing the other semi-final, this feels like the de facto final. “There’s been no let down, not even two or three points in a row,” enthuses Evert of Andreeva’s performance.
Andreeva breaks: Kostyuk 1-6, 0-2 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
Chris Evert, on TNT Sports, is advising Kostyuk to just “keep it simple” in order to hold serve. But Kostyuk, with all the emotion of the occasion and the conditions and what she’s playing for and her quarter-final win over fellow Ukrainian Elina Svitolina and the recent Russian missile attack near her home in Kyiv, doesn’t listen as she nets. 15-30. 30-40. And Andreeva pulls off possibly the shot of the match as she nails a HUGE backhand down the line. Andreeva is playing so smartly here, using greater height and margins to combat the wind, then unleashing when the opportunity allows.
Second set: Kostyuk* 1-6, 0-1 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
One of the biggest crowd reactions of the afternoon as Kostyuk drags herself to deuce on Andreeva’s serve. The Ukrainian is now fist-pumping and screaming as she secures a break point at her advantage. Prowling well inside the baseline for the second serve, Kostyuk gets the serve back … but then goes for too much, too soon and nets. She needed to show more patience there; blame the adrenaline of a first grand slam semi-final for that. And from deuce Andreeva holds.
Andreeva wins the first set 6-1
Kostyuk, now serving to stay in the first set, is blown off course once again at 30-all, and Andreeva has her first set point. The crowd sigh; they want a contest. They’re a little more hopeful when Andreeva nets her backhand, but from deuce Andreeva secures a second set point, steps in for the second serve … hits hard and deep at Kostyuk … whose feet don’t adjust quickly enough, as she slaps into the net to concede the set. After all the anticipation, this match has been something of an anti-climax so far. Not that Andreeva will care at all; she’s a set away from her first grand slam final.
First set: Kostyuk* 1-5 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
A 13th unforced error from Kostyuk and Andreeva leads 30-0 on serve. Make that 40-0. And jeu. Kostyuk has been a joy to watch on clay this year, her unbeaten run including wins over Iga Swiatek and Elina Svitolina this tournament, and over Andreeva and Jessica Pegula in Madrid, but the occasion is getting to her. And undoubtedly the wind too, with Andreeva playing with a little more margin for error.
First set: Kostyuk 1-4 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
0-15. 0-30. This first set is running away from Kostyuk horribly quickly; they’ve been playing for only 18 minutes. Anyone would think it’s Andreeva who’s on the 17-match winning run. Kostyuk takes the next point for 15-30, but after a lung-busting exchange that leaves Kostyuk gasping for air, Andreeva lands the ball bang on the baseline! 15-40. A one-two punch gets Kostyuk out of trouble on the first break point, a big serve saves the second, and also a third at Andreeva’s advantage. This first set could perhaps already be beyond Kostyuk, but she really needs this game to gain a footing in the match. But here’s a fourth break point and now a fifth … and Kostyuk shows tremendous resolve to repel them all and eventually hold when Andreeva hits long! That game took nearly as long as the rest of the match combined. Kostyuk is finally up and running.
First set: Kostyuk* 0-4 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
At 30-all, an unreturned serve gives Andreeva game point. A long rally plays out … Andreeva throws in a moon ball … and Kostyuk dismissively pulls off a winning drop shot! Deuce. Can Kostyuk finally get on the board? No, because Andreeva, on her second advantage, pummels a forehand deep to Kostyuk’s right, and Kostyuk can only frame the ball into the stands. This is turning into a very different story to Madrid.
Andreeva breaks: Kostyuk 0-3 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
The best point of the match so far as Andreeva drop shots and lobs and drop shots and lobs Kostyuk into submission. 15-all on Kostyuk’s serve, which develops into 15-30. Andreeva has the greater court craft, she’s got such impressive variety and a smart brain; she’s Martina Hingis-like in that respect. But she has more power than the Swiss did – and illustrates that with a big, big backhand. It’s 15-40 – and while Andreeva doesn’t take the first break point, she does the second with a forehand winner. And there’s the double break.
First set: Kostyuk* 0-2 Andreeva (*denotes next server)
Better from Kostyuk as she gobbles up an Andreeva second serve for 0-15, and now it’s Andreeva’s turn to double fault. Clearly it’s contagious. Another error from Andreeva and it’s 0-40, three break points. But Kostyuk coughs up two forehand errors and it’s 3-40. So only one break point left, and against Kostyuk makes a mess of her forehand. She’s up to seven unforced errors; this is very messy. And from deuce, Andreeva squeezes through to consolidate the break.
Andreeva breaks: Kostyuk 0-1 Andreeva* (*denotes next server)
Kostyuk, serving first, moves to 30-15, before the umpire is already slapping down the noisy crowd. Andreeva comes back for 30-all, and then an edgy double fault from Kostyuk gift wraps an early break point to Andreeva. And Kostyuk clunks into the net. Now the crowd are silent. That was a nervy, nervy start from the Ukrainian.
In their Madrid Open final last month, Kostyuk defeated Andreeva 6-3, 7-5 to claim the biggest title of her career. She dictated most of the points, so it’ll be interesting to see if the more defensively inclined Andreeva changes her tactics here. Andreeva has the greater experience at the business end of slams, despite being four years younger than her opponent, but because of Kostyuk’s power I make her the slight favourite. But this could – as tennis so often does – come down to who controls their emotions better.
Here Kostyuk and Andreeva come. Kostyuk has a huge smile as she waves to the Philippe Chatrier crowd; Andreeva looks a little more steely. Cue a huge gust of wind. It of course caused havoc yesterday, and is ominously even stronger today. So it’s not only a question of how well they handle the occasion, but how well they deal with the conditions. Sabalenka self-imploded in them yesterday.
SHE’S BACK!
Allow content provided by a third party?
This article includes content hosted on platform.x.com. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as the provider may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click ‘Allow and continue’.
Already today, before tomorrow’s all-Italian men’s semi-final between Flavio Cobolli and Matteo Arnaldi, there’s been victory for their compatriots Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori, the top seeds, in the mixed doubles final, 4-6, 6-3, 10-4 against the Canadian Gabriela Dabrowski and the American Evan King.
And congratulations to Britain’s Henry Patten who, along with his Finnish partner Harri Heliovaara, is into his first French Open men’s doubles final. The 2024 Wimbledon and 2025 Australian Open champs defeated the home pair Quentin Halys and Pierre-Hugues Herbert 6-3, 6-4.
Preamble
Salut! At the start of the tournament we were wondering how we’d cope without ‘just’ Carlos Alcaraz. But then Jannik Sinner departed and Novak Djokovic too, and then Iga Swiatek and Coco Gauff along with nearly all of the men’s and women’s top ten, and it’s still been joyeux and amusant and incroyable. And after Aryna Sabalenka snatched defeat from the jaws of victory yesterday, guaranteeing two first-time grand slam champions this weekend, there’s a wonderfully exciting sense of the unknown and the feeling that anything could happen on women’s semi-finals day – but it’s also impossible to ignore the shadow that Russia’s war in Ukraine has cast over the draw.
No one has felt that shadow more painfully this fortnight than Marta Kostyuk, who found out hours before her first-round match that a missile had struck close to her family home in Kyiv. Aged 23, it has taken Kostyuk time as a player to piece her rich talents together. Now, fuelled by the knowledge she represents something so much bigger than herself while simultaneously being able to put tennis into perspective, she’s on a 17-match winning run on clay and is playing with the belief she belongs at the top – but in Russia’s Mirra Andreeva she faces the highest-ranked player left who was already being ordained as a future slam champion when she burst into the semi-finals as a precocious 17-year-old in 2024.
Kostyuk did manage to defeat Andreeva in the Madrid Open final a month ago – and if she can pull off victory on an even bigger stage to become the first Ukrainian woman to reach a major final, she could face another Russian, Diana Shnaider, on Saturday. Shnaider, having stayed so impressively calm in the eye of Sabalenka’s storm yesterday, plays fellow slam semi-final debutant Maja Chwalinska, the Polish qualifier who is enjoying the run of her life but who, like Kostyuk, is very aware there are bigger challenges in life than sport, having taken an indefinite break from tennis five years ago because of depression. The promise of two absorbing semi-finals is why we’re here today, but these matches are about so much more.
L’action commence: à 15h (2pm BST). Allons-y!
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoWaitrose supermarkets across UK shut due to ‘critical error’
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoMan arrested in connection with rape in Oxfordshire town
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoBanbury woman jailed after lying to police about kidnapped children
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoHow to spend a day in Harpsden among UK’s poshest villages
-
Oxford Events3 weeks agoStage Watch: Somerset House enters the comedy arena with major new festival Laughterama
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoStrictly Come Dancing new hosts reportedly Emma Willis
-
Business & Technology4 weeks agoCBI posts 14% revenue rise as payment services grow
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoUK Hantavirus update as 22 ship passengers moved to hospital
