Former Wimbledon finalist Eugenie Bouchard beat Varvara Lepchenko 6-1, 6-2 in the rain-affected first round of the Aegon International in Eastbourne, England, on Monday.
The Canadian world No. 46, who lost to Petra Kvitova in the 2014 Wimbledon final, won her second grass-court match of the season against the American.
Bouchard is playing the main draw in Eastbourne for just the second time after reaching the third round last year.
Photo: Reuters
Ekaterina Makarova of Russia, the 2014 champion, produced one of three defeats of British women on the day, dispatching world No. 229 Tara Moore 7-5, 6-4. Her compatriot Elena Vesnina, who won the trophy in 2010, beat Heather Watson 6-2, 6-3 and next plays holder Belinda Bencic.
Monica Puig of Puerto Rico put out Naomi Broady 6-1, 6-1 to complete a miserable day for the home players at Devonshire Park.
Germany’s Andrea Petkovic advanced over Zheng Saisai of China in a 5-7, 6-2, 6-4 comeback victory.
Bencic was eager for training time during the day’s rainy start, but puzzled as to why organizers failed to cover any of the training courts.
The overnight and morning rain which soaked the seaside facility did little to help the courts, left to the elements on a chilly day of 15?C.
“I was hoping for today, but it doesn’t look good,” said Switzerland’s Bencic, who beat Agnieszka Radwanska a year ago to win the title. “When they don’t cover the courts, we have no chance to practice. I guess it’s the same for everyone, but still it’s a little bit of a disadvantage.”
Local officials explained that the training courts have no proper drainage, which is required to make covers work. As the area is a public park for the rest of the year, the investment was likely not deemed critical.
The 19-year-old Bencic, ranked eighth, is keen to get stuck into her final week before the start of Wimbledon on Monday next week after slightly injuring her leg when slipping last week in Birmingham, a fall which forced her to retire in the first round.
Bencic is due to play only her third event since missing the clay-court season with back problems. She reached the semi-finals on grass in the Netherlands earlier this month.
“Everyone has injuries at some point of their career, so I’m not the first person to get an injury. Obviously the other girls have also had a little something,” Bencic said. “This [the back] was my first or second serious injury, I just take it as a part of the job. It’s nothing special.”
Bencic expressed no worries as she returns to full-time tennis with Wimbledon bearing down.
“Why would I feel pressure? Of course it’s ranking points, but every week someone is defending points somewhere,” she said. “It’s just a normal situation. I don’t feel any pressure and have no expectations because I haven’t played a lot of matches lately.”
Top seed Radwanska is also looking for training time amid the weather chaos.
The Pole, who won the title on the south coast eight years ago, said that she has barely had time for any outdoor practice, but is counting on better weather forecast for much of the week.
“It’s only one day like this. A couple of times I just finished five minutes before the rain. I’m hoping it will be much better than the last week,” Radwanska said.
Fenerbahce on Thursday earned a rare 2-1 win in England, but were still knocked out of the UEFA Europa League by Nottingham Forest in the playoffs. Forest entered the second leg with a healthy 3-0 lead from the opener in Istanbul — where Vitor Pereira made an impact in his first game in charge — and that proved enough to advance to the round-of-16 with a 4-2 aggregate score. The result was a boost for Forest, struggling at 17th place in the Premier League, in their return to Europe after three decades. They next face Real Betis Balompie or Kerem Akturkoglu gave Fenerbahce
Soccer officials yesterday offered “full support and assistance” to the Iranian team in Australia for the AFC Women’s Asian Cup after the US and Israel launched massive attacks on their homeland. Iran’s 26-strong squad arrived on the Gold Coast days before the strikes on Saturday killed supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as Washington and Tel Aviv seek to topple the Islamic republic. They are due to open their tournament today against South Korea. The AFC in a statement said it “continues to closely monitor the recent developments in the Middle East during this challenging period.” “The AFC’s foremost priority remains the welfare, safety and
ROAD RASH: Marc Marquez retired after a crash, marking the first time after 88 consecutive races stretching back to 2021 that a Ducati bike failed to make the podium Marco Bezzecchi yesterday won the MotoGP season-opening grand prix in Thailand from pole position as defending world champion Marc Marquez retired late with a buckled wheel. Aprilia’s Bezzecchi led from start to finish to top the podium in Buriram, with KTM’s Pedro Acosta second and Trackhouse’s Raul Fernandez third. Ducati’s Marquez is chasing a record-equaling eighth world title this season, but he exited the race in dramatic fashion while in fourth place with five laps to go. The Spaniard, who started from second on the grid, took a corner wide, with the jolt to his bike dislodging the rear tire, badly damaging his
EVERY DAY A VICTORY: Players on the women’s team faced pressure from society just getting out onto the field as they prepare for their first Women’s Asian Cup game today Bangladesh’s national soccer team face daunting odds at their first-ever Women’s Asian Cup, but have already scored a major victory by qualifying. In the South Asian nation of 170 million, social stigma, family expectations, poverty and religious hardliners have long relegated women and girls to sports sidelines. The first women’s soccer league matches took place in 2011 and the squad, known to fans as the Red and Green, have kept pressing forward despite deeply embedded prejudices. “Many more girls would have joined us if the community had been even slightly supportive,” captain Afeida Khandaker told AFP ahead of her side’s March 3