Naomi Osaka, Angelique Kerber and Emma Raducanu receive Wimbledon wildcards for 2024 tournament

Date:

Share post:


Grand Slam champions Naomi Osaka, Angelique Kerber and Caroline Wozniacki have been given Wimbledon wildcards but the 2019 winner Simona Halep, who is back from a drugs ban, has been overlooked.

Halep was one of the big talking points before the announcement given her status as a former champion — normally enough to secure a wildcard, as with Kerber — but only recently return from a doping suspension.

Last week, when asked about Wimbledon’s policy on wildcards for players who have served drugs bans, the All England Club’s chair Deborah Jevans said: “Once a player has served any drugs ban, they’re then free to compete in the circuit and as such the wildcard committee would consider that and their performance when considering that wildcard.” The French Open, where Halep is also a former champion, similarly decided against giving her a wildcard last month.

Wildcards are given by tournaments to players who are not ranked high enough — in the case of a Grand Slam inside the world’s top 100 — to receive automatic entry. Typically they are handed out to home players and ones who have a particular affinity with the event.

In the case of Wimbledon today, the wildcards are dominated by the former. All seven of the ones given to men’s singles players were to British players, with one left to be allocated in the next week or so. On the women’s side, Osaka, Kerber and Wozniacki were the only non-British singles players to be given wildcards. Emma Raducanu, the US Open champion three years ago is among the British players to have been given a wildcard, as she continues her comeback after a terrible run of wrist and ankle injuries.


Raducanu missed the French Open to prioritise getting ready for the grass court season (Mike Egerton/PA Images via Getty Images)

Osaka, a four-time major champion, is ranked outside the top 100 after returning from maternity leave earlier this year, while Wozniacki launched a comeback in 2023 after retiring in 2020, two years on from winning her only Grand Slam at the Australian Open. Kerber won Wimbledon in 2018, her third major title, and is competing again this year after returning from maternity leave in December.

The qualifying and doubles wildcards have also been given almost exclusively to British players, with the one exception being the American Clervie Ngounoue, who as the reigning girls’ champion, gets one into qualifying. Amongst the British youngsters who will be hoping to make it through qualifying into the main draw are Hannah Klugman and Mika Stojsavljevic (both 15), both of whom have been tipped as ones to watch.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Wimbledon confirms record £50m prize money on offer this year

The right calls?

As for the fairness of all this, that remains a thorny issue. To outsiders and many within tennis, it can seem very strange that tournaments give out wildcards to players whose ranking is not even close to meriting a place over ones who are ranked a lot higher just because of their nationality. At other events, wildcards are even given to certain players because they are part of the same management company that is running the tournament.

When it comes to major omissions from the list, former US Open champion Dominic Thiem is one name that sticks out. He is ranked outside the world’s top 100 after suffering a debilitating wrist injury but has always been very popular with spectators and is due to retire in October. He has never advanced beyond the fourth round at Wimbledon, which could count against him, but that is true also of Osaka and Wozniacki, and he will surely be in consideration for the final wildcard spot.

Qualifying for Wimbledon gets underway next Monday, with the tournament itself starting a week later on July 1.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Raducanu turns down Olympic call-up, Murray included

(Top photo: Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)



Source link

Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams
Alexandra Williams is a writer and editor. Angeles. She writes about politics, art, and culture for LinkDaddy News.

Recent posts

Related articles

Wild get a big night from the Johansson-Rossi-Hartman line in St. Louis

ST. LOUIS – We all know what the Wild are going to get from the new top...

How Wild continued their dominance on the road vs. Blues: 3 takeaways

ST. LOUIS — In a game where so much was made of coach John Hynes reuniting last...

Canada tops Suriname with ease to advance to Nations League Finals

One year ago at BMO Field in Toronto, Canada’s men’s national team finished a season to forget...

Jets owner Woody Johnson suggested benching Aaron Rodgers in September: Sources

On Tuesday the New York Jets fired general manager Joe Douglas, six weeks after the team fired...

Giants notes: Advisory roles for Bobby Evans, Jeff Berry; two pitchers added to roster

When Buster Posey began his tenure as the Giants president of baseball operations last month, he said...

Phillies' quest for Andrew Painter placeholder takes shape as club makes 40-man roster adds

Only two teams, as of now, have invested more dollars in their 2025 rotation than the Phillies....

Rafael Nadal retires from tennis at Davis Cup after Spain lose to Netherlands

MALAGA, Spain — Rafael Nadal’s professional tennis career is over, his final match a 6-4, 6-4 defeat...

Market share report: Austin Ekeler is a cheat, Jauan Jennings is enviable and more

Target and touch totals are important but not as important as the market share. “Targets” is mostly...