Talkn Tennis
Wimbledon 2026 has already delivered drama, upsets and one of the most emotional matches in recent memory, and Adam and Adrian are here to break down every moment of a breathless opening few days at the All England Club. Jannik Sinner is through, but the defending Wimbledon champion has not had things his own way. The world number one was taken to five sets by Miomir Kecmanovic in round one, dropping the first set, losing a brilliant third-set tiebreak and losing a shoe along the way before eventually steadying to win 4-6, 6-3, 6-7(6), 6-2, 6-3. Round two against Nuno Borges was cleaner on the scoreline but tighter than the numbers suggest, with both sets going to tiebreaks before Sinner lifted at the crucial moments to win 7-6, 7-6, 6-4, taking his Grand Slam wins to 95 and the record as the most by any Italian in history. The takeaway from both matches though is that Sinner looks mortal. Someone with the nerve to hold their nerve in the big moments might just be able to beat him, and the boys discuss whether Wimbledon 2026 could be another upset Grand Slam. The story that had the whole tennis world talking was Serena Williams against Maya Joint on Centre Court. The 23-time Grand Slam champion, 44 years old and playing her first competitive singles match in nearly four years, was beaten 6-3, 6-7(6), 6-3 by the 20-year-old Australian in a match that lasted more than two hours. Williams showed the power and the fight, stealing the second set in a tiebreak and refusing to go quietly, but the movement and match sharpness were not there against an opponent less than half her age, and Joint held her nerve brilliantly to take it in three. The boys debate whether Centre Court was the right call, whether Joint deserves more credit than she is getting, and what comes next for Serena, who skipped her post-match press conference amid reports of a right knee injury. Fourth seed Ben Shelton is out in one of the genuine shocks of the Wimbledon 2026 draw, blowing a fifth-set super tiebreak he had by the throat at 8-5 and match point at 9-8 before Finnish qualifier Otto Virtanen closed it out 11-9. It is a brutal exit for a player who arrived as one of the most dangerous servers in the draw and caps a year where Shelton has repeatedly failed to convert his ranking and firepower into deep runs at the events that matter most. And in the biggest upset on the women's side, reigning Roland Garros champion Mirra Andreeva is out, beaten 4-6, 7-5, 6-4 by former Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova in a two-hour 46-minute epic. Andreeva saved six match points in one extraordinary game in the third set and looked like she had shifted the momentum, only for Krejcikova to break straight back and close it out. Andreeva was in tears at her press conference and the boys discuss whether the weight of expectation that comes with a first Grand Slam title is already starting to show. Talkn Tennis — the only tennis podcast you need.
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