Renata Zarazua vs Emma Raducanu – Wimbledon 2024: Live Score, updates

Zarazua* 5-4 Raducanu

As Raducanu falls 30-love behind, the crowd sends a wellspring of support her way, and the former US Open champion responds immediately, with a springy forehand winner.

However, again Raducanu hits long on her next point and the Mexican’s brutal spin on her chipped backhand tricks her into firing into the next to confirm Zarazua’s hold.

Now, it’s the lucky loser who has the advantage.

Zarazua breaks! Zarazua 4-4 Raducanu*

Raducanu looks a little off-kilter after Zarazua’s straightforward hold, and quickly falls behind after trying to hit a springy forehand down the line – only for it to fly out of play.

She’s able to get into the points at 15-30 with a backhand again targeted onto Zarazua’s forehand, but can’t string together a run of points when she’s drawn forward to the net and fails to bury a winner on the other side of it.

Zarazua is next to play her forehand into the net, throwing Raducanu a liftline, but Raducanu is again a little too powerful and a shade too imprecise – she can’t find the line, and Zarazua has her first break to put things back level at 4-all.

Zarazua* 3-4 Raducanu

After a spell on the outs, Zarazua completes her hold with minimal fuss, and is able to shake Raducanu’s momentum – even if not entirely loose.

It’s such an interesting clash for both players, with Raducanu having been preparing for a different prospect entirely, and Zarazua making her debut on the tournament’s biggest court, against a home favourite.

Zarazua 2-4 Raducanu*

Raducanu with heroic effort manages to make it back after being on net-duty for Zarazua’s aerial challenge, but her return can only find the netting for 15-30. To erase the memory of her mishit, Raducanu on serve volleys a ripping forehand past Zarazua to level things, before forcing an error from her deep-sitting to bring up game point.

She pulls off the necessary hold to skip two games ahead – this will be a crucial game for Zarazua coming up if she’s to stay afloat.

Raducanu breaks! Zarazua* 2-3 Raducanu

Centre Court is filling up, and with that comes the turning up of the home’s support volume. After watching her struggle for focus on her serve, the crowd are hungry for a break.

Save one mistep, Raducanu powers to 40-15 when Zarazua fumbled into the net at close range, and with a final backhand from the baseline, she can only do so again.

Raducanu has the first break of the match, and will only look for greater dominance.

Zarazua 2-2 Raducanu*

After a series of lovely backhands at the net, Zarazua gets lucky and one snares the cord to leap over Raducanu’s head and land beyond her for a bashful opening point.

Raducanu’s retort is to push her back to the baseline and fire at her until she blinks, which Zarazua does with a shaky forehand which flies out as she runs up the court.

After hitting too long to make it 30-all, Raducanu lets out a long cry of relief after Zarazua does the same, moments after being spurred on with cries of ‘come on, Emma!’ from the crowd.

At 40-all, after another mishit, Zarazua wins the advantage, on the brink of the match’s first break. After a barnstorming serve, Raducanu smacks a backhand across court which is called out – only for the Briton to call in HawkEve. And it’s in! By a whisker.

Raducanu’s advatage comes with a powerfully struck winner at the net, and another fist-bump. Again looking frightening as she switches between crosscourt forehands and backhands, Raducanu holds when Zarazua hits long.

Nervy, but she got her hold in the end.

Zarazua* 2-1 Raducanu

Growing in confidence, Zarazua lures Raducanu up the court, before sending an ungettable winning streaming past her backhand to reach game point.

Raducanu at the net tries to smack her own winner past an on-rushing Zarazua, but her forehand goes a hair too long. Another early hold for the Wimbledon debutant.

Zarazua 1-1 Raducanu*

It’s Zarazua who claims the longest rally of the match so far, as Raducanu whisks her across the baseline, the Mexican looks composed and capable. In the end, she outfoxes the 21-year-old with a teasing dropshot which Raducanu attempts to tap over at close range with equal levity – only to find the net.

She then has pin-point accuracy to claim 15-30, with Raducanu only able to watch her winner floating over the top of her visor… and land squarely in, instead of out.

With a fist bump, Raducanu’s back all square at 30-all after push Zarazua back to the baseline, and for the second point in a row, the Mexican’s shot fails to clear the net-cord, for 40-30.

After a testing start to the game, Raducanu’s hold is a straightforward one, after a flurry of good-looking forehands.

Zarazua* 1-0 Raducanu

Zarazua’s opening serve is soft-balled, and it takes very little indeed for the former champion to smack a down-the-line forehand winner skipping past the lucky loser.

The debutant climbs onto the board when that forehand looks shakier and goes long on the second point, and gets both feet on the ground after failing to fall for Raducanu’s dropshot ploy, which ends up with the Briton’s backhand finding the net.

Neither player looks settled from the off, and but at 40-30, a spinning sliced backhand allows Zarazua to hold. Deep breaths. First test passed.

Raducanu wins the toss

She’s opted to receive, as the players complete their final warm-ups while the fractious crowd settles.

Mood on Centre Court

British summertime is temporarily on hiatus as the rain has held off but the sun is firmly behind the clouds and there’s the note of a chill in the air.

Both players walk onto the court to ringing applause from the scattered crowds, and they’re warming up now.

We’ll be underway in just about three minutes.

Conditions seem primed…

The 21-year-old’s run-up a year after missing out on the competition altogether has been a promising one. After struggling to get to grips with clay, Raducanu reached the semi-finals on grass at Nottingham before a narrow defeat to eventual winner Katie Boulter, and the quarters at Eastbourne against Daria Kasatkina – who also went on to win the title on the south coast.

She also claimed the biggest scalp of her career, beating world No5 Jessica Pegula in her first (ever!) win against a top-10 player.

A comfortable way to start a competition where Raducanu would like expectations to be kept manageably low.

Good afternoon!

Hello and welcome to Centre Court, where we are poised and ready for the first British hope to step onto the hallowed turf – Emma Raducanu, up in just a few minutes time for her first-round tie with Renata Zarazua.

Without having hit a tennis ball, Raducanu’s morning has – at least on the surface – appeared charmed. First came news that the former British No1’s opponent Ekaterina Alexandrova had withdrawn due to illness, setting up a tie with a lucky loser ranked 98th in the world.

Then, another spell of possible good fortune, with the disappointing withdrawal of world No3 Aryna Sabalenka. The Belarusian has been struggling with a rare shoulder injury, and found her final practice session on Monday morning too much to take.

Sabalenka was possibly the biggest pitfall awaiting Raducanu in what now looks like a very open section of the draw indeed. That is, if Raducanu can pass her first test, on the biggest stage of all.

Play has just wrapped up between defending men’s champion Carlos Alcaraz and Mark Lajal, with the Spaniard winning in a not-as-straight-forward-as-it-first-appears straight sets victory against the Estonian qualifier.

Not long to go now!

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