Wimbledon 2024 day three: Live scores, order of play and updates

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Tiebreak: Alcaraz 5-3 Vukic

Vukic sends Alcaraz into the deep off his forehand, and he trips into sending a forehand straight into the net.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 5-2 Vukic

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 5-1 Vukic

Out come the grunts, as Alcaraz knuckles down and Vukic again is caught in the player’s unbeatable forehand.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 4-1 Vukic

What a forehand winner! After tempting Vukic with a slow-moving drift of a slice, Alcaraz smacks his shot well past his opponent to put daylight between them.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 3-1 Vukic

Taking his time to serve, Alcaraz goes into business mode, firing towering forehands at the Australian.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 2-1 Vukic

This time, Alcaraz can force a rally, and Vukic sprays his forehand way over the line to put the Spaniard ahead.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 1-1 Vukic

Vukic says, right back at you pal, and take the point in the same style.

Tiebreak: Alcaraz 1-0 Vukic

Vukic hits long off Alcaraz’s powerful serve.

Alcaraz breaks! Alcaraz 6-6 Vukic*

He may be down, but he’s by no means out, first sending a rocket back over the net in response to Vukic’s serve for love-15, then winning the next point when time slows for him to reach a dropshot on the left of the court and sneak it past a shocked Vukic.

An inelegant double-handed backhand in mid-court into the net allows Vukic in, but scampering up on the next point, Alcaraz’s clean backhand winner pushes him up to break point.

‘Come on!’ he roars, when Vukic is next to find the net, and he’s able to force the tiebreak.

Here we go!

Vukic breaks! Alcaraz* 5-6 Vukic

Alcaraz flings a too-casual forehand into the net after being unable to make a challenge stick, 15-30. He’s looking a little off-beat now, having been shaken out of cruise control, and the crowd attempts to gee him up when he shanks another forehand too long under pressure.

An ace lifts the spirits, 30-40, but the ensuing double fault decidedly does not.

Quite unexpectedly, Alcaraz is behind and Vukic will now try and serve out the set.

Alcaraz 5-5 Vukic*

The pair trade artful slices instead of big hitting, but Vukic’s final backhand can’t clear the netcord, and puts Alcaraz 30-15 up.

Infuriated when he can’t hold onto it after overcooking his return cheaply, Alcaraz holds a frustrated hand up in the air, willing himself to focus.

Vukic can hop one step ahead of him when another forehand heads towards the sidelines, and then an aggressive-looking Vukic prompts another mishit from him to claim the hold.

Impressive levelling from the Australian.

Vukic breaks! Alcaraz* 5-4 Vukic

Wasting no time, Vukic dives headfirst into Alcaraz’s serve and provides some feisty responses to streak 30-love ahead. Pushing back fire against fire, the Australian forces Alcaraz into a hasty backhand which he ploughs into the net for love-40.

And here’s the break back! Catching Alcaraz at the back of the court, Vukic goes for the drop-shot (I think) and it’s a pearl, snaring the netcord and landing impossibly short. I do think he meant that, if perhaps not as dramatically.

Regardless, he’s responded!

Alcaraz 5-3 Vukic*

Vukic can finally stop the rot on his service game as Alcaraz’s focus dips somewhat after his three-game run.

Alcaraz* 5-2 Vukic

Alcaraz has an immense talent for making his tennis look positively charmed. Things that absolutely shouldn’t be going in, finding the line, and he shows this off to great effect for 40-15, leaving Vukic scrambling at the back of the court to return wildly, and inaccurately.

Vukic can’t keep up with Alcaraz in the rallies, looking stretched and a little fraught, and with a final unfocused forehand, Alcaraz pulls off his hold.

Alcaraz breaks! Alcaraz 4-2 Vukic*

What a point! No one thinks Alcaraz’s backhand, desperately struck on the run is going in, until it does, and in triumphant, he points a finger up to the sky in recognition of the awestruck crowd.

Another backhand, this time a leaping volley at the net, is a far more obvious winner, and hands him a love-40 lead.

Vukic climbs back in and creeps to 30-40, desperate to stay on level footing, but when he stretches to smash Alcaraz, his attempt at deuce lands just wide of the lines.

Alcaraz has his break – and the way he started the game, it seemed inevitable.

Alcaraz* 3-2 Vukic

The champion sends a stinging forehand right onto the sideline at the back of the court for 30-15, looking every inch a world beater, but is wonkier when it comes time for him to try a little serve and volley at 40-15, and his ensuing shot lands squarely in the netting.

But as much as Vukic would like to steal a march, there’s little signs of Alcaraz’s game being rocked, and with an ace, he pulls off the hold.

Things are well balanced. But Alcaraz is unlikely to blink first.

Alcaraz 2-2 Vukic*

Alcaraz gets on the front foot with an elegant slice over the net which Vukic can’t sprint to meet, but he makes a rare forehand mistake to allow the Australian a toehold in the game.

Vukic is put under pressure in the final rally, but responds well, misdirecting Alcaraz on the baseline before sending a flying winner past him to complete his hold.

Alcaraz* 2-1 Vukic

The crowd oohs and ahhs in big-top style under the roof as Vukic moves well to cling on in an early breakneck rally, before wafting a dropshot over the net which Alcaraz can’t hoover up.

But the 21-year-old wrenches back the lead with two aces, 30-15, and sets up game point after receiving two helping hands from the netcord before Vukic hits long.

Alcaraz is tested a little more than in his opening service game, but his hold is a straightforward one. No surprises just yet, thank you.

Alcaraz 1-1 Vukic*

Vukic whips a smooth, flat forehand over the net low which Alcaraz can’t scoop up, instead firing his return into the netting for 40-love.

The Spaniard can climb into the points when his opponent squanders a forehand, but Vukic is able to keep the pressure up on Alcaraz to hold cleanly.

First set: Alcaraz* 1-0 Vukic

Vukic doesn’t do badly at all with Alcaraz’s opening serve, equal to it and nimble on the baseline to send a backhand winner down the line and past Alcaraz’s grasp.

But Alcaraz gets off the mark next, before serving up an unreturnable to put himself 30-15 up. Vukic clubs his next backhand return long, before Alcaraz cleans up with an ace.

The players are out on court

And a huge cheer goes up for Alcaraz, easily one of the most popular players of his generation, who rewards the fans in the stands with a smile.

Not really one for visible pre-match nerves is the 21-year-old.

Gauff shows qualifier how things work in SW19

At the tender age of 20, this is the world No2’s fifth Wimbledon, six years on from beating Venus Williams and announcing her presence in the most dramatic style.

With the same number of Grand Slam participations as years on this planet, Gauff made light work of the qualifier Anca Todoni, 6-2 6-1 on No1 Court.

She’ll play the winner of Kartal-Burel (currenly the Briton, who is a set to the good and 3-1 up in the second) in the next round.

Next up on No1 Court…

It’s the champion incumbent himself, Carlos Alcaraz, against world No69 Aleksandar Vukic.

The Spaniard breezed through his Centre Court opener – as is his right as last year’s winner – against qualifier Mark Lajal, he of the impressive Wimbledon trophy topper-esque hairstyle.

By contrast, Vukic was taken the distance by Ofner, and will be preparing for equally choppy waters today.

Don’t cry because it’s over, etc.

Instead, you can reminisce about Murray’s great Wimbledon outings, via Matthew Lambert’s insights below.

We may have been robbed of a final singles match before time, but hopefully his doubles showings can bring his time in SW19 to a close with some pomp and occasion.

Four years ago seems like a distant memory

But Vukic will hope Alcaraz is haunted by their one unofficial meeting in 2020’s Australian Open qualifiers.

Vukic holds the honour of being the only Australian player to have ever beaten the Wimbledon champion, which he did 4-6, 7-6, 6-3 battling for a main draw spot in Melbourne.

It might be harder to take the Spaniard in three sets now.

BRITWATCH: Qualifiers battle for round-three spots

After seeing out a Brit-packed first round, the cohort is notably thinner for the second round, but there are two women’s players worth keeping an eye on due to step up later in the day.

Both Sonay Kartal and Yuriko Lily Miyazaki came through qualifiers to book their spot in SW19 this year, with the former defeating impressively despatching No29 seed Sonya Cirstea in the first round.

They will play Clara Burel of France and Eastbourne champion Daria Kasatkina respectively, with Dan Evans finishing off his rain-delayed match against Alejandro Tabilo on Court 12.

As things stand, Kartal leads Burel 5-2 in the first set.

In the biggest news of the day so far, a surprise announcement which eager portmanteau-watchers have already dubbed ‘Murrucanu’ (yikes).

The news comes just one day after Murray’s devastating withdrawal from his final singles draw. But along with a partnership in the men’s doubles with his brother Jamie, Wimbledon clearly hasn’t seen the last of their two-time champion.

You can read more from Mail Sport’s Matthew Lambert, below.

Good afternoon!

Hello and welcome to Mail Sport’s live blog, coming to you from No1 Court on a thoroughly miserable Wednesday afternoon – weatherwise, of course. Would it be a British summer without it?

Play has been stop-start on the outdoor courts, but under the roof on the two biggest show courts, things are well and truly underway.

There’s an especially good card on No1 Court, as Carlos Alcaraz continues his trophy defence against Aleksandar Vukic, before home favourite Emma Raducanu attempts to bypass Elise Mertens in the final match of the evening.

Elsewhere, there’s Naomi Osaka, Daniil Medvedev, Jannik Sinner and Matteo Berrettini to come on Centre Court, and a slew of Brits around the ground.

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