Russia’s Daniil Medvedev advances to semifinals at Wimbledon

Sports July 12, 2023, 23:01

The Russian tennis player prevailed in five sets

LONDON, July 12. /TASS/. Russian tennis star Daniil Medvedev downed American Christopher Eubanks in the quarterfinals of the 2023 Wimbledon tennis championship on Wednesday.

Medvedev (No. 3 seed at the tournament) prevailed in five sets, 6-4, 1-6, 4-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-1, over the unseeded Eubanks.

The Russian tennis player is moving on to Wimbledon’s semifinals for the first time in his career, having reached its fourth round in 2021. In the semifinal, Medvedev will play the winner of the match between Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz (No. 1 seed) and Denmark’s Holger Rune (No. 6 seed).

Medvedev, 27, is currently third in the ATP Rankings List. In 2022, Medvedev was the number one ranked tennis player in the world for 16 weeks. He is the 2021 US Open Champion and has 20 ATP tournament titles under his belt. He has won five of those 20 titles this year. Also, in 2021, he won the Davis Cup for the Russian national team as well as the ATP Cup.

This season’s third Grand Slam tennis tournament, Wimbledon, kicked off on July 3 and unlike last year’s event, Russian players were allowed to compete, but under certain conditions.

The Wimbledon tournament, the most prestigious out of the four Grand Slam tournaments, has been held annually in London since 1877. This year’s Wimbledon runs between July 3 and 16 and has $56.3 million in prize money up for grabs.

In 2022, Wimbledon organizers, the AELTC and the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA), announced a decision to bar Russian and Belarusian players from participating in the 2022 edition of the tournament, citing Russia’s ongoing special military operation in Ukraine as the reason for the ban.

This year, Wimbledon organizers - the AELTC and the LTA - announced a decision to allow Russian and Belarusian players to participate in the tournament as neutrals and under several conditions.

Specifically, athletes from the two countries should not be "actively supporting" Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine, must compete under a neutral status and must not be financed by the governments of Russia or Belarus, or by state-run companies from either country.

Following the ban of Russian and Belarusian players from Wimbledon last year, the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) and the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) announced decisions to strip Wimbledon of ranking points due to its move to ban Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing at the 2022 Grand Slam tournament in London, as it violated the fundamental principles stipulating that players of any nationality can enter tournaments based on their merits and without any type of discrimination. President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Thomas Bach also criticized at that time Wimbledon organizers’ decision to bar players from Russia and Belarus.

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