Tomic into final 16; Stosur out

Jun 30, 2013, updated May 09, 2025

Bernard Tomic outfoxed ninth-seeded Frenchman Richard Gasquet 7-6 (9-7) 5-7 7-5 7-6 (7-5) on Centre Court on Saturday to reach the last 16 for the second time.

He was the only Australian to reach the second week of singles at the grass-court grand slam after 14th seed Samantha Stosur lost 4-6 6-2 6-1 to 23rd-seeded German Sabine Lisicki.

Tomic’s impressive performance set up a last-16 showdown with seventh-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych on Monday, with the winner likely to meet top seed Novak Djokovic in the quarter-finals.

World No.59 Tomic is competing at Wimbledon without the court-side support of his father John, who had his ATP credentials suspended after being charged with assaulting Bernard’s former training partner Thomas Drouet during the Madrid Masters.

John Tomic has also been banned from attending Wimbledon as a spectator and, although Bernard is now comfortable with the situation, he didn’t take kindly to questions suggesting he’d be better off without his dad.

“It’s just something that shouldn’t be asked, I think,” Tomic said in another post-match conference dominated by talk of his father.

“You don’t say that … `because your father’s not here, you’re doing very well, do you need him, don’t you need him’.

“That’s not an appropriate question to ask because he’s my dad.

“You know, it’s family. I’m going to stick by that.”

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Tomic appeared to relish a big atmosphere, with the match scheduled first up on Centre Court.

And some 15,000 supporters were treated to an entertaining match as Tomic was forced to call on his full range of skills against the crafty Frenchman.

In stark contrast to his opening encounters against big-hitting Americans Sam Querrey and James Blake, it was more an exercise in tactics and touch and Tomic showed great composure and focus at key moments.

“It’s a huge win for me,” Tomic said.

“I played very well today and I needed to against Richard.”

In the match following on Centre Court, Samantha Stosur blew a one-set lead and a chance to reach the last 16 at Wimbledon for the first time.

Still, she was encouraged by matching her best performance at the grand slam on her least-favoured surface.

“I would have loved an opportunity to play in the fourth round but at least today again I have to be happy with the way I played overall,” Stosur said.

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