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Emma Raducanu has pulled out of her mixed doubles match with Andy Murray at Wimbledon later on Saturday.
On Friday the 2021 US Open champion, 21, channelled the spirit of her New York fairytale to inflict more Grand Slam misery on Maria Sakkari and keep her SW19 singles dream alive.
But citing stiffness in her right wrist, Orpington’s Raducanu withdrew from the mixed doubles against China’s Zhang Shuai and El Salvador’s Marcelo Arevalo, meaning Murray’s Wimbledon career is over.
Raducanu had beaten world No.9 Sakkari in the semi-finals on her way to that historic Flushing Meadows triumph and emulated those thrilling exploits with a fluent 6-2, 6-3 triumph under the Centre Court roof.
Before withdrawing from the mixed doubles, she said of playing alongside Murray: "I'll just take direction and follow his lead.
"I think I have to do a crash course in doubles - but I'll have fun regardless and, of course, I'll cherish the opportunity because it's just such an honour.
“It's just an amazing opportunity to be able to play with him. It's something that I'm going to cherish.
“I love playing on the big courts. For me, I thrive on such occasions, on big stages - it's something that I play tennis for. I just love the feeling of it, competing, especially here in front of a home crowd. It is really amazing.”
Raducanu bounced around Centre Court on Friday to deliver a dazzling display and secure a straight-sets triumph that catapulted her into the last 16.
That equals her run to the same stage when she burst onto the scene three years ago and next she will face New Zealand qualifier Lulu Sun, where she will go in as the red-hot favourite to advance to the quarter-finals.
Raducanu played with the energy, verve and swagger that saw her go all the way in the Big Apple three years ago and with the draw now opening up in her favour - she would not face another seed until the semi-finals - few would bet against her threatening to do something similarly special once again.
Asked where that ranked in the most fun she’d had on court since that remarkable Flushing Meadows triumph, she said: “Number two, for sure.
“I mean, even the points I was losing, the long points or certain situations, even when I lost the point, I found myself smiling or laughing to myself because I was just enjoying competing.
“I was just enjoying the battle, I was just appreciating the good tennis that was being played by my opponent who is of course going to come out with some amazing points because, yeah, she's class.
“Tennis is pretty brutal in the way you have to enjoy it tonight and then tomorrow you're already thinking about the next one - it's just like that.
“You can win the tournament but you can lose first round the next week - it's the sport. I'm just trying to cherish every moment I have here.”
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