Wimbledon 2026 – Day 11: Muchová Saves Match Point to Deny Gauff, Nosková Sets Up Historic All-Czech Final
Day 11 of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships belonged to Czech tennis as Karolina Muchová and Linda Nosková won contrasting women's singles semi-finals to book places in the final. Muchová produced one of the greatest comebacks seen on Centre Court, saving a match point before overcoming Coco Gauff, while Nosková delivered another composed display to defeat Marta Kostyuk, ensuring the first all-Czech women's singles final at Wimbledon in the Open Era.
The match of the day saw Karolina Muchová outlast fourth seed Coco Gauff 6-1, 1-6, 7-6(12-10) in a breathtaking contest lasting nearly three hours. Muchová dominated the opening set with her trademark variety, mixing sliced backhands, drop shots and precise volleys to race through 6-1. Gauff responded emphatically in the second, raising the pace of her groundstrokes and breaking serve three times to level the match with a commanding 6-1 set of her own.
The deciding set developed into a classic. Gauff appeared on the verge of reaching her maiden Wimbledon final when she earned a match point at 6-5 on the Muchová serve, but the Czech produced a fearless winner to escape. The ensuing championship tie-break swung repeatedly as both players produced outstanding shot-making under immense pressure. Muchová eventually converted her third match point, sealing a dramatic 12-10 tie-break to reach her first Wimbledon final. Her victory ended Gauff's memorable run, which had included victories over Jessica Pegula and Belinda Bencic, while Muchová became the first Czech woman to reach the Wimbledon singles final since Petra Kvitová.
Later on Centre Court, ninth seed Linda Nosková continued her outstanding tournament by defeating Ukraine's Marta Kostyuk 6-4, 6-4. The 21-year-old Czech displayed remarkable maturity throughout the one-hour, 35-minute contest, serving consistently and keeping her unforced errors to a minimum.
Nosková secured the decisive break late in the opening set after capitalising on a series of forehand errors from Kostyuk. The second set remained closely contested until 4-4, when the Czech again broke serve with aggressive returning before confidently serving out the match. Her composed performance earned her a maiden Grand Slam final appearance and completed an extraordinary fortnight in which she defeated Madison Keys, Elise Mertens and Kostyuk without dropping a set after the fourth round.
For Kostyuk, the defeat ended the finest Grand Slam run of her career. The Ukrainian had enjoyed victories over Jasmine Paolini and Ashlyn Krueger to reach the semi-finals, but she was unable to find answers to Nosková's consistency and intelligent tactical play. Despite the disappointment, her run to the last four is expected to propel her to a career-high world ranking.
Although Coco Gauff fell just short of the final, the American can take great encouragement from reaching her maiden Wimbledon semi-final. Throughout the tournament she demonstrated tremendous resilience, winning several three-set encounters and further establishing herself as one of the most consistent performers on the WTA Tour.
Day 11 concluded with a landmark achievement for Czech tennis. Muchová and Nosková will contest the first all-Czech Wimbledon women's singles final, guaranteeing the country another Wimbledon champion and continuing the rich legacy established by Jana Novotná and Petra Kvitová. While Muchová brings experience and all-court creativity into the championship match, Nosková has been one of the tournament's most consistent performers and will bid to capture her maiden Grand Slam title. Attention now turns to Day 12, when the men's semi-finals will feature defending champion Jannik Sinner against Novak Djokovic, while Britain's surprise package Arthur Fery faces Alexander Zverev for a place in the Wimbledon final.
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