By the time Linda Noskova sat down with a towel draped over her head after blocking the crowd noise with fingers in her ears, Centre Court had already started travelling backwards through time.Five championship points had come and gone. The crowd that had spent an hour watching a one-sided final was suddenly roaring for Karolina Muchova’s escape act. A young Czech who had been serving for the Wimbledon title at 5-2 in the second set was trying to block out the weight of what might be happening.It was difficult not to think of Jana Novotna. An image deep in Wimbledon folklore is Novotna weeping on the shoulder of the Duchess of Kent after letting the 1993 final slip away from an unassailable position against Steffi Graf. Thirty-three years later, another Czech woman stood on the brink of writing her own chapter in the Championships’ catalogue of heartbreak. Instead, Noskova changed the ending. She steadied herself and came back out to defeat Muchova 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 to win her first grand slam title. What had threatened to become a cautionary tale became an initiation, with Noskova fighting to avoid Novotna’s tragedy; instead inheriting Wimbledon itself.For those anxious minutes, Noskova was not really playing Muchova. She was playing against the version of Wimbledon that never forgets. Centre Court has a habit of preserving triumph and trauma, and the fear was that Noskova’s name would for ever be attached to the afternoon she let the title slip away, just as Novotna’s was for so many years after 1993.Linda Noskova takes shelter under a towel on her way to Wimbledon glory. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty ImagesThat is the inheritance that mattered. Not the passing of the trophy from one Czech player to another – whichever woman won, it would remain in Czech hands – but which part of Czech Wimbledon history Noskova would join. Would she become a chapter in the country’s catalogue of near-misses, or another name alongside Novotna’s redemption, Kvitova’s brilliance, Vondrousova’s breakthrough and Krejcikova’s surprise triumph? By surviving her collapse, she chose the latter.The Czech Republic has a population of about 11 million. London alone is not far short of that figure. Yet for the third time in four years, a Czech woman walked away from the All England Club holding the Venus Rosewater Dish. Marketa Vondrousova won in 2023. Barbora Krejcikova followed in 2024. Now Noskova has added her name to the lineage. Before them came Petra Kvitova, whose thunderous left-handed game inspired a generation of Czech children, including Noskova herself. Before Kvitova came Novotna, whose redemption in 1998 remains a Wimbledon classic. And hovering above them all is Martina Navratilova, the Prague-born grass-court queen whose record of nine singles titles still remains untouched. Every generation leaves something for the next. Novotna left belief. Kvitova left ambition. Vondrousova and Krejcikova proved the tradition was still alive. On Saturday, Noskova accepted the baton.Muchova and Noskova became close during the Paris Olympic Games in 2024, spending weeks together as partners and narrowly missing out on a medal. Their friendship had been one of the most charming subplots of an all-Czech final; both spoke warmly about the other throughout the fortnight. Muchova, eight years older and playing in her second major final, appeared to be drawing on all the experience gathered through injuries, near-misses and years of waiting for another chance. Noskova looked uncannily calm for someone contesting the biggest match of her life. Until she was not.At 6-2, 5-2, Noskova was two points from the title. Then Muchova began saving championship points. The crowd sensed a comeback. Noskova double-faulted on her fourth match point. Muchova clawed her way back. Five games in a row disappeared from Noskova’s side of the scoreboard. Many players would have – and have – unravelled completely. She broke early in the third set, regained the rhythm that had deserted her and, fittingly, finished the match with another unreturnable serve before collapsing on to the grass in triumph and relief. Afterwards, Muchova said the line that captured the strange intimacy of the occasion. “Linda, my ex-friend,” she joked, before congratulating the new champion.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionKarolina Muchova joked that Linda Noskova was now her ex-friend after losing the Wimbledon final to her compatriot. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPACzech tennis had spent the fortnight celebrating itself; in the final, it had to choose a new standard-bearer. The same Kvitova whose 2011 Wimbledon victory first made young Noskova notice tennis was sitting in the Royal Box watching her successor emerge. Kvitova had been 21 when she won her first Wimbledon title. Noskova is 21 now.History does not always repeat itself at Wimbledon, but it has a habit of rhyming. What began with Novotna’s redemption, flourished through Kvitova’s brilliance and was sustained by Vondrousova and Krejcikova has become something closer to inheritance. The Venus Rosewater Dish keeps finding Czech hands. On Saturday, after flirting with the cruellest twist imaginable, Noskova accepted her place in the family line.
Noskova avoids Wimbledon catalogue of heartbreak and joins line of Czech greats | Yara El-Shaboury
After courting disaster in the second set, the new women’s singles champion emulated compatriots Jana Novotna, Petra Kvitova, Marketa Vondrousova and Barbora Krejcikova










