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Princess of Wales consoles Wimbledon runner-up Ons Jabeur after her defeat

Kate presented the Tunisian and Marketa Vondrousova with their trophies after the latter claimed a 6-4 6-4 victory.

Ellie Ng
Saturday 15 July 2023 12:33 EDT
The Princess of Wales consoled Ons Jabeur after her defeat (John Walton/PA)
The Princess of Wales consoled Ons Jabeur after her defeat (John Walton/PA) (PA Wire)

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The Princess of Wales consoled runner-up Ons Jabeur after she was defeated in the Wimbledon ladiesā€™ singles final.

As a patron of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Kate presented Jabeur and Czech player Marketa Vondrousova with their trophies after the latter claimed a 6-4 6-4 victory.

The princess rubbed Jabeurā€™s arm before the Tunisian player broke down in tears in front of a supportive crowd.

The runner-up joked in her on-court interview that she was ā€œgoing to look ugly in the photosā€ before sobering up and adding: ā€œI think this is the most painful loss of my career.ā€

Kate joined in with the applause after Jabeur continued: ā€œIā€™m not going to give up and Iā€™m going to come back stronger.ā€

She hugged and spoke with Jabeur after the presentation was finished.

Asked in a press conference what the princess said to her, Jabeur told reporters: ā€œSame thing after last year ā€“ to encourage me to be strong, to come back and win a Grand Slam, win a Wimbledon.

ā€œObviously she was very nice. She didnā€™t know if she wants to give me a hug or not. I toldher hugs are always welcome from me. That was a very nice moment and sheā€™s always nice to me.ā€

The princess also congratulated Vondrousova on her victory, telling her to ā€œenjoy this momentā€.

Kate sat next to tennis great Billie Jean King to watch the match.

Wearing a pale green ensemble from Self-Portrait, Kate arrived over an hour before the match began and chatted with Wimbledon staff, including 14-year-old ball girl Tiffany and 17-year-old ball boy Abhi, at the Playersā€™ Lawn.

She told a maintenance manager at the grounds he had ā€œsaved the dayā€ after fixing a leak in the Court One shop the day before the tournament began.

Billy Lewis told the PA news agency he was surprised Kate had been told about his efforts, which saved ā€œthousands of pounds worth of merchandiseā€.

Asked what Kate said to him, Mr Lewis said: ā€œShe said I heard you saved the day, in terms of a leak?ā€

Speaking to representatives from the British Army, London Ambulance Service, London Fire Brigade and Metropolitan Police, Kate recalled her own time spent queueing to get into the championship as a child, saying: ā€œI loved it when I was younger. It was part of coming to see Wimbledon and the anticipation.ā€

She also spoke with Jack Wakelin, a clinical team manager at the London Ambulance Service, about the dangers of dehydration when spectators do not drink enough water and ā€œforget not to drink too much Pimmā€™sā€.

The princess met Philippa George, a representative of the Riding For The Disabled Association charity, who tossed the coin for the final.

Kate asked about her Wimbledon-themed nail polish and whether Ms George had been practising for the toss.

The princess told her she was ā€œsuch an inspiration to so many peopleā€ and was glad she had been recognised.

Ms George, 27, told PA after the meeting: ā€œIt was so special. She was asking me about my nails and talked to me about how I like horses.

ā€œShe was really happy that I was here. It means so much.ā€

Kate had a rain-hit visit on the tournamentā€™s second day when she took shelter under an umbrella on Court 18 while watching British number one Katie Boulter.

Later that day, she was joined in the Royal Box by former champion Roger Federer.

Fans vented their disappointment on Saturday morning after organisers closed the Wimbledon queue due to a yellow weather warning for wind, in place from 9am to 11.59pm.

Kathy Yates, 54, and her son, Daniel Yates, 27, were turned away at the gates when they tried to queue for ground passes.

The pair had flown from Aberdeen and stayed in a hotel on Friday night for a ā€œonce-in-a-lifetime opportunityā€ to watch the tennis.

Ms Yates said: ā€œWe have spent well over Ā£300. Two of our other family members have got tickets in the ballot.

ā€œWe all came down together. We have been queuing since 7am this morning.

ā€œWe have been planning for this for a long time. We donā€™t often get together. I have one son who lives in Edinburgh.

ā€œWe made this as a family get-together and half the family can get in and half the family canā€™t.ā€

Tiago Veloso, 48, and his 15-year-old son Vincente arrived at Wimbledon at about 8am to queue for tickets.

Mr Veloso said: ā€œWe came yesterday. It was terrible weather. The rain cancelled all the games and we came today to see the ground games, the under-14s and juniors, because (my son) wanted to watch.

ā€œI donā€™t understand, yesterday was the worst of the weather. I donā€™t understand the decision.

ā€œIt is a very frustrating morning. We had a lot of expectations because the weather yesterday was terrible and we were not expecting this today.ā€

Met Office spokesperson Nicola Maxey told PA: ā€œThere is a (yellow wind warning) on Saturday covering Wimbledon and may well impact the competition.

ā€œThat will bring blustery conditions and, again, rain and showers are expected.ā€

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