Mirra Andreeva Falls in Bad Homburg Wimbledon Warm‑up
**Mirra Andreeva** was beaten 6‑4, 3‑6, 6‑7(4) on 4 July 2026 in Bad Homburg, her first competitive appearance since lifting the French Open crown. The Russian star fell to Germany’s **Noma Noha Akugue**, ending a 12‑match winning streak and raising questions ahead of Wimbledon.
Andreeva entered the Bad Homburg Open as the top seed, eager to fine‑tune her grass‑court game. The opening set slipped away after a double fault at 4‑4, and Akugue seized the break to close it 6‑4. Andreeva rallied, breaking twice in the second set and forcing a tiebreak, but the German held her nerve to claim it 7‑5. The final set was a marathon; Andreeva saved two match points at 5‑5 before the tiebreak decided the match, with Akugue edging it 7‑4.
The loss interrupts a meteoric rise that saw Andreeva capture the French Open title on 2 June 2026, becoming the youngest Russian Grand Slam champion in the Open Era. A defeat on grass highlights the adaptation challenge many clay specialists face. Her ranking, currently No. 4, remains secure, but the early exit could affect seedings if she cannot gather points at Wimbledon.
Andreeva served 12 aces but also double‑faulted eight times, a stark contrast to her usual 2‑3 errors per match. Akugue’s aggressive baseline play forced Andreeva into defensive positions, especially on the backhand side. The Russian’s forehand winners dropped from an average of 15 per set in Paris to nine in Bad Homburg, indicating a possible fatigue factor after a busy summer schedule.
The Wimbledon draw opens on 1 July 2026, just three days after the Bad Homburg final. Andreeva will face **Jodie Burrage** in the first round, a player who upset a top‑10 seed in the previous edition. If Andreeva can rebound quickly, she may still reach the later stages, but the grass‑court transition will be under intense scrutiny. Coaches have hinted at a brief recovery period before Wimbledon practice begins, hoping to restore confidence and sharpen serve placement.
Andreeva’s team will likely review the match footage, focusing on reducing double faults and improving her net approaches. A strong showing at Wimbledon could cement her status as a versatile Grand Slam contender beyond clay.
The tennis world will watch closely as the young Russian steps onto Centre Court, eager to prove that a single loss does not define a season.