Karolína Muchová’s Wimbledon 2026 campaign ended in a heartbreak after her younger compatriot Linda Nosková secured a hard-fought 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 victory in the final. Noskova, however, had opportunities to secure the championship in straight sets, but her opponent didn’t go down with a fight.
During the post-match press conference, Muchová opened up about how she felt on court during the three-set rollercoaster.
Karolína Muchová Loses Second Grand Slam Final at Wimbledon
Muchová was chasing her career’s first Grand Slam title at Wimbledon after a failed attempt against Iga Świątek at the French Open three years ago. Interestingly, the final in Paris concluded with a similar 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 score in Świątek’s favor.
The Czech star entered the final on a 10-match winning streak, having clinched her first grass-court title in Bad Homburg just days before Wimbledon. She opened her run at SW19 with straight-set wins against Anastasia Zakharova, Zhang Shuai, and Mananchaya Sawangkaew. She then sent 2024 champion Barbora Krejčíková packing in three sets before comfortably beating an in-form Naomi Osaka.
In the semifinal, Muchová saved a match point against Coco Gauff to advance to the title clash. On Saturday, she gave a peaking Nosková a run for her money after the opponent established a 6-2, 5-2 lead and produced five match point opportunities over the next few games.
The 29-year-old turned the fortunes in her favor to steal the second set. “I started really slow today, and on the other hand, Linda started really strong,” she said after the match.
While addressing her dramatic turnaround in the second set, she said, “It took a lot of power and strength out of me to get back in that second set. I gave it my all to get back. The people were cheering on me. I felt it. I felt the support. I felt the momentum in the second set, and I turned it around. That was definitely nice that it happened. It was tough.”
Muchová let slip break point opportunities in the first game of the third set and was broken in the very next game by Nosková. The 21-year-old held her lead this time and served out the match without any hiccups. “Unfortunately, then the start of the third kind of slipped through my fingers,” Muchová admitted.
“Today was one of my worst matches from this tournament. I played better in the other matches. She played really well and made it tough for me,” she said at one point during the press conference.
Muchová, however, felt optimistic about her chances after she won the second set. “I felt, okay, I can do it. I can turn it around, even though I didn’t feel so good on the court today. I’m like, I’m going to just put the ball over the net, however. But then again, it didn’t happen.”
With the runner-up finish, Karolína Muchová has risen to a new career-high ranking of World No. 6. Despite the setback, the player has plenty to be proud of this year. In February, she ended a nearly seven-year title drought by capturing the WTA 1000 title in Qatar, her second career trophy.
The Wimbledon final marked her fourth championship match of the season, having also finished runner-up on clay in Stuttgart before lifting the title in Bad Homburg in the lead-up to the grass-court Major.
