Hewitt upsets rising star at Queen’s

Lleyton Hewitt wound back the clock to show rising star Grigor Dimitrov a thing or two about grass-court tennis in an impressive second-round win at Queen’s Club on Wednesday.

Hewitt, a four-time champion at the London event, scored an upset 6-4 6-3 victory over the Bulgarian tenth seed to reach the tournament’s last 16 for 11th time in his career.

World No.28 Dimitrov, ten years Hewitt’s junior at 22, is considered among the most exciting young players in world tennis, with French daily newspaper L’Equipe predicting he will be world No.1 in five years.

But Hewitt showed him he still has a long way to go in a clinical display that provided another step in the right direction for the Australian veteran ahead of Wimbledon, starting later this month.

Hewitt, the 2002 Wimbledon champion, will face American sixth seed Sam Querrey in the third round, while fellow Australian Marinko Matosevic has also reached the last 16 thanks to a slice of fortune.

Matosevic received a free passage to a likely showdown with British top seed Andy Murray after Frenchman Michael Llodra withdrew from their second round clash with a hamstring injury.

Murray was due to face Nicolas Mahut later on Wednesday.

While Hewitt had fought hard to beat American veteran Michael Russell in three sets on Monday, he looked much sharper as he faced Dimitrov for the first time.

The world No.82, who has the second most career wins on grass behind Roger Federer, moved around the court impressively and was largely untroubled throughout the match on the back of an excellent serving display.

Dimitrov’s girlfriend, women’s world No.2 Maria Sharapova, was nowhere to be seen in the stands after attending his first-round win over Dudi Sela.

Stay up to date with the latest sports news
Follow our social accounts to get exclusive content and all the latest sporting news!