It seems that Madison Keys and I were on similar wavelengths on Friday.
Watching her go up 5-2 in the first set against 120th-ranked Evgeniya Rodina, I was struck by how easy she was making everything look, and how calm and composed she appeared to be as she walked to the sideline.
My next thought was, “Madison Keys is going to win Wimbledon.”
It wasn’t a crazy thought, or a laughable thought; it was, I believed at the time, a rational thought. Six of the Top 8 seeds in the women’s draw were already out. Someone had to win the tournament, so why shouldn’t it be Keys? We’ve been saying for years that she’s a future Wimbledon champion. Wasn’t this the moment that U.S. tennis fans had been waiting for?
Apparently, and unfortunately for her, Keys was also thinking ahead while she walked to the sideline at 5-2. She wasn’t thinking of winning the tournament necessarily. But she was, she said later, thinking about her potential fourth-round match on Manic Monday, in which her opponent could very well have been Serena Williams. The winner of that match would likely have been favored to win the whole tournament.
WATCH—Match point from Rodina's win over Keys at Wimbledon: