The Queen’s Club Championships are set to draw attention to Emma Raducanu, Katie Boulter and Harriet Dart, but the day’s most unusual development is already in the draw. A walkover on Andy Murray Arena has changed the shape of the schedule before the British trio even take centre stage.
BBC coverage is following the WTA Queen’s Club Championships closely, with live updates available as the action unfolds. The tournament page also shows the event type filters and court listings that separate singles and doubles action across the venue.
Walkover on Andy Murray Arena
One scheduled women’s doubles match has been decided without a point being played. Leylah Fernandez and Laura Siegemund were awarded a walkover against Victoria Mboko and Serena Williams, with the court listing showing no scores across any set.
The result means Fernandez and Siegemund advance by default, while the matchup involving Mboko and Williams disappears from the live action readers might have expected to see. The BBC event feed describes it as a walkover and lists the winning pair in both short and full form.
Harriet Dart waits for her singles match
In the other notable fixture on the schedule, Harriet Dart is listed to face Belinda Bencic in a women’s singles match on a court not assigned. The live event board shows the contest with no score yet in any set, leaving it as one of the key matches to watch.
That makes Dart part of the British interest surrounding the Queen’s Club event, alongside the attention on Raducanu and Boulter. The tournament’s live listings point to a day shaped by both expectation and the practical changes of an active schedule.
How the live coverage is being presented
The BBC event page groups the action under the WTA Queen’s Club Championships and offers filters for all events, women’s singles and women’s doubles. It also notes that all times are UK and subject to change, with the BBC not responsible for any changes.
That setup makes it easier to track where each match sits on the day, especially when a walkover or an unassigned court changes the order of play. For followers of the British players, the live board remains the quickest way to see how the Queen’s Club story develops.
Read more at: www.bbc.com






