Daria Kasatkina's miserable build-up to Wimbledon has continued with the Australian number one's defence of her Eastbourne title blown away in the first round, as much by the windy conditions as her opponent, Lulu Sun.The world number 11 served up 11 double faults as she was beaten 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 on the English south coast, her high ball toss vulnerable to the swirling gusts that made both players look foolish at times.But there is a better Wimbledon outlook for Maya Joint who gained her first win of the grass court season by beating three-time grand slam finalist Ons Jabeur, 7-5, 6-2.Tennis's ultimate villain extends lengthy rap sheet with latest bizarre clash Photo shows Maria Sakkari and Yulia Putintseva clash at the net Yulia Putintseva is no stranger to a bizarre post-match handshake drama and has done it again. After a fiery clash with Maria Sakkari, here is a look at the Kazakh's lengthy rap sheet, which features run-ins with fans and officials as well.If not quite a boilover — both players are now ranked in the 50s — Jabeur has far more experience than the Queensland-based teenager, having reached the Wimbledon final in 2022 and 2023.Kasatkina's defeat means she has lost all three matches on grass since reaching the last 16 on the red clay of Roland-Garros."The conditions are very tricky. The ball is swirling around so anything can really happen, you have to keep fighting," Sun said.Devonshire Park is barely an over-hit forehand from the beach and the flags cracked with the stiff breeze as seagulls fought with the currents overhead.The conditions made for a topsy-turvy match, with New Zealander Sun racing into a 4-0 lead, only for Kasatkina, the number one seed, to roar back with five straight games. But at 5-4, she failed to press home a set point and Sun won the next three games to take the set in just under an hour.ABC Sport Daily podcast ABC Sport Daily is your daily sports conversation. We dive into the biggest story of the day and get you up to speed with everything else that's making headlines.This despite a moment of brilliance when she returned a lob on the turn with a superb forehand pass.Kasatkina, who will be representing Australia for the first time in a grand slam at Wimbledon, having switched allegiance from Russia in March, responded impressively, snagging the second set in 36 minutes.She then broke in the fifth to take a 3-2 lead but Sun, who only served two double-faults, took the next three games and the match to move into the last 16 of the WTA 250.Kasatkina has now lost to players ranked 50 (Sonay Kartal at Nottingham), 49 (Xinyu Wang at Queen's) and 46 (Sun).While Sun is a useful grasscourt player who reached the quarterfinals at Wimbledon last year, she had lost five of her last six matches and had not beaten a player in the top 250 since April.Following Kasatkina on court was Australian number two Joint, who took a 2-0 lead against Jabeur, but then found herself 2-3 down.However, winning her maiden title in Morocco recently has boosted her belief, and she soon broke back to be 4-4 before taking the set 7-5. Once she broke midway through the second set, the result was never in doubt."I was really happy to win my first title in Rabat, that was on clay so a bit different to grass, but I am learning to love this surface. [The Rabat title] gives me confidence coming in here," Joint said."I take a lot from my previous successes."Aussie number three Kim Birrell plays American Sofia Kenin first up on Tuesday.
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