Tennis

Man who stabbed Petra Kvitova gets 8-year prison term

A court in the Czech Republic convicted a man of knifing two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova in her home and sentenced him to eight years in prison.

2-time Wimbledon champ currently holds career-high ranking

The man convicted of stabbing Petra Kvitova, seen above at the Miami Open, was sentenced to an eight-year prison term on Tuesday. (Jim Rassol/The Associated Press)

A man who stabbed two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova in her home was sentenced to eight years in prison on Tuesday.

Radim Zondra, aged 33, was convicted of causing Kvitova serious bodily harm, by a regional court in Brno, Czech Republic.

The state prosecutor requested 12 years in prison for Zondra, who pleaded not guilty to attacking Kvitova in December 2016 in her apartment in Prostejov.

Kvitova was informed about the sentence, and her spokesman Karel Tejkal added she "respects the ruling of an independent court."

"She's satisfied with the verdict because she identified the convicted person as the attacker," Tejkal said.

Zondra can appeal and so can the prosecution.

Kvitova had surgery on injuries to her playing left hand. It took the tennis star more than five months to recover.

Kvitova reached the Australian Open final in January, her first Grand Slam final since her second Wimbledon title in 2014. She is ranked a career-high No. 2.

In quarters at Miami Open

Kvitova is at the Miami Open this week, facing Ashleigh Barty in the quarter-finals, and will rise to No. 1 if she wins the title.

Her testimony provided key evidence for the court to rule in the case, Judge Dagmar Bordovska said.

Kvitova testified she opened the door when Zondra rang the doorbell because she expected a possible doping control. The suspect claimed he came to inspect her boiler.

In the attack, Kvitova sustained damage to the tendons in her hand, along with injuries to all five fingers and two nerves, and underwent nearly four hours of surgery.

While bleeding, she said she offered Zondra money. He accepted 10,000 Czech crowns ($440 US) and left.

Zondra is currently serving a prison term for a different crime.