
Andrew Garfield attends seventh day of Wimbledon Championships
The 41-year-old is best known for starring in The Amazing Spider-Man, as well as playing Eduardo Saverin in The Social Network while Barbaro is known for portraying Joan Baez in A Complete Unknown.
He recently starred alongside British actress Florence Pugh in the romance drama, We Live In Time.
He was among other familiar faces who were in attendance at the tennis tournament including British actor Tosin Cole.
Sitting in the Royal Box were Olympic swimming champions Duncan Scott, Matt Richards, and James Guy.
Former swimming champion Mark Foster was also seen in the Royal Box along with Trinidadian former international cricketer, Brian Lara.
Spectators were met with a cloudy start to the day followed by some light rain with some taking shelter under umbrellas and ponchos.
The rain was seen to interrupt Carlos Alcaraz's practice before his match against Russian Andrey Rublev who has won one of their previous three meetings – on the clay in Madrid last year – and has powered his way through to the fourth round at Wimbledon for the third time.
Meanwhile, on Court One spectators can expect to see Aryna Sabalenka who will face Elise Mertens later today.
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The Guardian
14 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Cameron Norrie focus of British hopes as he reaches Wimbledon quarter-finals
Cameron Norrie said it felt 'amazing' to be the last Briton standing at Wimbledon after battling though to the quarter-finals of the championships. The 29-year-old defeated his Chilean opponent Nicolás Jarry in five sets and became the only British player to reach the second week of the tournament despite a promising start. Hopes of having two Britons in the quarter-finals for the first time in eight years were dashed after Sonay Kartal, 23, was overpowered by the 34-year-old Russian veteran Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. Their two-hour clash was overshadowed by an electronic line-calling failure which prompted Pavlyuchenkova to allege home bias and that the game had been 'stolen' from her. Norrie, the British No 3, fell to the floor after his four-and-a-half hour 6-3 7-6 7-6 6-7 6-3 epic in front of a roaring No 1 Court crowd. Spectators appeared to boo Jarry when the South American confronted Norrie about being 'a little bit vocal' as the pair were shaking hands at the net. Jarry, the 29-year-old World No 143, had earlier complained to the umpire after appearing frustrated with how long Norrie was taking to serve. 'It is not a nervous tic, it is something he can control,' Jarry said. In an on-court interview after the match, Norrie said of the five-set epic: 'I just had to keep fighting.' Norrie, a former top 10 player who was knocked out of the Wimbledon semi-finals in 2022 by Novak Djokovic, added: 'I think at the beginning of this year I was struggling a little bit with confidence and had some doubts and just wanted to enjoy my tennis a little bit more. I'm doing that and I enjoyed it today, so it was a bonus today but I was more happy I was enjoying it and I was playing point for point, that's what mattered.' Fellow Briton Kartal, ranked 298 this time last year, said she was 'devastated' after her fairytale run ended with a 7-6 (3), 6-4 defeat on her Centre Court debut. 'Probably for the rest of the day I'll be a bit sad,' the 5ft 4in Brighton native told reporters. 'But I think tomorrow I'll probably wake up, and I can look back on this week and be super proud of it and step back and think, you know, fourth round of a slam, it's the first experience, and for it being here, having beaten the players that I did to do that.' Kartal, the British No 3, said she had 'goosebumps' entering and exiting Centre Court to thunder and lightning. Her match was as dramatic as the weather after Pavlyuchenkova, on game point serving at 4-4, became convinced that a Kartal shot had landed long but the AI technology was not working at the time. The umpire Nico Helwerth said the system was 'unable to track the last point', which had to be replayed. 'I don't know if it's in or it's out. How do I know? You cannot prove it, because she's local they can say whatever. You took the game away from me,' Pavlyuchenkova said, shaking her head. 'They have stolen the game from me, they stole it.' Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion A spokesperson for the All England Club said: 'Due to operator error, the system was deactivated on the point in question. The chair umpire followed the established process.' It is believed to have been due to a human error with the system turned off for that one point. Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper, the British No 1s, have both complained about the new technology and questioned some its calls. Speaking after her win, Pavlyuchenkova said she believed the umpire should have called the ball out rather than making them replay the point. 'He was probably scared to take such a big decision. I think they should … That's why we have a chair umpire,' she told reporters. 'Otherwise, I think soon let's just play without them, right, and then we're going to have everything automatic. I think we losing a little bit of the charm of actually having human beings … It just becomes a little bit weird and, like, robot sort of orientated.'


ITV News
20 minutes ago
- ITV News
Cameron Norrie last Briton left in Wimbledon after grueling five-setter
Cameron Norrie kept the British flag flying at Wimbledon by taking down qualifier Nicolas Jarry in a five-set marathon to reach the quarter-finals. The 29-year-old led by two sets and had a match point in the third, but was taken to a fifth by the towering Chilean. However, Norrie held his nerve in the decider and did not drop serve all day in a 6-3 7-6 (4) 6-7 (7) 6-7 (5) 6-3 victory over a gruelling four hours and 27 minutes. Norrie, a semi-finalist in 2022, is now only the third British man to reach the last eight more than once in the last 50 years, after Tim Henman and Andy Murray. He is also the last home player left in either draw after Sonay Kartal's defeat to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova earlier on Sunday. It is a fine achievement for a player who had slipped from eight in the world to 91 after a tough couple of years, and who is now on the verge of a return to the top 50. He will have his work cut out to get much further, though, with two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz his likely quarter-final opponent. Norrie, who has now won nine of his 10 matches on his favourite Court One, said: 'I hung tough when I needed to and the atmosphere was so good. 'Credit to Nico, he did an unbelievable job staying with me. I just had to keep fighting. 'It's my coach's birthday and I forgot to get him a present, so I got him the win.' Jarry was clearly unhappy about something at the end, with the two players engaged in a long, heated conversation after shaking hands. 'He said I was a little bit vocal, but that's my energy. It was a competitive match,' added Norrie. The first three sets were peak Norrie, with him simply keeping the ball in play and waiting for his opponent to make a mistake. The 6ft 7in South American obliged with 43 unforced errors, while risk-averse Norrie had made just 13. However, when Norrie had a match point on serve in the third set tie-break, Jarry saved it with a fine return and volley before converting his second set point. Jarry's charge through qualifying to the fourth round has been one of the stories of the Championships, his ranking having plummeted from 16 this time last year to 143 due to a health issue which has affected his vision and balance. The winners were now starting to mount up from Jarry's racket – he hit 103 in total including 46 aces – one of which secured the fourth set, again after a tie-break. Yet some three-and-a-half hours after he first broke the Jarry serve Norrie, aided by an untimely double-fault, managed it again at the start of the fifth. Norrie backed that up by saving two break points for a massive hold after a 10-minute game to lead 3-0. He stayed strong down the home straight and when Jarry put one last, tired forehand into the net the British number three was able to celebrate a memorable win.

Leader Live
25 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Bright Thunder oozes class in Deauville romp
Karl Burke's four-year-old was a Listed winner at Chantilly last summer and after going close on home soil at Goodwood and Epsom earlier this season, gained some valuable compensation on the continent. It was a victory that was a welcome tonic for the Spigot Lodge team after near misses both earlier on the Deauville card with Spycatcher and in the German Derby with Contingent and there could plenty more to look forward to with the daughter of Night Of Thunder after her commanding performance in the hands of Sam James. James told Sky Sports Racing: 'She jumped really well, if not too well and I wanted to get a bit of cover. Emphatic! British raider Bright Thunder makes it look easy in the Listed Prix Goldikova for @samjock22 and @karl_burke… — At The Races (@AtTheRaces) July 6, 2025 'However, once I got behind Christophe (Soumillon on Rubies From Burma) on the lead horse she settled away grand and I thought we were going quite slow so I was quite happy to let her find herself and keep coming. 'She doesn't find an awful lot off the bridle but to be fair to her today she's really quickened up and put the race to bed. 'A Group Three wouldn't be out of the question for her and the faster they go in these races the more it suits her. She seems to like coming over here so maybe she can come over again. 'You can sometimes get racing a long way out on a straight mile, but today it all went to plan and she obviously likes coming over and Karl does as well when he brings horses over here.'