logo
Princess of Wales to attend Wimbledon women's singles final

Princess of Wales to attend Wimbledon women's singles final

Yahoo20 hours ago
The Princess of Wales will attend the women's singles final at Wimbledon.
Kensington Palace said Kate would attend the match between Amanda Anisimova and Iga Swiatek on Saturday.
Kate, who is patron of the All England Lawn Tennis Club, will present the trophy on Centre Court to the winner of the final on day 13 of the championships.
She will be accompanied on court by All England Club chairwoman Deborah Jevans, All England Club chief executive Sally Bolton and LTA president Sandi Procter.
Last year the princess presented the Wimbledon men's final trophy to Carlos Alcaraz, in her second public engagement since she announced her cancer diagnosis.
The Princess of Wales's parents, Carole and Michael Middleton, were seen in the Royal Box on Monday, with the Duchess of Edinburgh and the Duchess of Gloucester also in attendance.
The Queen told tennis star Novak Djokovic that she was keeping her 'fingers crossed' as she visited Wimbledon on Wednesday.
The Princess Royal's son Peter Phillips attended the championships on Wednesday, with Hugh Grant and former prime minister Sir John Major also in the Royal Box.
Olympic champion Sir Mo Farah, former footballer Ian Wright and Welsh singer Katherine Jenkins were among the notable names to attend a hot day at Wimbledon on Saturday.
Temperatures are forecast to peak at around 30C and fall short of a record for a women's singles final day, with 31.2C having been recorded on the day of the 1976 final between Chris Evert and Evonne Goolagong Cawley.
Met Office meteorologist Greg Dewhurst said: 'There will be blue skies at Wimbledon throughout the day so it will feel hot, with very high UV levels and a light wind.
'There might be a little bit more cloud around tomorrow, making it a degree lower.'
The men's singles semi-final on Friday between Carlos Alcaraz and Taylor Fritz was stopped twice in less than five minutes because of crowd emergencies, amid temperatures of 32C on Centre Court.
Three fans also needed attention on Centre Court on Thursday in similarly hot conditions.
The men's singles final on Sunday, with highs of 29C predicted, is unlikely to break the record of the warmest closing day on record of 34.1C recorded on July 3 1976.
The extreme heat during the 1976 tournament prompted organisers to allow umpires to remove their jackets.
Wimbledon has said the heat rule will apply for all singles events for players, which allows for a 10-minute break when the wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) is at or above 30.1C.
The rule will apply after the second set for all best-of-three-set matches, and after the third for all best-of-five-set matches.
Players may leave the court during the break, but they may not receive coaching or medical treatment.
Sophie Kneen, 12, will perform the coin toss at the women's singles final on Centre Court, representing the AFC Wimbledon Foundation.
Sophie, who is part of the foundation's women and girls inclusion project, told the PA news agency: 'I'm really excited, it's always been a dream of mine to go out on Centre Court.'
Asked about the foundation, Sophie said: 'I've been playing football with them and at the development centre for a couple of years now and it's really helped my confidence.'
Kate Wells, women and girls' officer at AFC Wimbledon Foundation, said: 'Sophie is such a great, positive energy to have at our sessions, she's really respectful to her coaches and to her peers, and because of that we felt she really deserved to take part in the coin toss ceremony this year.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alcaraz faces arch-rival Sinner in blockbuster Wimbledon final
Alcaraz faces arch-rival Sinner in blockbuster Wimbledon final

Yahoo

time33 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Alcaraz faces arch-rival Sinner in blockbuster Wimbledon final

Carlos Alcaraz will target a third successive Wimbledon title as Jannik Sinner aims to win the All England Club crown for the first time in the latest enthralling chapter of their burgeoning rivalry. Just five weeks after Alcaraz staged one of the all-time great fightbacks to beat Sinner in a classic French Open final, the pair bring their battle for supremacy to Wimbledon's hallowed Centre Court on Sunday. Advertisement Alcaraz and Sinner have shared seven of the past eight Grand Slams between them, evenly splitting the six on offer since the start of 2024. The tennis world has been captivated by the emergence of the new rivalry after the storied era of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. Alcaraz is the flashy showman who has stolen the hearts of the Centre Court crowd, while world number one Sinner is Djokovic 2.0 -- a ruthlessly efficient operator who rarely misses. Two-time defending Wimbledon champion Alcaraz will start as the marginal favourite on Sunday but knows he has to bring his best to keep Sinner at bay. Advertisement The Spanish world number two has won eight of his 12 matches against his Italian rival, including the past five. Their most recent clash was in last month's phenomenal five-and-a-half hour French Open final, when Alcaraz rallied from two sets down and saved three match points to defend his clay-court title. The 22-year-old, who has five majors under his belt, is on a career-best winning run of 24 matches and is unbeaten at the All England Club since 2022. But three-time Grand Slam winner Sinner, playing his first Wimbledon final, will take heart from the fact that he was the last man to beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon, in the fourth round three years ago. Advertisement The Spaniard, who beat US fifth seed Taylor Fritz in the semi-finals, does not believe his remarkable comeback in Paris gives him the mental edge. "I'm pretty sure he's going to take a lot of things from the French Open final," he said. "He's going to be better physically, he's going to be better mentally. He's going to be prepared to give 100 percent." Both men have shown vulnerabilities during their runs to the final. Alcaraz was taken to five sets in his opener against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini and has dropped sets in three of his other matches. Sinner, 23, was rock solid for three rounds but had an almighty scare -- and a huge slice of luck -- when his fourth-round opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, retired when leading by two sets. Advertisement But he swept past US 10th seed Ben Shelton in straight sets and demolished an under-par Djokovic in the semi-finals. - Mental edge - The Italian top seed played down the lingering impact of his defeat at Roland Garros. "I think if it was too much in my head, I would not be in the situation to play a final again," he said. "I'm very happy to share the court with Carlos once again. It's going to be difficult, I know that. "But I'm looking forward to it. I always try to put myself in these kind of situations that I really love. Sundays at every tournament are very special." Advertisement Alcaraz is attempting to join an elite club of players in the Open era who have won Wimbledon three years in a row -- Bjorn Borg, Pete Sampras, Federer and Djokovic. But if there is one man who can stop him it is Sinner, the reigning US Open and Australian Open champion, who has been impressive since his return in May from a three-month doping ban. The match is too close to call, though seven-time champion Djokovic narrowly favours Alcaraz. "I think I will give a slight edge to Carlos as a favourite because of the two titles he's won here and the way he's playing and the confidence he has right now," he said. "But it's just a slight advantage because Jannik is hitting the ball extremely well. I think it's going to be, again, a very close match-up like they had in Paris." jw/smg/bsp

Iga Swiatek defeats Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 to win her first Wimbledon title
Iga Swiatek defeats Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 to win her first Wimbledon title

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Iga Swiatek defeats Amanda Anisimova 6-0, 6-0 to win her first Wimbledon title

For years, Iga Swiatek never quite felt comfortable on Wimbledon's grass courts, never thought she could add a trophy there to her other Grand Slam triumphs. Oh, did that turn out to be wrong. And how. Not only is Swiatek now the champion of the All England Club, she did it with a 6-0, 6-0 victory over Amanda Anisimova on Saturday in the first women's final at the tournament in 114 years in which one player failed to claim a single game. Advertisement 'It seems,' said Swiatek, a 24-year-old from Poland who is now 6-0 in major title matches, 'super surreal.' That's also a good way to describe the way things unfolded at a sunny, breezy Centre Court against the 13th-seeded Anisimova, a 23-year-old American who was participating in her first Slam final. With Kate, the Princess of Wales, sitting in the Royal Box and on hand to present the trophies, the whole thing took just 57 minutes. The previous 6-0, 6-0 Wimbledon women's final was all the way back in 1911. 'Honestly, I didn't even dream (of this), because for me, it was just, like, way too far, you know?' Swiatek said. 'I feel like I'm already an experienced player after winning the Slams before, but I never really expected this one.' Advertisement She won 55 of Saturday's 79 points despite needing to produce merely 10 winners. Anisimova was shaky from the start and made 28 unforced errors. 'You're such an incredible player. It obviously showed today,' Anisimova told Swiatek. 'You've been such an inspiration to me. Just an unbelievable athlete.' Swiatek already owned four titles from the French Open's red clay and one from the U.S. Open's hard courts, but this is first one of her professional career at any grass-court tournament. And it ended a long-for-her drought: Swiatek last won a trophy anywhere more than a year ago, at Roland-Garros in June 2024. Swiatek is the eighth consecutive first-time women's champion at Wimbledon, but this stands out because of just how stunningly dominant it was. Advertisement Anisimova won her first-round match less than two weeks ago by a 6-0, 6-0 score and eliminated No. 1-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals on Thursday, but she never looked like she was the same player this time. Not at all. 'No matter what happened today,' Swiatek told Anisimova, 'you should be proud of the work you're doing.' When it was over, while Swiatek climbed into the stands to celebrate with her team, Anisimova sat on the sideline in tears. Swiatek never had been past the quarterfinals of the All England Club and her only other final on the slick surface came when she was the runner-up at a tuneup event in Germany right before Wimbledon began. Advertisement Swiatek spent most of 2022, 2023 and 2024 at No. 1 in the WTA rankings but was seeded No. 8 at Wimbledon. She served a one-month doping ban last year after failing an out-of-competition drug test; an investigation determined she was inadvertently exposed to a contaminated medical product used for trouble sleeping and jet lag. Anisimova, who was born in New Jersey and grew up in Florida, was a semifinalist at age 17 at the 2019 French Open. Her father died soon after that. On Saturday, Anisimova's mother flew to England, a rare instance of her attending one of her daughter's matches. 'My mom is the most selfless person I know, and she's done everything to get me to this point in my life,' Anisimova said through tears, then spoke to her mother directly, saying: 'Thank you for being here and breaking the superstition of flying in.' And then, with a chuckle, Anisimova added: 'It's definitely not why I lost today.' Advertisement She took time away from the tour a little more than two years ago because of burnout. A year ago, she tried to qualify for Wimbledon, because her ranking of 189th was too low to get into the field automatically, but lost in the preliminary event. Now she'll break into the top 10 in the rankings for the first time. 'It's been an incredible fortnight for me. Even though I ran out of gas a bit today, and I wish that I could put on a better performance for all of you,' Anisimova told the crowd, 'you guys have still been there for me and lifted me up today.' Download the FREE WPXI News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Channel 11 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch WPXI NOW

Wimbledon 2025 live updates: Men's final latest as Jannik Sinner faces Carlos Alcaraz today
Wimbledon 2025 live updates: Men's final latest as Jannik Sinner faces Carlos Alcaraz today

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Wimbledon 2025 live updates: Men's final latest as Jannik Sinner faces Carlos Alcaraz today

Hello everyone and welcome to south-west London for the 14th and final day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships. Today, all eyes are on Centre Court as two superstars of the men's game collide. Carlos Alcaraz (2) is looking to secure his third straight Wimbledon title against a familiar foe, Jannik Sinner (1), just over a month after their instant classic in the final of the French Open. We've already had plenty of compelling storylines and drama throughout these past two weeks at SW19, and it all culminates today with this latest chapter of a thrilling rivalry. So, why would you want to be anywhere else? Settle down with The Athletic and let us take you through today's action.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store