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Sports schedule, July 2025: Wimbledon, India's Tour Of England, Neeraj Chopra Classic, Women's Euros and more

Sports schedule, July 2025: Wimbledon, India's Tour Of England, Neeraj Chopra Classic, Women's Euros and more

The Hindu14 hours ago

REPRESENTATIVE IMAGE: This year's Wimbledon is set to be held from June 30 to July 13 at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in London. | Photo Credit: GETTY IMAGES

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Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know
Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know

Economic Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know

Wimbledon's 148th edition, from June 30 to July 13, anticipates Carlos Alcaraz's title defense after his French Open victory. Novak Djokovic aims to equal Federer's record. The tournament boasts a record £53.5 million prize pool, with singles champions earning £3 million. Electronic line-calling debuts, aligning Wimbledon with other Grand Slams, enhancing accuracy and fairness. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads WIMBLEDON 2025 PRIZE MONEY IN SINGLES EVENTS Champion - $4,124,760 Finalist - $2,089,878 Semifinalist - $1,065,563 Quarterfinalist - $549,968 Round of 16 - $329,980 Round of 32 - $208,987 Round of 64 - $136,117 Round of 128 - $90,744 WHERE TO WATCH WIMBLEDON 2025 ON TV EUROPE: Digit-Alb, MOVISTAR PLUS+, Fast Sports, Eurosport, Arena Sport, SPORT KLUB, Cytavision, DR, S Sport, beIN Sports France, Setanta Sports, Novasports, Premier Sports, Sky Sport, Sport+Qazaqstan, Artmotion Telecom, Go3 Sport, TSN Malta, Ziggo, Telewizja Polsat, SportTV, RTS1, RTS2, SRF, RTS, RSI, TRT SPOR, BBC, TNT Sports and discovery+. MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA: beIN Sports MENA, Tennis South Africa & Tennis Africa, Canal+ Sport 5 and The Sports Channel 5 SPORT. NORTH AMERICA: ESPN, TSN/RDS and The Tennis Channel. ASIA: Star Sports, SPOTV, Tencent Sports, CCTV, SMG Great Sports Channel, Now TV, NHK G, WOWOW, tvN SPORTS, TDM, SPOTV Macau Cable TV and SPORTCAST. OCEANIA: Nine Network Australia, ESPN and TVWAN Sports. NEW TECHNOLOGY IN WIMBLEDON 2025 1. Jannik Sinner 2. Carlos Alcaraz 3. Alexander Zverev 4. Jack Draper 5. Taylor Fritz 6. Novak Djokovic 7. Lorenzo Musetti 8. Holger Rune 9. Daniil Medvedev 10. Ben Shelton 1. Aryna Sabalenka 2. Coco Gauff Pegula 4. Jasmine Paolini 5. Zheng Qinwen 6. Madison Keys 7. Mirra Andreeva 8. Iga Swiatek 9. Paula Badosa 10. Emma Navarro The 148th edition of Wimbledon , which remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to 1877, will take place from June 30 to July 13 at the historic All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC) in London. As the third Grand Slam of the year, Wimbledon remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to the men's singles draw, all eyes are on two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz . The 22-year-old Spaniard enters The Championships on an impressive 18-match winning streak, fresh off a dramatic French Open triumph where he saved three match points to defeat World No. 1 Jannik Sinner in the longest Roland Garros final ever - lasting five hours and 29 minutes. Alcaraz also claimed his second title at the Queen's Club Championships, capping off ideal preparation for his Wimbledon, the third Grand Slam of the year, title Novak Djokovic returns to the All England Club seeking to equal Roger Federer's Open Era record of eight Wimbledon titles. The Serbian legend, who has not won a Grand Slam since the 2023 US Open, will be eager to make his mark after a challenging year and further strengthen his legacy on the sport's grandest total player compensation for 2025 has reached a record £53.5 million (approximately $72 million), marking a 7% increase from last year. The tournament's two singles champions will each take home £3 million (around $4 million), highlighting the continued growth in prize money at the prestigious Grand Slam the first time in its history, the All England Club will implement electronic line-calling at Wimbledon, replacing traditional line judges during matches. This move brings Wimbledon in step with the Australian Open and US Open, both of which already use automated systems. With this change, the French Open now stands as the only Grand Slam still relying on human line judges to make in-or-out calls.

Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know
Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Wimbledon 2025: Total prize money, live streaming, seedings - All you need to know

The 148th edition of Wimbledon, which remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to 1877, will take place from June 30 to July 13 at the historic All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTC) in London. As the third Grand Slam of the year, Wimbledon remains the oldest and most prestigious tennis tournament, dating back to 1877. In the men's singles draw, all eyes are on two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz . The 22-year-old Spaniard enters The Championships on an impressive 18-match winning streak, fresh off a dramatic French Open triumph where he saved three match points to defeat World No. 1 Jannik Sinner in the longest Roland Garros final ever - lasting five hours and 29 minutes. Alcaraz also claimed his second title at the Queen's Club Championships, capping off ideal preparation for his Wimbledon, the third Grand Slam of the year, title defense. — Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Dolly Parton, 79, Takes off Her Makeup and Leaves Us Without Words The Noodle Box Undo Meanwhile, Novak Djokovic returns to the All England Club seeking to equal Roger Federer's Open Era record of eight Wimbledon titles. The Serbian legend, who has not won a Grand Slam since the 2023 US Open, will be eager to make his mark after a challenging year and further strengthen his legacy on the sport's grandest stage. Wimbledon's total player compensation for 2025 has reached a record £53.5 million (approximately $72 million), marking a 7% increase from last year. The tournament's two singles champions will each take home £3 million (around $4 million), highlighting the continued growth in prize money at the prestigious Grand Slam event. Live Events WIMBLEDON 2025 PRIZE MONEY IN SINGLES EVENTS Champion - $4,124,760 Finalist - $2,089,878 Semifinalist - $1,065,563 Quarterfinalist - $549,968 Round of 16 - $329,980 Round of 32 - $208,987 Round of 64 - $136,117 Round of 128 - $90,744 WHERE TO WATCH WIMBLEDON 2025 ON TV EUROPE: Digit-Alb, MOVISTAR PLUS+, Fast Sports, Eurosport, Arena Sport, SPORT KLUB, Cytavision, DR, S Sport, beIN Sports France, Setanta Sports, Novasports, Premier Sports, Sky Sport, Sport+Qazaqstan, Artmotion Telecom, Go3 Sport, TSN Malta, Ziggo, Telewizja Polsat, SportTV, RTS1, RTS2, SRF, RTS, RSI, TRT SPOR, BBC, TNT Sports and discovery+. MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA: beIN Sports MENA, Tennis South Africa & Tennis Africa, Canal+ Sport 5 and The Sports Channel 5 SPORT. NORTH AMERICA: ESPN, TSN/RDS and The Tennis Channel. ASIA: Star Sports, SPOTV, Tencent Sports, CCTV, SMG Great Sports Channel, Now TV, NHK G, WOWOW, tvN SPORTS, TDM, SPOTV Macau Cable TV and SPORTCAST. OCEANIA: Nine Network Australia, ESPN and TVWAN Sports. NEW TECHNOLOGY IN WIMBLEDON 2025 For the first time in its history, the All England Club will implement electronic line-calling at Wimbledon, replacing traditional line judges during matches. This move brings Wimbledon in step with the Australian Open and US Open, both of which already use automated systems. With this change, the French Open now stands as the only Grand Slam still relying on human line judges to make in-or-out calls. MEN'S SEEDINGS (TOP 10) 1. Jannik Sinner 2. Carlos Alcaraz 3. Alexander Zverev 4. Jack Draper 5. Taylor Fritz 6. Novak Djokovic 7. Lorenzo Musetti 8. Holger Rune 9. Daniil Medvedev 10. Ben Shelton WOMEN'S SEEDINGS (TOP 10) 1. Aryna Sabalenka 2. Coco Gauff Pegula 4. Jasmine Paolini 5. Zheng Qinwen 6. Madison Keys 7. Mirra Andreeva 8. Iga Swiatek 9. Paula Badosa 10. Emma Navarro

The spectacular ‘new two' era in tennis has arrived
The spectacular ‘new two' era in tennis has arrived

Mint

time2 hours ago

  • Mint

The spectacular ‘new two' era in tennis has arrived

The constant reminders of how much tennis has shifted are now coming from inside Novak Djokovic's house. Earlier this month, the 24-time major champion was in his native Serbia while two men more than a decade his junior were duking it in Paris in one of the greatest Grand Slam finals tennis had ever seen. Djokovic, who had been out to lunch with his family, didn't feel like watching. 'I got enough of tennis," he told them. His son and wife dragged him to a TV anyway. And for the rest of the afternoon, he found himself glued to a 5.5-hour fight for the ages between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner for the French Open title. Even Djokovic had to accept that the rivals who had so recently been the sport's future were now clearly its present. Three weeks on from that long afternoon, Wimbledon is shaping up much the same way. As the tournament begins on Monday, Sinner and Alcaraz are heavy favorites to continue a streak of dominance that has now lasted for more than a year. Together, the world's No. 1 and No. 2-ranked players have swept the past six major titles and generally seemed in a class of their own. Those types of runs aren't exactly a rarity, but they do signal the transition between eras. The previous six Grand Slams had been swept by Djokovic and Alcaraz, while six of the seven before those went to Djokovic or Rafa Nadal. This is how the tectonic plates move in modern men's tennis. They gradually redefine the geography of the game until the landscape looks immovable again. The real question is how the dynamic evolves between the pair of champions dubbed the New Two. Sinner came out on top in their one and only clash at Wimbledon, back in 2022. Burt Alcaraz currently leads the head-to-head against Sinner by eight victories to four and has won their past five meetings, including this year's French Open final. 'For me, the final in Roland Garros was an amazing achievement," said Sinner, who had led by two sets in that match before losing in five. 'That's it. Look, in this sport things can happen." Perhaps the most surprising part about the pair's status as heavy favorites heading to London is that neither one grew up on grass at all. Sinner, the 23-year-old Italian, feels most at home on hardcourts, the surface on which he has won all three of his Grand Slam titles. (His best result at Wimbledon remains a semifinal in 2023.) And Alcaraz, still only 22, was raised on clay in Spain, yet somehow developed an affinity for grass as a teenager. His first taste of it came when he played the junior tournament at Roehampton in England in 2019. What he found was a surface that meshed perfectly with his game, full of deft slices and drop shots. Moving around the slippery grass couldn't be more different from the sliding he knew on clay or the pounding physicality of hard courts, but Alcaraz took to it quickly. There was no better proof than winning Wimbledon twice in his first four trips to the All England Club. Alcaraz is now bidding to join Bjorn Borg and Boris Becker as the only men to win the title there three times before the age of 23. 'I think the most beautiful tennis that we can watch is on grass," he said. 'The style that the people bring to the court when they play on grass, I think is so beautiful. The sound of the ball. The movement is really tough, but when you get it, it's kind of like you're flying." That's what Djokovic is up against. Though he hasn't won a major since the 2023 U.S. Open, marking his longest dry spell in seven years, he still believes that Wimbledon represents his best shot at elusive title No. 25. Novak Djokovic, during a practice session at Wimbledon, where he has played in each of the past six finals. Even past his prime, the 38-year-old Djokovic has played in each of the past six finals at the Championships, winning four in a row before losing the past two to Alcaraz. And while his form is clearly one notch below the New Two this season, he has managed to keep himself close enough to the peak at major tournaments that things could conceivably break his way. In both Melbourne and Paris this season, Djokovic reached the semifinals. In London, where he is the sixth seed, his road to the final would potentially include world No. 4 Jack Draper, of Britain, in the quarters and Sinner in the following round. 'Even though my level of tennis has been going quite up and down and fluctuating much more than for most of my career…Grand Slams stay quite consistent," he said. 'These tournaments give me the biggest drive still." Write to Joshua Robinson at

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