Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner, Wimbledon Live Streaming: When and where to watch men's final live on TV and online
Carlos Alcaraz is currently enjoying a 24‑match winning streak. He is the stand-out favourite for the final against Sinner. However, the latter cannot be discounted as he brushed aside the challenge of 24-time Grand Slam winner Novak Djokovic in the semi-final.
If Sinner prevails over Alcaraz, then he will win his first-ever Wimbledon title. One can expect spell-binding rallies, shifting momentum, and some edge‑of‑the‑seat drama.
Here are all the live streaming and telecast details for the Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final:
When will the Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final be played?
The Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final will be played on Sunday, July 13, at 8:30 PM IST.
Where will the Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final be played?
The Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final will beT played at the Centre Court in London.
Which channels will broadcast the Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final?
The Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final will be broadcast live on the Star Sports Network.
Where will live streaming be available for the Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final?
The Carlos Alcaraz vs Jannik Sinner Wimbledon 2025 men's singles final will be streamed live on the JioHotstar app and website.
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Hindustan Times
21 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Sinner sweeps aside Alcaraz, wins first Wimbledon title
Mumbai: Between the French Open and Wimbledon, Jannik Sinner spent a few sleepless nights. Jannik Sinner beat Carlos Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 at the Wimbledon to claim his fourth Grand Slam at the age of 23. (REUTERS) Between the French Open and Wimbledon, his single with legendary tenor Andrea Bocelli, titled 'Dust and Glory', was released. Between the French Open and Wimbledon, he went from dust on the dirt to glory on the greens. Playing the same man at the same stage of a Grand Slam within a month. How's that for a redemption song? Tune up to your new Wimbledon champion – Jannik Sinner. The world No.1, so in sync with his tennis on grass, made even the two-time defending champion at Wimbledon and his conqueror at Roland Garros dance to his tunes at Centre Court on Sunday. Carlos Alcaraz was the favourite and frontrunner, yet it was Sinner who flipped things for a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victory. If that French Open final was an exhaustive five-setter in which Sinner saw three championship points turn into a crushing defeat, this Wimbledon final was a cat-and-mouse four-setter in which the Italian let the first set slip but remained supreme thereafter. And so, this time when on the second championship point, the Italian's serve did not return, he stood with his arms spread wide on Centre Court. The 23-year-old had finally got the better of his most fierce rival, who'd beaten him five times in a row, at the most iconic Grand Slam. Sinner has indeed moved on. From the French Open agony to Wimbledon ecstasy. From joining Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray as the only men to have played all four Slam finals in the last three decades, to clinching the first Wimbledon final without either of the four since 2002. From recording his first musical in a studio to scripting history as the first Italian – male or female – to carve a name on the Wimbledon trophy. Defeats in Grand Slam finals can linger. Defeats in Grand Slam finals from being one good hit away from history can drown even the world No.1 in a wave of daze. Sinner found himself down there fighting the never-ending what-ifs chain of thought. It took him a few days and some ping pong games to snap it. With his tennis, he was back up there at Wimbledon. So far so good, but how about fronting up with the same man for another final? Brings back harrowing memories? 'If it would be a lot in my head,' answered the Italian before the final, 'I would not be in the situation to play a final again, I guess.' Not just play a final, win it. After setting the tone for their encore with an ace, Alcaraz was under early pressure when his first serves dropped. Sinner attacked his second serves and extracted errors to fetch the break in the fifth game. The polished baseliner was showing spunk in moving forward, albeit with mixed success, while also mixing it up with drops and volleys. But as Alcaraz brought out his own drop shot and ramped up his baseline intensity, he got back level at 4-4. The Spaniard began making shots he was missing and finding his first serves. Sinner now began losing his serves, and when he also lost his footing around the worn out brown patch at the baseline, a set point stared at him. So did another, after the first was saved. Alcaraz wasn't letting a second one slip. He came out on top of a brutal baseline exchange by ekeing out the acutest of angles for a backhand get at full stretch which floated across the net and dropped dead. The final had been brought to life. That was typical Alcaraz. As was what followed. In three of his previous six matches, Alcaraz squandered the second set after having sailed through the shores in the first. In the final too, out of nowhere, Alcaraz had a dip to land in troubled 0-40 waters at the start of the second set, and soon went down a break. Sinner was up in front, yet hardly in complete control. His service games were taken to deuce territory, the strapped elbow tested and the legs pushed. Still, the world No.1 stood tall and firm. And, this time, the Italian wasn't going to cave in at the business end of the set. This time, it was Sinner signing off with a gasp-inducing point serving for the set. This time, it was Sinner finding the acutest of angles for a crosscourt forehand winner after a baseline tussle. There was early pressure on the Spaniard's serve again in the third set, where he was made to thwart a couple of break points in the first game. Sinner was growing to Sinner-like levels in the contest, even feeling the comfort to attempt a between-the-legs shot at the net. Alcaraz was slipping in his serving and concentration levels. At 4-4, with Alcaraz's first strikes dwindling -- he made just 43% first serves to his opponent's 68% -- Sinner pounced on his second serves. A brilliant return of serve followed by a cracking winner set up a break point. And as Sinner broke, Alcaraz stumbled. Alcaraz couldn't get back up in the third set, or even in the fourth. He was flat, Sinner was firing. A break in the third game came, fittingly, with a backhand return winner from Sinner off Alcaraz's susceptible second serve. Unlike in Paris, he wouldn't let this advantage slip in London. Sinner has moved on from that French Open. He's now a Wimbledon champion.


Hindustan Times
21 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
India lose early wickets in chase after bowlers set it up
Mumbai: A Lord's Test and an India bowling day. Cast your mind back to 2021 and those 60 overs of hell. It took India 62.1 overs this time to dismiss England for 192. But to get over the line this time, India have to chase those runs down. India's Yashasvi Jaiswal's was dismissed for a seven-ball duck during India's pursuit of a 193-run target against England at Lord's. (PTI) England recorded four strikes late on Sunday in Yashasvi Jaiswal (0), out to an injudicious half pull, Karun Nair (14), gone to an ungainly leave, Shubman Gill (6), whose nervy vigil lasted nine balls, and nightwatchman Akash Deep (1). Going into the fifth day on a pitch showing enough signs of wear and tear, India still have to score 135 runs. Like it has been a pattern in this series, it is anybody's game. At 58/4, India's hopes rest on KL Rahul, the first-innings centurion unbeaten on 33 at stumps. England's stonewalling approach in the first innings was just a pause for Bazball. The ramps and the scoops were back on Day 4. If the Sunday crowd at Lord's had chosen cricket over the Wimbledon final anticipating a more frenetic action, it is just what they got. And the opening session is where India took charge. The spice in the pitch that England had publicly called for but was unseen for three days suddenly became a talking point as Jasprit Bumrah began to get the ball to lift off the surface. One thing with deteriorating pitches, you don't know until there is a spike in parameters. The moment Bumrah produced a brute of a delivery that reared off good length and banged into Crawley's gloves, leaving him out of position as he lost his bat, one just knew. It was only the sixth ball of Bumrah's opening burst. Once the up-and-down behaviour of the pitch became evident, the openers decided to take their chances. Crawley had irked the Indian team enough the previous evening after his theatrics to avoid facing an extra over. Now, he was in the firing line. Bumrah softened him up. Even though he survived, it was going to be a matter of time. Nitish Reddy ultimately got Crawley (22) for the second time in the Test, this time getting him to play on the up to be lapped up by a second gully in Jaiswal, stationed just for that sort of a shot. For Bumrah, it was a day to use his potency and accuracy – home in on good length and surprise them with the shooting ball pitched between 7.7m to 8.3m – to set up dismissals at the other end. Bustling Siraj It was time for Mohammed Siraj, the lion-hearted trier to get on the wickets column. Before Crawley's fall, Siraj took back new-ball duties from Akash Deep. Though he was operating from the Pavillion End from where he found less uneven bounce, he persevered and got Duckett (12) to play an attacking pull, which he holed out to mid-on. The bowler went almighty close while celebrating on his face. It might cost him some of his match fee but by then India knew they would have to burn some cash anyway after the hostile end to Day 3. On a day both teams were pushing for victory, they weren't going to compromise on intensity. Coming towards the end of his opening spell, Siraj's wobble seam delivery nipped back sharply off a length and rapped Ollie Pope's pad. He single-handedly convinced the captain to review, predicting that it wasn't too high. HawkEye showed the ball would have dismantled the bails and that's all it took to end the No.3's stay. England were three wickets down and another England batter, battling for his place, had proved a no show. England's naturally aggressive players wanted to play their shots. To push India back, it is the only way they knew. For a while, it worked. Harry Brook, heir apparent to England's batting, collected two boundaries, ramp sweeping Akash Deep and following it up with a royal six over the bowler's head. The next over, India had moved the fine leg finer. Brook went ahead and tried to repeat the dose, only to find his stumps disturbed as Akash Deep pushed it up fuller. A limited overs dismissal to a limited overs shot attempted in a Test that was on the edge. At 98/4, England wouldn't have been able to savour their lunch. Things didn't get any easier. Siraj delivered an even better spell than he did with the new ball. Constantly working on Joe Root's technique, and that usually takes some doing, he almost worked him out lbw, bowling from an angle but narrowly missed to umpires' call on review. That was around the time India's pacers were tiring. Enter Washington Sundar. Shubman Gill had waited 39 overs before handing the ball to the off-spinning allrounder. Watching Washington's delightful spell (12.1-2-22-4), he would never take the ball away from India's surprise package of the day as he bowled all his victims to set up a thrilling final phase.


Hindustan Times
21 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Tennis-Sinner banishes Roland Garros demons to de-throne Alcaraz at Wimbledon
By Martyn Herman HT Image LONDON, - When Jannik Sinner arrived at three match points in the fourth set of his Wimbledon final against Carlos Alcaraz on Sunday, the memory of what happened five weeks ago in Paris was flashing through the minds of everyone inside Centre Court. Everyone, perhaps, except world number one Sinner, who managed to banish any lurking demons from the darkest recesses of his brain to seal a 4-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 victory and become the first Italian Wimbledon singles champion. Just as on the Parisian clay, 23-year-old Sinner was the better player for long periods. Just as at Roland Garros he had the title in his hands. But unlike that day when three consecutive match points vanished in the fourth set and Alcaraz roared back to win the longest French Open final ever, this time the ice-cool Sinner was never going to be denied. Alcaraz, whose bid to become only the fifth man in the professional era to win three successive Wimbledon titles was watched from the Royal Box by Spain's King Felipe, saved one match point. But this time there was no escape for Alcaraz as Sinner fired down an unreturnable serve. There were no ecstatic celebrations. Sinner raised his arms to the sky, before consoling the man he de-throned and headed off in time-honoured fashion to embrace those in his box. "Back in the days when I was young, this was only a dream, because it was so far away from where I'm from," the man from the Dolomites who could have been a top skier, said on court. "Emotionally I had a very tough loss in Paris. So I'm very happy that I held my nerves and yeah, it's an amazing feeling. While Sunday's duel contained some mind-boggling points, it lacked the twists of last month's Roland Garros roller-coaster. It did, though, underline why the Sinner-Alcaraz rivalry is set to dominate men's tennis for the foreseeable future. Alcaraz had led their series 8-4 entering Sunday's final, including winning their last five showdowns. So while Sinner was fuelled by a shot at redemption, he also needed to make a statement. He did so with a superlative display of craft and skill. He refused to be knocked off track by losing the last four games of the first set and went on to pick apart Alcaraz's game with a level of tennis his opponent could not match. GREAT RIVALRY "It is always difficult to lose even if it is in the final. I have to congratulate Jannik once again," Alcaraz, who lost for the first time in 25 matches dating back to April, said. "I am really happy for you. Keep it going. It is great to build a great rivalry and you made me improve every day." But for Alcaraz's astonishing comeback in Paris, Sinner would now hold all four Grand Slam titles, having won last year's U.S. Open and a second Australian Open this year. He had a large slice of luck en route to his first Wimbledon final when Grigor Dimitrov retired injured while leading by two sets in their fourth-round clash. Since then he barely put a foot wrong. Alcaraz was below his best on Sunday and was always vulnerable to Sinner's crisp, early ball-striking. He still hit back from a slow start though and clinched the first set with a stretching backhand sliced winner from an impossible position. Sinner grabbed an early break in the second though and consolidated it despite a Champagne cork popping and landing on the court prompting a chorus of loud boos. Just as Alcaraz sealed the opening set in style, Sinner produced a moment of magic to take the second, whipping an audacious forehand winner at full elastic stretch. The third set felt crucial and after a lull it was Alcaraz who blinked, dropping serve at 4-4 after a slide and slip on the baseline allowed Sinner to guide away a winner. Sinner duly held serve to move one set from victory but after what happened in Paris five weeks ago, it still felt like the finishing line was far away. But the usual Alcaraz exuberance was missing and he was scowling after Sinner clubbed away a backhand winner off a short second serve to gain an early break in the fourth. Alcaraz's mood darkened when Sinner held serve for a 4-2 lead with a net cord off of a forehand. Sinner survived a huge test of his nerve at 4-3, 15-40 when a break may have re-ignited Alcaraz but he showed remarkable composure to take the next four points. The biggest examination came at 5-4 though with Sinner obliged to serve for the title and he passed it with barely a backward glance. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.