
Olivia Rodrigo, John Cena and Dave Grohl among many celebrities in Wimbledon's Royal Box
There was as much star power — or maybe even more? — in the Royal Box at Wimbledon as there was down below on the Centre Court grass on Wednesday.
And that was on an afternoon that featured two-time defending men's champion Carlos Alcaraz, No. 1-ranked woman Aryna Sabalenka, and 2021 US Open champion Emma Raducanu of Britain all winning matches at the grass-court grand slam tournament's main stadium to reach the third round.
'It's so special in the Royal Box to have those kind of people in there. It definitely adds a bit of pressure, I guess, if you look up and you kind of recognise (them),' Raducanu said.
'That's why I try and stay with my eyes on the court as much as possible. Only after, you kind of look up and take it all in, if they're still there.'
The seats in the Royal Box behind one of the baselines are by invitation only, and there was quite a list of celebrities on hand for Day 3 of competition.
'I was trying not to look today,' Sabalenka said about the collection of boldfaced names, explaining that she might be distracted while competing.
'I was just trying to focus on my game. Later on, I'm going to open the social media (and ask), 'OK, who was there?''
Well, Aryna, here's a rundown:
Rodrigo, fresh off headlining at music festival Glastonbury while on tour for her GUTS album, sat next to Cena, the professional wrestler and movie star.
Rodrigo chatted at one point with former England soccer coach Roy Hodgson, while the current person in that job, Thomas Tuchel, also was in attendance.
Grohl, a member of the rock bands Foo Fighters and Nirvana, made an appearance, too, as did the married couple Chopra and Jonas.
Hollywood's Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann, who also are married, were on the Royal Box list, along with actor Dominic Cooper.
Others taking in a day of tennis at the most famous court in the world included British athletes from other sports, such as Olympic gold medalists Sophie Bray (field hockey) and Tom Daley (diving), and Paralympic gold medalist William Ellard (swimming).
Oh, and there was actual British royalty there Wednesday: Princess Michael of Kent.
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The Age
43 minutes ago
- The Age
De Minaur to face Danish bolter at Wimbledon after dominant win
The 2018 Wimbledon quarter-finalist is the highest-ranked player left in her quarter, but has a challenging round-of-32 test against Russian power-hitter Liudmila Samsonova, who eliminated in-form Australian Maya Joint in the first round. 'I know a lot of seeded players lost already in both draws – men's and women's – but I've got a very difficult next match,' Kasatkina said. '[Samsonova] is super confident on grass, she's showing good results, and she's playing very good, so it's going to be a very difficult match ... last time we played in Indian Wells [in March], I lost in three sets. Here, on grass, I think she feels even more comfortable [but] I'm going to prepare well, and give my 150 per cent.' However, it was a tough centre court initiation for another Australian, Aleks Vukic, who copped a 6-1, 6-1, 6-3 hiding from world No.1 Jannik Sinner in exactly 100 minutes after saving five match points. 'Obviously, Jannik was too good today,' Vukic said. 'Him and Carlos are definitely at least two levels above everyone else, and it's pretty evident. Playing him on centre court was a great experience for me – it doesn't happen every day – so as far as the experience, it's up there with one of the best for me. 'The result wasn't amazing, but especially the atmosphere in that third set, and at least making it competitive in the third … I definitely left the court with good sensations from that.' Australia's Rinky Hijikata saved three match points in a row, but still trailed 10th seed Ben Shelton 6-2, 7-5, 5-4 when their match was controversially suspended due to bad light, with the American to serve on Friday for a third-round berth. Thompson's opponent was also decided, with Italy's Luciano Darderi sweeping aside British wildcard Arthur Fery in straight sets. 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A tense struggle ensued on Cazaux's next service game, with de Minaur coming out on top in a captivating rally – despite his French foe's wonderful defence – to bring up a break point, only for Cazaux to send down an ace and temporarily stave off the danger. Cazaux failed to convert his own game point soon after, then collapsed on consecutive points that effectively decided the contest. Loading He dumped a straightforward volley into the net to face another break point before double-faulting – missing by about a metre – to gift de Minaur the chance to serve out the third set. Australia's No.1 was locked in by then, and drilled an inside-out forehand winner to go two-sets-to-one up. De Minaur had already worn Cazaux's best punch, and breezed to the end without conceding another game. For all his early waywardness, de Minaur should be satisfied that he is moving in the right direction after an underwhelming period where he admitted to struggling with mental fatigue and had to shift his focus from being so rankings-obsessed. Another source of inspiration was Davis Cup teammate Thompson, who again defied a back injury to win a second straight five-setter on Wednesday. 'I don't know exactly how many five-set wins or comebacks from two-sets-to-love down he's had, but it feels like six or seven already. It's amazing to see,' de Minaur said. 'He's the ultimate competitor. He might not play his best, he might not feel amazing, but something you can count on is him competing from the very first point to the last. 'That's what we, as Australians, want the standard to be, and to show, and to let the opponents from the rest of the world know that, 'Hey, if you are playing an Aussie, be ready for a battle'.' Seven-time champion Djokovic, Grigor Dimitrov, Iga Swiatek, Mirra Andreeva, 2022 winner Elena Rybakina, reigning champion Barbora Krejcikova and Emma Navarro were among the other winners on Thursday. But the upsets continued, with 2017 finalist Marin Cilic sending British fourth seed Jack Draper packing in four sets, while Tommy Paul, Felix Auger-Aliassime and Sofia Kenin also exited the tournament.


The Advertiser
an hour ago
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Hamilton homes in as Piastri is third in first practice
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At Silverstone, it will be Red Bull who will try to overcome their terrible weekend in Austria as defending champion Max Verstappen was knocked out of the race in the first lap after an incident with Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes, and Yuki Tsunoda finished 16th. Verstappen was 10th in first practice, while Tsunoda made way for Red Bull junior Arvid Lindblad, who was 14th. Second practice is later on Saturday (AEST), followed by qualifying on Sunday and the showdown race the following day. With DPA Lewis Hamilton has topped the first practice for his home Formula One British Grand Prix ahead of fellow British driver Lando Norris. The Ferrari man clocked 1 minute 26.892 seconds, beating the McLaren of Norris by a mere 0.023s. Australia's championship leader Oscar Piastri, in the other McLaren, was third, while Hamilton's team-mate Charles Leclerc was fourth. Seven-time world champion Hamilton is yet to be on the podium since his blockbuster move from Mercedes to Ferrari this season. His best result this year was fourth place at the Emilia-Romagna GP and at the Austrian GP. Norris, meanwhile, bounced back from a catastrophic weekend in Canada - in which he crashed into team-mate Piastri - to win the Austrian Grand Prix last week and cut the gap to Piastri in the drivers' standings to 15 points. At Silverstone, it will be Red Bull who will try to overcome their terrible weekend in Austria as defending champion Max Verstappen was knocked out of the race in the first lap after an incident with Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes, and Yuki Tsunoda finished 16th. Verstappen was 10th in first practice, while Tsunoda made way for Red Bull junior Arvid Lindblad, who was 14th. Second practice is later on Saturday (AEST), followed by qualifying on Sunday and the showdown race the following day. With DPA Lewis Hamilton has topped the first practice for his home Formula One British Grand Prix ahead of fellow British driver Lando Norris. 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Verstappen was 10th in first practice, while Tsunoda made way for Red Bull junior Arvid Lindblad, who was 14th. Second practice is later on Saturday (AEST), followed by qualifying on Sunday and the showdown race the following day. With DPA Lewis Hamilton has topped the first practice for his home Formula One British Grand Prix ahead of fellow British driver Lando Norris. The Ferrari man clocked 1 minute 26.892 seconds, beating the McLaren of Norris by a mere 0.023s. Australia's championship leader Oscar Piastri, in the other McLaren, was third, while Hamilton's team-mate Charles Leclerc was fourth. Seven-time world champion Hamilton is yet to be on the podium since his blockbuster move from Mercedes to Ferrari this season. His best result this year was fourth place at the Emilia-Romagna GP and at the Austrian GP. Norris, meanwhile, bounced back from a catastrophic weekend in Canada - in which he crashed into team-mate Piastri - to win the Austrian Grand Prix last week and cut the gap to Piastri in the drivers' standings to 15 points. At Silverstone, it will be Red Bull who will try to overcome their terrible weekend in Austria as defending champion Max Verstappen was knocked out of the race in the first lap after an incident with Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes, and Yuki Tsunoda finished 16th. Verstappen was 10th in first practice, while Tsunoda made way for Red Bull junior Arvid Lindblad, who was 14th. Second practice is later on Saturday (AEST), followed by qualifying on Sunday and the showdown race the following day. With DPA

Mercury
an hour ago
- Mercury
‘Oh my god': Wimbledon rocked by madness as top seeds left ‘scattered on ground'
Alex de Minaur, Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic avoided the pitfalls but local hope Jack Draper wasn't so lucky, joining a long list of seeds to exit Wimbledon early as a wild start to the tournament continued on Friday morning. Draper, the fourth seed, had hopes of a deep run at his home slam, but was upset in four sets by veteran Marin Cilic, who secured his first win against a top five player on grass in a 6-4 6-3 1-6 6-4 victory. Draper is the new figurehead of British tennis after taking on a role filled for a generation by the now-retired former Wimbledon winner Andy Murray. But the 23-year-old has a poor record at his home Grand Slam. He is yet to make it past the second round in four appearances at the grass-court tournament. As Cilic secured match point, a commentator said: 'The older man making new memories at Wimbledon - Jack Draper joins all the other seeds scattered on the ground.' Jack Draper of Great Britain applauds the fans as he leaves the court following defeat against Marin Cilic. (Photo by) Croatia's Marin Cilic celebrates his first win against a top five player on grass. (Photo by Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP) Eight top 10 seeds in the men's and women's singles were beaten in the first round, which ranks as the most at a Grand Slam in the Open era. American 13th seed Tommy Paul was another high-profile victim overnight after losing to Sebastian Ofner in four sets. But de Minaur joined fellow Aussie Jordon Thompson in the third round despite dropping the first set in his 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 triumph against Arthur Cazaux. De Minaur faces qualifier August Holmgren in the round of 32, before a likely fourth round match against Novak Djokovic. Djokovic is on track to meet world No. 1 Sinner after the Italian had no problems winning past Aussie Aleksandar Vukic on Friday morning. Sinner was clinical on his way to a 6 1, 6-1, 6-3 victory. There was late drama over at Court 2 with Aussie Rinky Hijikata on the brink of being eliminated before play was suspended. Ben Shelton appeared to be moments away from securing his spot in the third round with a 6-2 7-5 5-4 lead, but play was stopped due to bad light. The American was understandably furious. He had three match points on Hijikata's previous service game. 'Oh my god,' leading tennis journalist Jose Morgado posted on X after the match was suspended to be resumed on Friday night (AEST). Hijikata's likely defeat means there will be just three Australians through to the third round in the gentleman's and ladies' singles draws. Daria Kasatkina, in her first Wimbledon tournament representing Australia, won through to the third round with a 6-2 4-6 6-1 victory over Romanian Irina Camelia Begu. Djokovic earlier crushed British wildcard Dan Evans second round as he stepped up his bid for a record 25th Grand Slam title. The Serb needed just one hour and 47 minutes to dispatch Evans with a ruthless 6-3 6-2 6-0 victory on Centre Court. 'It means I've been playing quite a long time!' Djokovic said when told he had just secured his 99th Wimbledon match victory. 'I still enjoy it. This court has given me so much. Wimbledon has a special place in my heart. Any history made here is obviously extra special.' Djokovic is dreaming of putting an exclamation point on his incredible career by becoming the most successful singles player in tennis history. The 38-year-old has been tied with Margaret Court on 24 Grand Slam titles since winning his most recent major prize at the 2023 US Open. And despite losing the last two Wimbledon finals against Carlos Alcaraz, Djokovic believes the lawns of southwest London provide his best chance to win that elusive 25th major. 'I'm aware of the history on the line. I'm thinking about the big things I can do in this tournament,' he said. 'I don't reflect on it for now. I think that will come when I sip a margarita on the beach with (Roger) Federer and (Rafael) Nadal!' Jannik Sinner also did it easy, smashing Aussie Aleksandar Vukic 6-1 6-1 6-3. Serbia's Novak Djokovic was in rare form. (Photo by Adrian Dennis / AFP) Only one of the top five women's seeds - world number one Aryna Sabalenka - is still standing. But defending champion Barbora Krejcikova and five-time Grand Slam winner Iga Swiatek avoided joining the big name casualties with hard-fought three set wins. Krejcikova has had a miserable time with injuries this year and arrived at Wimbledon with just six matches under her belt in 2025. Despite not feeling 100 per cent, she overcame American Caroline Dolehide 6-4 3-6 6-2 to set up a meeting with Emma Navarro. 'Definitely a huge relief,' said the Czech. 'I wasn't feeling that well but I was fighting for every ball. I'm really happy I won the third set.' Swiatek has previously struggled on Wimbledon's lush lawns despite being a former junior champion at the All England Club. The former world number one dropped the first set to American Caty McNally before roaring back to win 5-7 6-2 6-1. Elena Rybykina, Wimbledon winner in 2022, was in fine form as she demolished Maria Sakkari 6-3 6-1. Russian seventh seed Mirra Andreeva, aged just 18, beat Italy's Lucia Bronzetti 6-1 7-6 (7/4) on Court One. - with AFP Originally published as 'Oh my god': Wimbledon rocked by madness as top seeds left 'scattered on ground'