
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 Herald Scotland
26 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Not so picture perfect and taking a skateboard shopping
The couple were strolling down the Royal Mile when Steven decided to use his mobile to take a photo of his wife, with the glorious vista of Arthur's Seat in the background. As he was focusing the image, a friendly American tourist stepped up and announced she'd be delighted to take the photo so Steven could also appear in the picture. Our reader happily complied, and the American briskly got to work in an exceedingly professional manner. 'Move a bit closer,' she said. 'Lovely… lovely… shuffle to the right, where the light's better… great… now step back, so we can get Arthur's Seat in frame… how about an arm round your wife's waste, and lovingly gazing into each other's eyes… perfect!' The picture was taken and the American tourist returned the phone, before disappearing into the crowd. Steven was understandably eager to see the photo taken by someone who was clearly an expert and an artist, and immediately took a peek… at a beautifully rendered close-up of his own belly. Roll with it 'My balance isn't what it was,' admits Ian Noble from Carstairs Village. 'So I've started wearing a crash-helmet when going to the shop. Because I don't want to look stupid, I carry a skateboard.' Bill Cassidy has been in San Sebastian, and came across this ladies clothes shop that confirms that shopping is still the No 1 alternative for those starved of love and affection. (Image: Bill Cassidy) Legal challenge Diary correspondents are a courageous bunch, willing to brave the uncertainties and indignities of Glasgow's nightlife. Rose Campbell was strolling down Sauchiehall Street, late on a Friday evening, when she witnessed a drunk chap, clearly sartorially inclined, grabbing a traffic cone from the pavement and attempting to place it on his own head at a jaunty angle. A pal he was with said, 'Naw, naw. Y' cannae put one o' them oan yer heed unless yer a soldier or an ex-Prime Minister.' The wag was obviously alluding to the traffic cone on the statue of the Duke of Wellington, though his sartorial chum didn't get the reference. 'Wit a weird rule,' he said, taking the cone from his bonce, 'though I guess the law's the law.' Talking balls Wimbledon cliches, continued. 'There must be a report on the price of strawberries at the food stalls,' says Eddy Cavin. 'Three for a fiver?!' Loopy lingo We're discussing the snares and traps lurking in the English language. Tom Law recalls his boss bemoaning work pressures, and admitting he'd been suffering, 'nightless sleeps.' Consciously uncoupling Statistics expert Dave Dunbar notes: 'Marriage is the number one reason for divorce.'


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
It feels like Rangers odds are stacking up against Russell Martin and he might be on a hiding to nothing
He would neither wish for nor expect to receive anyone's sympathy at this exciting, fledgling point in his Rangers career. Why would he? Russell Martin is settling into the very job which he was coveting since the final weeks of last season. He has shiny new American owners to subsidise his summer spending plans and pretty much a blank canvas on which to go about his work. Russell intends not only to overhaul the playing squad he inherited when he became Philippe Clement 's permanent successor but also to redesign the manner and style in which his team goes about its business. He wants to create something modern and contemporary which is exactly what Rangers have been waiting for ever since they lost Walter Smith as manager and dropped down the divisions to begin the one journey they never planned for. Granted, there were few or little signs of this transformation in yesterday's first half at Ibrox as Rangers suffered a bit of a clubbing from Brugge. If truth be told Martin could hardly have got off to a more inauspicious start watching his team fall two goals behind the Belgians in the opening 12 minutes. But accidents happen at this stage in the summer - and Rangers improved significantly after the half time interval to claim a 2-2 draw - so the new boss will have to get over the awkwardness of a difficult first day in the office and focus on the enormity of the task in hand. In his own mind Martin has probably reached the conclusion that he is very fortunate to be arriving back on Glasgow's south side at this particular moment in time, when the club feels in so much of a better place than it has done for more than a decade. All of this and more is true. And yet somehow it's impossible not to feel as if the odds are already stacking up against him before his first campaign in charge is even up and running. As if he might just have signed himself up for a managerial hiding to nothing. He must know, from the snarling reaction to his appointment, that there's a great deal of work for him to do if he's going to win over the hearts and minds of those supporters who had little or no desire to see him land the job in the first instance. One false move when the real stuff starts, one early season stumble, and they'll be falling over themselves to say 'I told you so,' while placing the latest incumbent back on the same green mile which Clement was walking not all that long ago after the Belgian's approval ratings crashed through the Auchenhowie floor. Martin is in the unfortunate position of having to follow on from a list of such casualties and with each manager who has come and gone, so the patience of the man in the stands has edged towards the point of exhaustion. To put it simply, if they didn't fancy him all that much in the first place then they're highly unlikely to dig deep in search of the resolve required to wait for his grand plan to come to some kind of fruition. No, they will demand instant signs that he was worthy of his appointment and their tolerance levels are notoriously low at the very best of times. Then there's the side from across the river. The wealthy neighbours and their stockpile of silverware, operating under the expert guidance of a manager who has made a habit of seeing off his rivals over two stints in charge. Brendan Rodgers has already carved the notches of Mark Warburton, Pedro Caixinha, Michael Beale and Clement in his bed post. He'll plan to add a fifth name to that list, possibly over the course of the next 10 months. And he has been busy getting tooled up for his next opponent since the end of last season, signing four new players already headed up by poster boy Kieran Tierney - the returning prodigal son who cost Arsenal £25m not all that long ago. By contrast, Martin and his recruitment department are currently ducking and diving around in a very different part of the market. That's not to say they can't find exactly what they need in places such as Bournemouth, Luton and Peterborough. In fact, there's a clear structure and strategy to this ongoing recruitment drive which has been posted missing from all the other emergency rebuilds which have been scrambled together over the period. Martin is assembling a British core by going after players of a similar profile albeit with varying pedigrees. There is a uniformity about the moves which are being made and a sense that those making the decisions actually know what it is they are looking for this summer. The old transfer scattergun has been locked away and replaced by a far more measured and calculated approach and there's a good chance that Rangers will be all the better off for it. But it still doesn't change the fact that Martin is about to put himself up against an elite level manager who is flexing the kind of financial muscle that Rangers cannot realistically match, not even in the hands of their wealthy new American owners. They might get there in the end. Andrew Cavenagh and his consortium from across the big pond wouldn't have taken this challenge on unless they truly believed they could claim Celtic's crown. Over time they will believe they can streamline, modernise and recalibrate their club to the point that it lead the way again in its own backyard. But 'in the end' just won't cut it for Martin. He doesn't have the luxury of being afforded a five year plan or anything like it. He'll be lucky to last five months unless his early work lands well both with his superiors and supporters alike. Which is precisely why it's hard not to empathise with the guy at the very least. If Martin thought he got a tough time of it during his final few months at Southampton last season then he has no idea what he's letting himself in for in this part of the world. If life bobbing around on the English Riviera left him feeling a little bit bruised by the end then Glasgow will hit him like the double decker to Drumchapel should he make the same mistakes all over again. Yesterday was far from an ideal introduction to the many of the same old faces and an all too familiar level of performance on the pitch there was no sign at all of what Martin has in mind until a host of changes were made at half time. Yes, his players did a fair amount of pressing high up the pitch but to little meaningful effect until that second period, during which Mohamed Diomande halved the deficit early on and Findlay Curtis squared things up at the death. But, really, this was a bounce match which provided a decent run around and yet further evidence to suggest that Martin is going to be seriously up against it from the start.

Leader Live
an hour ago
- Leader Live
Cameron Norrie survives fiery Nicolas Jarry clash to reach Wimbledon quarters
Norrie is the last British player standing after taking down the towering Chilean qualifier 6-3 7-6 (4) 6-7 (7) 6-7 (5) 6-3 in four hours and 27 minutes. The 29-year-old led by two sets and had a match point in the third, but was pegged back to a fifth with Jarry firing down 46 aces among 103 winners. But Norrie, who did not drop serve all day, converted his second match point – more than two hours after his first before dropping to the ground in celebration. Jarry had complained to the umpire about the time Norrie was taking between first and second serves, and at one point seemed to mimic his opponent by stopping and starting his service action. It backfired, though, as the South American sent his serve too long and double-faulted. When quizzed about Norrie's excessive bouncing of the ball, Jarry kept his cards close to his chest. He said: 'He's very competitive, so he knows how to make the most of the important games, the important part of the match.' Norrie said he was unaware the 6ft 7in giant from Santiago was making a point – or giving one away as it turned out. 'I thought he was maybe a little bit tight on that second serve,' he said. 'I actually didn't even notice he was upset with that. I want to settle before I hit my second serve. I don't want to rush into it and hit a quick double.' The pair had words at the handshake, and their conversation continued for some time under the umpire's chair. Norrie said: 'I think it's a big match for both of us, we really wanted to win. It was obviously frustrating for him to lose. 'I just told him 'man, that was unbelievable level. You competed so well, and I loved the way you kind of responded'. 'I think he just said I was being a little bit too vocal, but I was aiming directly at my team and pulling from the crowd. The atmosphere was so, so good. WHAT A WAY TO FINISH IT OFF! 🤩 Cameron Norrie is into the quarter-finals of #Wimbledon after being forced to a decider by Nicolas Jarry, but he gets it done by winning 6-3, 7-6(4), 6-7(7), 6-7(5), 6-3 🇬🇧 Just look at what it means 😁 — Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 6, 2025 'Honestly, nothing but credit to Nico for his performance. And to see him not only playing at that level, you know, seeing him enjoying his tennis and coming through quallies so easily and dropping guys, so I wish him all the best.' 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. But Norrie's achievement is quite something, too, 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 awaiting in the quarter-final.