
Among yesterday's upsets: Jack Draper out of Wimbledon
French Open champion Carlos Alcaraz, and women's World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka headline day five at Wimbledon today with American Taylor Fritz (5) currently on Centre Court at the All England Club.
Upsets have been the story of the tournament so far and day four was no different, with contenders such as British hope Jack Draper (5) and U.S. player Tommy Paul (13) dumped out.
As the field narrows, the intensity continues to pick up, setting the stage for another intriguing day of tennis. Follow along for the latest updates, analysis and reaction throughout day five. Watch: BBC (UK), ESPN (U.S.); Get involved: live@theathletic.com
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Wimbledon recap: Grand Slam champions hold firm as tournament sets seed record
This was a disappointing one for the Brits in the crowd at Wimbledon yesterday — home favorite Jack Draper was knocked out of the tournament by Marin Cilic.
Fourth seed Draper was the latest to exit in another early, underwhelming Wimbledon departure for him.
His struggles on grass continue despite an otherwise very impressive 12 months of Grand Slam performances for the world No. 4, with runs to the semifinals at the U.S. Open and then fourth-round appearances in Melbourne and Paris.
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Jack Draper out of Wimbledon in second round as Marin Cilic's grass pedigree triumphs
Seeds are tumbling, suspensions are altering the order of play, and it can be easy to miss out on big talking points from this year's Wimbledon.
The good news is, we've got The Briefing to fill you in on all the big issues, every day of the Championships. On the agenda today: Surprise: there were more upsets at Wimbledon
Wimbledon's fastest security guard strikes again
Read all about it on the link below!
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Wimbledon recap: Grand Slam champions hold firm as tournament sets seed record Getty Images
It's another warm one today in SW19, which means perfect conditions for strawberries and cream and plenty of Pimms.
The good news is that the forecast is showing zero per cent chance of rain with temperatures rising to 26 degrees by late afternoon.
Time to slap on some sun cream!
We've got some big ones today on the show courts, with action on No. 1 Court set to start at 1 p.m. BST, 8 a.m. ET and half an hour later on Centre Court.
Here's some of the best coming up: Taylor Fritz (5) vs. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (26)
Diane Parry vs. Sonay Kartal
Aryna Sabalenka (1) vs. Emma Raducanu
A very good morning everyone and welcome along to another day of scintillating Wimbledon action.
Action on the outdoor courts is due to commence at the top of the hour — here's a look at some of the best matches to look out for: Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova vs. Naomi Osaka
Dalma Gálfi vs. Amanda Anisimova
Márton Fucsovics vs. Gael Monfils (to finish)
Neil Stubley, Wimbledon's head of courts and horticulture, is the man in charge of keeping the tennis courts pristine as he enters his 30th tournament.
He and his team of 18, which grows to 31 during the event, are responsible for 'anything that grows' — including weeds.
'Every day we test the ball bounce height and the hardness of the surface,' Stubley says.
'If they're getting too hard, we can add a little more water. If they get too soft, we can just hold off on irrigation and let Mother Nature dry it out a little more.
'Last week, it got its final liquid fertilizer on to give it the right color that we need.'
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How Wimbledon gets its grass courts, flowers and tennis balls ready for Grand Slam action
There's some serious history behind the trophies at Wimbledon.
The men's singles trophy was first presented in 1887 while the women's singles trophy was first presented a year earlier.
The women's trophy is dish-shaped with a mythological theme and is known as the Rosewater Dish or Venus Rosewater Dish. The winner will receive a three-quarter size replica of the trophy bearing the names of all past champions.
Meanwhile, the men's trophy is cup-shaped and stands 18 inches high and has a diameter of 7.5 inches. Like the women's trophy, the winner receives a three-quarter size replica of the cup with the names of all the past champions engraved on it.
This year at Wimbledon the singles champions take home a pretty tasty prize pot.
Both the men and the women's singles champions will win an equal prize pot of £3million each.
That would set up the summer pretty nicely ...
The grass-court season is short — meaning it brings additional challenges for players to master the surface.
Last year, Carlos Alcaraz said, 'Every time I step on a grass court I have to learn how to move better, how to play better.' Quite the statement from someone who has won Wimbledon twice.
The issue for players is the constant change of surfaces throughout the year and that so few tournaments are played on grass.
Grass requires sometimes-staccato movements and rewards players with clean ball striking and effective serves, as well as being an ideal service for a variety of shots using slicing and drop shots.
Wimbledon's second-biggest and second-most important court, with a seating capacity of 12,345 (singer Lou Bega's ears have perked up).
Opened in 1997, it was renovated in 2019 and has a retractable roof.
Arguably, it's the most famous tennis court in the world.
It is the main showpiece court, only ever used at the Wimbledon Championships (apart from the 2012 London Olympic Games), and has a capacity of 14,979.
Distinguished guests sit in the Royal Box, with a 3,000-tonne retractable roof installed in 2009.
The inscription above the entrance quotes Rudyard Kipling's poem 'If': 'If you can meet with triumph and disaster, and treat those two impostors just the same.'
Wise words for anyone playing on it.
We'd love to hear from you ahead of today's 2025 Championships action getting underway in around two-and-a-half hours.
Who do you think is going to win this year with so many big names out? Who will be the most successful British and American players? Is Wimbledon your favourite Grand Slam of the season, and if so why?
Let us know by emailing live@theathletic.com.
Our venue: All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club
Church Road, Wimbledon, London. Postcode: SW19, a synecdoche for the tournament itself.
The private members' club, established in 1868 (156 years ago), has a green and purple color scheme and is one of the most exclusive and prestigious in the country.
How to get in, I hear you ask? You need letters of support from four full members, two of whom must have known you for at least three years.
If you're a tennis fan — and you love a plethora of other sports — there is no better place to follow all your favourite teams, leagues and players than on The Athletic .
From the UK, we've got you covered throughout a jam-packed summer of sport, including the Women's Euros as the Lionesses look to defend their crown in the football, and in the U.S., the last rounds of the Club World Cup are compelling viewing.
Plus, the F1 calendar continues, and Open Championship golf is on the way soon too. We have all that covered and much more, so make sure you're fully informed with access to our full experience.
And you're in luck — you can subscribe to The Athletic on an exclusive offer right here.
In the UK, all of the action will be shown on the BBC.
In the U.S., you can watch Wimbledon on ESPN and ESPN2, with select matches on ABC.
As ever, the first matches of the day get underway at 11 a.m. BST, local time in the UK, which is 6 a.m. ET and 3 a.m. PT on the east and west coast of the United States, respectively.
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Women's T20 Blast round-up: Bryce leads Blaze to victory
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29 minutes ago
- New York Times
Another break for Struff
Follow live coverage from our team at SW19 with world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka leading Emma Raducanu in the third round under the roof Getty Images Day five at Wimbledon 2025 is wrapping up with women's world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka facing Britain's Emma Raducanu on Centre Court and so far it's been one of the matches of the tournament. Two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz (2) is through to the fourth round, along with Americans Taylor Fritz (5) and Amanda Anisimova (13). But the upsets have continued with Madison Keys (6) eliminated. Follow along for the latest updates, analysis and reaction throughout the fifth day from our team at the All England Club in south-west London. Watch: BBC (UK), ESPN (U.S.); Get involved: live@ GO FURTHER Madison Keys latest Wimbledon seed to fall after grass masterclass from Laura Siegemund Getty Images Struff 1-6, *5-3 Alcaraz Just when it seemed like Alcaraz was in control of the match, Struff has stepped on the gas. He breaks Alcaraz's serve with a beautiful backhand and all of a sudden he's one game away from taking the second set! Getty Images In the women's singles, Elise Mertens (24), pictured, has won four games on the spin against Ukrainian Elina Svitolina (14). The Belgian is a double break up at 4-1, serving to make it 5-1 in the first set on No. 1 Court. A fine start. Plenty of American interest in today's women's doubles! Nicole Melichar-Martinez and Liudmila Samsonova (15) beat Alycia Parks and Camila Osorio 7-6(5), 6-4, with Quinn Gleason and partner Ingrid Martins outdone by Mirra Andreeva/Diana Shnaider (5), 7-5, 6-3. Elsewhere: Babos/Stefani (10) beat Panova/Guo, pictured, 7-6(3), 6-7(3), 6-3; Zhang/Alexandrova (14) beat Hozumi/Sutjiadi 7-6(3), 5-7, 6-2 beat Panova/Guo, pictured, 7-6(3), 6-7(3), 6-3; beat Hozumi/Sutjiadi 7-6(3), 5-7, 6-2 Italians Paolini/Errani (3) were shocked by Chan/Krejčíková, 6-3, 6-2; Dabrowski/Routliffe (2) beat Sönmez/P. 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He hits a couple of nice shots, eventually forcing Alcaraz into a difficult stroke that does not make it over the net. Struff 1-6, 1-2* Alcaraz Struff has his serve broken as he rifles a backhand into the net, followed by a small fist-pump from Alcaraz. The No. 2 seed appears to be in firm control of this match at the moment. Getty Images Glad you asked. Top seeds Arévalo/Pavić beat Munar/Martinez 6-3, 6-2; Erler/Frantzen beat Doumbia/Reboul (11) 3-6, 7-6(4), 6-3 beat Munar/Martinez 6-3, 6-2; Erler/Frantzen beat 3-6, 7-6(4), 6-3 Brazilians Matos/Melo surprised Mektić/Venus (8) 7-6(3), 5-7, 7-6(6) 7-6(3), 5-7, 7-6(6) Krawietz/Pütz (3) defeated Romios/Seggerman 6-3, 7-6(3); Nouza/Rikl beat Cabral/Miedler 6-3, 7-6(9) defeated Romios/Seggerman 6-3, 7-6(3); Nouza/Rikl beat Cabral/Miedler 6-3, 7-6(9) Andreozzi/Demoliner got past Romboli/Smith 6-3, 6-4; Hijikata/Pel beat Americans Tracy/Cash 6-3, 6-7(5), 7-6(11) Getty Images How have things been going in the doubles today? Let's check in, firstly on the mixed doubles. American Withrow and Khromacheva beat Brit Glasspool and Olmos 6-3, 6-3 All-British pair Silva/Paris beat Schuurs/Arends 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(5) U.S. player Lammons and Panova surprised seventh seeds Perez/Krawietz 7-6(2), 6-4 7-6(2), 6-4 American duo Melichar-Martinez/Harrison were beaten by Jiang/Bhambri, 6-3, 1-6, 7-6(6) Coming up later: Wu/Doumbia vs. UK-U.S. pair Krawczyk/Skupski, and Brits Cash/Watson vs. Italians Vavassori/Errani (3) Struff 1-6, *0-0 Alcaraz He makes it look too easy sometimes. Alcaraz paints a serve down the line and all Struff can do is wave at it as the ball blazes by him. First set to Carlos! Getty Images Checking out the men's singles scores, with plenty of sets taken across the All England Club. Nuno Borges, smiling above, has taken the second set 6-4 against Karen Khachanov (17) after losing the first 7-6(6) and is a break up at 2-0 in the third. No wonder he's grinning. Nicolas Jarry leads João Fonseca at 6-3, 6-4, though Fonseca is ahead 4-1 in the third set. Kamil Majchrzak is up 6-3, 7-6(4), 1-0 on serve on Arthur Rinderknech, while Luciano Darderi fought back to take the third set 6-3 after losing the first two 6-4, 6-4 against Jordan Thompson. 2-1 to Thompson, on serve, in the fourth there. Getty Images Struff 1-5* Alcaraz Carlos Alcaraz is rolling already. He lobs a shot towards the back of the court and Struff cannot get enough velocity on the return to will it over the net. Alcaraz is now a game away from winning the first set in under 30 minutes. Impressive work from these Wimbledon fashionistas. Let's see if The Athletic can procure a giant strawberry costume on expenses (pictorial evidence to follow hopefully...). Alcaraz 2-1* Struff Carlos Alcaraz, the second seed, is underway against unseeded German Jan-Lennard Struff on Centre Court. Alcaraz leads 2-1 on serve so far. Getty Images FINAL: Bellucci 6-7(7), 4-6, 3-6 Norrie The crowd at Wimbledon gives Norrie a standing ovation as he reaches match point. After a brief volley, this match fittingly ends with an unforced error by Bellucci. Loud applause rains down on Norrie as he advances to the fourth round of the tournament. Caoimhe O'Neill/The Athletic After saving a number of match points (so many I lost count) British duo Olivia Nicholls and Henry Patten finally succumbed in straight sets against American Asia Muhammad and Argentine Andrés Molteni (6-3, 6-4). The match was held on court 17 where every now and then a ball seemed to pop out towards the walkway between No. 1 Court and Centre Court. The same place former Real Madrid and Wales player Gareth Bale has just been spotted. Now there's someone who can strike a ball out of the ground. Bellucci 6-7(7), 4-6, *3-5 Norrie Bellucci has no margin for error and he played like it in that game, staving off defeat by breaking Norrie's serve. Can he battle his way back into this match? Bellucci 6-7(7), 4-6, 1-4* Norrie This has turned into a very impressive performance from Cameron Norrie. He just hit a drop shot that Bellucci could only stare at as he breaks serve again and is now just two games away from winning this match in straight sets. Getty Images Let's take a look at the scores around the courts in the men's singles. Jordan Thompson leads Luciano Darderi by two sets, 6-4, 6-4, though he trails 3-1 in the third, with Darderi serving to make it 4-1. Karen Khachanov (17) won the first-set tiebreak 7-6(6) against Nuno Borges, but is a break down at 1-2* in the second. João Fonseca, seemingly performing a Michael Jackson dance move in the picture above, trails Nicolas Jarry 3-6, 4-5*, with Jarry serving for the second set. Kamil Majchrzak and Arthur Rinderknech are locked at 5-5 in the second after the Pole took the first set 6-3.
Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Struff stress but Carlitos maintains hat-trick charge
Carlos Alcaraz has survived a "stressful" afternoon, coping with a barrage of booming serves from veteran German powerhhouse Jan-Lennard Struff to take his unbeaten streak to 21 matches and keep his Wimbledon hat-trick ambitions on course. The Spanish champion knew all about the danger of the 35-year-old Struff, having been knocked out of the 2021 French Open by him when he was an emerging star and then also getting stretched by the towering German over five sets at the following year's Wimbledon. And the same old problems emerged again on Friday when, after Alcaraz had eased through the first set, Struff, who blasted down 13 aces in all, responded brilliantly to clinch the crucial break for 5-3 before levelling the match. A fourth consecutive 4R at #Wimbledon awaits Carlos Alcaraz 👏The defending champion defeats Jan-Lennard Struff 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 🇪🇸 — Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 4, 2025 But Alcaraz, who'd also had a serious workout from another veteran, Fabio Fognini, over five sets in the opening round, once again found another gear to prevail 6-1 3-6 6-3 6-4 in two hours and 25 minutes. "I knew it was going to be really difficult and I had to be focused on every shot," said the 22-year-old. "His game suits the grass, big serves, coming to the net, so I'm pleased with everything I did today. Proud to get the win in four sets. "To be honest I was suffering in every service game I did. Lots of break points down. It was stressful," added Alcaraz, who set up a last-16 date with 14th seed Andrey Rublev, who eased past veteran French leftie Adrian Mannarino 7-5 6-2 6-3. Taylor Fritz, who had already negotiated two marathon five-setters over three days to reach the third round, needed another three hours and 12 minutes to get past Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina. Yet though his workload has been massive and he's had issues with his knee, he reckons he's actually feeling stronger as each match goes by as he gets ready to face Australian Jordan Thompson, four-set victor over Luciano Darderi, in the last-16. It as the end of the road for Brazil's rising teenage star Joao Fonseca, who couldn't keep his legion of noisy fans happy after losing to the resurgent Chilean qualifier Nicolas Jarry, who secured a fourth-round meeting with Britain's Cameron Norrie after a 6-3 6-4 3-6 7-6 (7-4) victory on a raucous No.2 Court. The home fans, fed up after the exit of their big men's hope Jack Draper on Thursday, still have Cameron Norrie, their 2022 semi-finalist, to cheer after the last British man standing beat Italy's Mattia Bellucci 7-6 (7-5) 6-4 6-3.