
Wimbledon briefing: Day seven recap, Monday order of play and technology woe
Here, the PA news agency looks back at Sunday's action and previews day eight of the Championships.
Norrie mania returns
Cameron Norrie came through a marathon match to reach the quarter-finals (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
Cameron Norrie kept the British flag flying at Wimbledon by taking down qualifier Nicolas Jarry in a five-set marathon to reach the quarter-finals.
The 29-year-old had a match point in the third set, but was taken to a fifth by the towering Chilean before getting over the line after four hours and 27 minutes.
Norrie, a semi-finalist in 2022, is only the third British man to reach the last eight more than once in the last 50 years, after Tim Henman and Andy Murray, and is the last home hope remaining in singles after Sonay Kartal was beaten in straight sets by Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.
Technology fail
'They stole the game from me' 😠
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova wasn't happy when #Wimbledon's electronic line-calling system failed ❌ pic.twitter.com/JA0WIYSccD
— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) July 6, 2025
Wimbledon officials had to apologise to Pavlyuchenkova and Kartal after an embarrassing malfunction of the new electronic line-calling system on Centre Court.
Organisers admitted the technology was turned off in error on a section of the court for a game, with the mistake only becoming apparent when a shot from Kartal that clearly missed the baseline was not called out.
Had the call been correct, it would have given Pavlyuchenkova a 5-4 lead in the first set, but instead umpire Nico Helwerth ruled the point should be replayed, with Kartal going on to win the game.
A Wimbledon spokesperson later said the technology was 'deactivated in error on part of the server's side of the court', the 'chair umpire followed the established process' and both players had received an apology.
Sabalenka and Alcaraz progress
Aryna Sabalenka is through to the last eight (Adam Davy/PA)
Women's world number one Aryna Sabalenka beat Elise Mertens in straight sets to reach the quarter-finals for an 11th successive grand slam appearance.
The victory was her 46th of the season – way ahead of any other player, with only four women managing more wins in the whole of 2024 – but having lost in the Australian Open and French Open finals so far this year, she is desperate to win Wimbledon for the first time.
Meanwhile, reigning men's champion Carlos Alcaraz remains on course for a third successive SW19 title.
The Spaniard dropped the opening set against Russian 14th seed Andrey Rublev, but he fought back to extend his winning streak to 22 matches.
Match of the day
Alex De Minaur will attempt to stop Novak Djokovic (Ben Whitley/PA)
Alex De Minaur has been forced to wait for a crack at seven-time champion Djokovic.
The pair were scheduled to meet in the 2024 quarter-finals before a devastated De Minaur withdrew ahead of play due to a hip injury sustained in his previous round win over Arthur Fils.
Twelve months on, the Australian has an opportunity a round earlier.
Order of play
Centre Court (from 1.30pm)
Novak Djokovic (6) v Alex De Minaur (11)
Mirra Andreeva (7) v Emma Navarro (10)
Jannik Sinner (1) v Grigor Dimitrov (19)
Court One (from 1pm)
Ekaterina Alexandrova (17) v Belinda Bencic
Ben Shelton (10) v Lorenzo Sonego
Iga Swiatek (8) v Clara Tauson (23)
Weather
Heavy rain changing to sunny intervals by late morning, with a maximum temperature of 23C, according to the Met Office.
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