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Scotsman
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Scotsman
Dominating the net: British stars take over the nations conversations during Wimbledon
The nation went Wimbledon-wild during the last two weeks, as the success of homegrown heroes inspired fans across the country. Nowhere was that more apparent than in SW19; standout performances from Britain's Jack Draper, Katie Boulter, Cam Norrie and Emma Raducanu saw notable spikes in demand on The Nation's Network, as fans turned to their devices to share their courtside excitement with friends and family. Free weekly newsletter Join our weekly YourWorld newsletter for updates, behind-the-scenes insights from our editors and your chance to shape what's next. Free weekly newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Wimbledon's iconic middle Sunday proved to be the busiest day for Vodafone's network, with 6,100 gigabytes of data used by visitors across the Grounds. Interest peaked during Cam Norrie's gripping five-set victory against Chile's Nicolas Jarry, with a huge 3,000 gigabytes of data being consumed across the epic four-and-a-half-hour match – enough to stream more than 600 HD films. Yet, it was the opening day that really got Brits talking, with Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal's impressive victories against Paula Badosa and Jelena Ostapenko helping to drive over 46,000 voice calls, as fans phoned home. Wimbledon fever extended well beyond the grounds, with more than 10,000 Brits streaming Carlos Alcaraz's nail-biting five-set victory over 38-year-old Fabio Fognini on their phones during work hours – joining traditional TV audiences in the moment, according to insights from Barb. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It wasn't just the tennis that kept the nation hooked, however, as Google Trends revealed a surge in curiosity around the nation's stars. Searches for 'Sonay Kartal tattoos' soared by a massive 9,900%, while 'Jack Draper hair' and 'Cam Norrie accent' ranked among the nation's top searches for each player, showing Brits' interests in their homegrown heroes beyond the court. Fans at Wimbledon drove record demand on The Nation's Network*, with usage increasing versus last year, as fans streamed matches, messaged friends and phoned home to celebrate British successes in the early rounds. And it wouldn't be Wimbledon without the weather taking centre stage, with searches for 'Wimbledon heat' soaring by 683% as Brits braced themselves for the sweltering conditions. Meanwhile, the age-old debate between 'Henman Hill' and 'Murray Mound' reignited online once again, seeing the Englishman coming out on top this year, with 58% more searches for the 'Hill' versus the 'Mound'. The Championships continued to fuel the nations' excitement, with searches for 'tennis court nearby' more than doubling – up 120% since the event began – as fans were inspired to pick up a racket themselves. In total, 548,770 tennis fans attended this year's Championships – an all-time attendance record. Together, fans consumed more than 69,000 gigabytes of data across the two weeks. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Iain Milligan, Network Development & Infrastructure Director, VodafoneThree, said: 'From music festivals to Centre Court, connecting fans to iconic British moments is exactly what The Nation's Network is built for. As Official Connectivity Partner to The Championships, we proudly power SW19 with 5G Standalone connectivity, delivering faster speeds and greater coverage for fans across the grounds. In turn, allowing them to share their favourite moments with friends, call home to fully dissect the match or hit search to find out more about their favourite stars.' Fans at Wimbledon drove record demand on The Nation's Network*, with usage increasing versus last year, as fans streamed matches, messaged friends and phoned home to celebrate British successes in the early rounds. As Official Connectivity Partner to The Championships, Vodafone – The Nation's Network – has brought its reliable, award-winning*** network to SW19, ensuring fans can stay connected to the action and enjoy the very best of the British summer with their friends. Vodafone enabled its 5G Standalone network at The Championships for the first time in 2023 and since then, it has delivered faster 5G speeds and greater coverage for those on and around the grounds. Beyond the courts, Vodafone is helping friends stay connected this summer. Its latest campaign spotlights classic British pastimes – from TV presenter Roman Kemp enjoying an afternoon at the pub with mates to a student's joyful reunion at the train station – all of which celebrate how The Nation's Network brings friends together to enjoy the very best of the British summer. VodafoneThree is committed to delivering a new era of connectivity. With an £11 billion investment over eight years, VodafoneThree will be able to build a network that transforms the nation, delivering more reliable, quality connectivity to all corners of the UK.


Scotsman
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- Scotsman
Dominating the net: British stars take over the nations conversations during Wimbledon
The nation went Wimbledon-wild during the last two weeks, as the success of homegrown heroes inspired fans across the country. Nowhere was that more apparent than in SW19; standout performances from Britain's Jack Draper, Katie Boulter, Cam Norrie and Emma Raducanu saw notable spikes in demand on The Nation's Network, as fans turned to their devices to share their courtside excitement with friends and family. Free weekly newsletter Join our weekly YourWorld newsletter for updates, behind-the-scenes insights from our editors and your chance to shape what's next. Free weekly newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Wimbledon's iconic middle Sunday proved to be the busiest day for Vodafone's network, with 6,100 gigabytes of data used by visitors across the Grounds. Interest peaked during Cam Norrie's gripping five-set victory against Chile's Nicolas Jarry, with a huge 3,000 gigabytes of data being consumed across the epic four-and-a-half-hour match – enough to stream more than 600 HD films. Yet, it was the opening day that really got Brits talking, with Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal's impressive victories against Paula Badosa and Jelena Ostapenko helping to drive over 46,000 voice calls, as fans phoned home. Wimbledon fever extended well beyond the grounds, with more than 10,000 Brits streaming Carlos Alcaraz's nail-biting five-set victory over 38-year-old Fabio Fognini on their phones during work hours – joining traditional TV audiences in the moment, according to insights from Barb. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It wasn't just the tennis that kept the nation hooked, however, as Google Trends revealed a surge in curiosity around the nation's stars. Searches for 'Sonay Kartal tattoos' soared by a massive 9,900%, while 'Jack Draper hair' and 'Cam Norrie accent' ranked among the nation's top searches for each player, showing Brits' interests in their homegrown heroes beyond the court. Fans at Wimbledon drove record demand on The Nation's Network*, with usage increasing versus last year, as fans streamed matches, messaged friends and phoned home to celebrate British successes in the early rounds. And it wouldn't be Wimbledon without the weather taking centre stage, with searches for 'Wimbledon heat' soaring by 683% as Brits braced themselves for the sweltering conditions. Meanwhile, the age-old debate between 'Henman Hill' and 'Murray Mound' reignited online once again, seeing the Englishman coming out on top this year, with 58% more searches for the 'Hill' versus the 'Mound'. The Championships continued to fuel the nations' excitement, with searches for 'tennis court nearby' more than doubling – up 120% since the event began – as fans were inspired to pick up a racket themselves. In total, 548,770 tennis fans attended this year's Championships – an all-time attendance record. Together, fans consumed more than 69,000 gigabytes of data across the two weeks. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Iain Milligan, Network Development & Infrastructure Director, VodafoneThree, said: 'From music festivals to Centre Court, connecting fans to iconic British moments is exactly what The Nation's Network is built for. As Official Connectivity Partner to The Championships, we proudly power SW19 with 5G Standalone connectivity, delivering faster speeds and greater coverage for fans across the grounds. In turn, allowing them to share their favourite moments with friends, call home to fully dissect the match or hit search to find out more about their favourite stars.' Fans at Wimbledon drove record demand on The Nation's Network*, with usage increasing versus last year, as fans streamed matches, messaged friends and phoned home to celebrate British successes in the early rounds. As Official Connectivity Partner to The Championships, Vodafone – The Nation's Network – has brought its reliable, award-winning*** network to SW19, ensuring fans can stay connected to the action and enjoy the very best of the British summer with their friends. Vodafone enabled its 5G Standalone network at The Championships for the first time in 2023 and since then, it has delivered faster 5G speeds and greater coverage for those on and around the grounds. Beyond the courts, Vodafone is helping friends stay connected this summer. Its latest campaign spotlights classic British pastimes – from TV presenter Roman Kemp enjoying an afternoon at the pub with mates to a student's joyful reunion at the train station – all of which celebrate how The Nation's Network brings friends together to enjoy the very best of the British summer.


Daily Mail
13-07-2025
- Sport
- Daily Mail
From Great British success to the farce of the electronic line calling system, here are the highs and lows of Wimbledon 2025
As the dust settles on Wimbledon for another year, it is Jannik Sinner who will be celebrating after his four-set defeat of Carlos Alcaraz. It was a sun-drenched and often scorching two weeks at the All-England Club as a heatwave engulfed SW19. Along the way there were some terrific highs and some rather forgettable low points at tennis' most storied Grand Slam. From the brilliantly-performing Brits to the farce surrounding the lack of line judges, this year's Wimbledon had it all. And so, with proceedings now brought to a close at Wimbledon for 2025, the grass that has been churned into dust along baselines can now rest once again. Here, Mail Sport's Matthew Lambwell takes a look at the biggest highs from this year's tournament. Highs Sonay Kartal and Cam Norrie For all the attention on Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper, it was two less fashionable Brits who stole the show. Kartal reached the last 16, showing that you do not have to be from a wealthy background, or a child prodigy, or tall and willowy to be a top British tennis player. As for Norrie, after the worst 18 months of his career when it looked as though the game might have passed him by, he played some of the finest tennis of his life to reach the quarters. His competitive spirit burns as fiercely as ever. The magnificent seven The super Tuesday on which seven Brits won through to the second round was the high watermark from a parochial perspective. Leading the way were a corps of US college boys whose progress we will follow keenly. Oliver Tarvet, who came through qualifying and acquitted himself well against Carlos Alcaraz in the second round, was most impressive. Aryna Sabalenka This has been a poor tournament overall but it is no coincidence two of the matches that will live in the memory involved the Belarusian world No1. Her tight third-round win over Emma Raducanu and her semi-final defeat by Amanda Anisimova were packed with tension and incident. Where some players can seem robotic she is so vibrantly human - from her screams of exertion, triumph or frustration to her frank admission to being 'p****d off' by Anisimova's behaviour. Lows The same old faces on commentary Given this was the first Wimbledon fully under the auspices of BBC head of sport Alex Kay-Jelski - he took over just before the last edition - we expected more of a shake-up in the commentary box. Instead it was the same old faces. There are valid reasons why Nick Kyrgios was not retained by the Beeb but some fresh blood from more recently retired players is needed. The heat We should not complain too much about a fortnight with only one day of serious rain but the heat was unbearable for much of the start and end of the fortnight. The courtside seats on Centre were sparsely populated simply because it was impossible to sit in 30C sun with no shade for that long. As the climate crisis continues this is only going to get worse. If the mooted shakeup of the tour ever transpires, there is a good argument for shifting Wimbledon back by a few weeks – when it is usually slightly cooler - to create a genuine grass court swing. Electronic line calling The players' complaints over its accuracy are simply not grounded in reality but there is no doubt the system was a disaster on its first outing at Wimbledon. Amid the malfunctions, the most consistent issue was how difficult it was for fans and even players to hear the calls, especially on the noisy stadium courts. Next year Wimbledon should introduce some visual signal - as we always had with line judges. IN or OUT could be displayed on the screens. And here's an idea - for very close ones, instead of announcing the call straight away, do a zoomed in replay on the big screen, in the style of the old challenges which added such drama. Best match Women: Amanda Anisimova bt Aryna Sabalenka 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 (semi-final). Men: Carlos Alcaraz bt Taylor Fritz 6-4, 5-7, 6-3, 7-6 (semi-final) Best shot Corentin Moutet against Francisco Comesana. The Frenchman dummied to hit an overhead then let the ball bounce and hit a half-volley drop shot - through his legs. Two sets to the good and four games away from check a first victory over a world No1 for 12 years, Grigor Dimitrov collapsed to the court with a scream of pain, clutching an abdominal muscle which had torn with the effort of another huge serve. What a let-off for Jannik Sinner.


New York Times
09-07-2025
- Sport
- New York Times
Let's hear from Carlos Alcaraz...
Follow analysis and reactions from day nine at the 2025 Championships where Carlos Alcaraz and Aryna Sabalenka have advanced to the next round Getty Images Getty Images He's just booked his ticket to the semifinal and has moved one step closer to the chance to defend his Wimbledon crown. Here's what Carlos Alcaraz had to say in his on-court interview: 'I'm really happy to be able to play another semifinal here at Wimbledon is super special. It's something that I wanted to do at the beginning of the week. I'm really happy with the way I played today against a really difficult player like Cam. He's an amazing guy as well and for sure, there are not many who work harder than him. I'm happy to see him playing these kinds of matches. 'He (semifinal opponent Taylor Fritz) has played great. The grass season for him has been really successful so far, two titles and a semifinal here at Wimbledon. I'm going to be ready for that battle, I've played a few times against him and he's always tough to play against. I'll try to play similar to today and that might give me a chance.' Getty Images FINAL: Norrie 2-6, 3-6, 3-6 Alcaraz And he's done it! With a blistering 135mph serve that Norrie cannot get clean contact to return, Alcaraz wraps up this match. That's a statement win given how easy he made it look against a tricky opponent and he's into the semifinal. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, 3-6, 3-5* Alcaraz Alcaraz, with two match points, allowed Norrie a way back in that game and he rescues it for a hold. The Spaniard has the chance to serve for the match now. Can Norrie pull off something remarkable? Getty Images Norrie 2-6, 3-6, *2-5 Alcaraz ...but can Norrie deny him the win in the last singles match of the day here at Wimbledon? This one has only been going for around 90 minutes such has been Alcaraz's dominance. Let's see what Norrie can produce with his back against the wall here. Norrie 2-6, 3-6, 2-4* Alcaraz Now that's a big break. Alcaraz can smell victory now after forcing a few errors and showing his class in that game. There were some long rallies there and the sound of Alcaraz striking the ball off his racket is something special. He looks so clean with it — and it won him the point on the way to breaking Norrie, too. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, 3-6, *1-2 Alcaraz Alcaraz is keen to get moving after another hold and a change of ends. He jogs around to the base line well before the chair umpire calls time and is waiting for Norrie's serve. He's in a hurry to get this wrapped up but will need a break to move ahead in this set. Is the Spaniard the best player in the world? Jannik Sinner would challenge that view, but Alcaraz is already smashing enough records to suggest he can become a true great of the sport. He overcame Sinner in an epic French Open final to pick up his second Coupe des Mousquetaires trophy last month in what already looks like the next great rivalry in men's tennis. That second Roland Garros win came after Alcaraz became the youngest male player to win a major title on three different surfaces at the age of 21 last year. Since breaking into the top 100 in the world rankings in 2021, Alcaraz has risen to the top of men's tennis and has four major titles — missing only the Australian Open to complete a career Grand Slam. The 22-year-old comes into Wimbledon chasing a third successive title after winning the 2023 and 2024 editions of the tournament and will be the one to beat in west London. He's just taken another step closer with that second set win. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, 3-6, 0-0* Alcaraz An error there from Norrie as he drills a forehand return into the net sees Alcaraz move two sets to the good. The two-time Wimbledon champion has been efficient and clinical so far. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, *3-5 Alcaraz Pressure on for Norrie now, who steps up to serve in the knowledge that Alcaraz is cranking up the pressure and moving closer to taking the second set. He's just one game away now. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, *2-4 Alcaraz Norrie did well to take Alcaraz to Ad-40 there and hold break point, but the Spaniard fought back and managed to hold. A few more errors have been creeping into Alcaraz's game as Norrie feels his way into this on, although he still has the advantage in the set here. FINAL: Anisimova 6-1, 7-6(11) Pavlyuchenkova There it is! After a 15-minute tiebreak featuring 20 total points, Anisimova closes out Pavlyuchenkova and wins the match, advancing to the semifinals at Wimbledon for the first time. She will face No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, *1-2 Alcaraz That was hard won by Carlos Alcaraz. He's pleased with that break as he sends a lovely touch just over the net and leaves Norrie scrambling. The Brit had done well to knock Alcaraz back from Ad-40 on a few occasions there. Getty Images Anisimova 6-1, 6-6(9-9)* Pavlyuchenkova Pavlyuchenkova was 6-3 up in the tiebreak but Anisimova turned up the pressure to even the scoring at 6-6. The competitors each land a point making it 7-7 before an unforced error by Anisimova gives Pavlyuchenkova the edge again. Now her unforced error evens it. Anisimova blasts a backhand past her opponent and now has her third match point of the set but she rips a ball wide right. Norrie 2-6, *1-1 Alcaraz Well, we're up and running in the second set and so far both players have held their service games. Norrie's hold was greeted with a much larger reaction from the crowd here than Alcaraz's — which probably says something about the momentum so far. There's plenty of support for both players inside Centre Court, though. Getty Images He had to work for that one — and he liked it! A celebratory wag of the finger from Alcaraz comes after an extraordinary rally saw Norrie recover from tight angles and drop shots, only for the reigning champion here to finally thunder home the shot to win the point. Getty Images Anisimova 6-1, *6-6 Pavlyuchenkova After everything that has ensued over the last couple of games, a tiebreak is fitting between Anisimova and Pavlyuchenkova. Getty Images Norrie 2-6, *0-0 Alcaraz He had to wait a game after Norrie held but Alcaraz is one set to the good after just 28 minutes of this match. He looks relaxed and unruffled — he's just going through the process of picking apart another opponent. Norrie is doing all he can to hold on. There's chance here to reset momentum with a new set. Getty Images Norrie *1-5 Alcaraz How about this for a start to a match from Carlos Alcaraz? He's one game away from taking this first set in pretty rapid fashion. I've come over to Centre Court to catch a piece of the action — and the Spaniard is looking comfortable even with the home crowd backing Norrie.


Times
08-07-2025
- Sport
- Times
Wimbledon 2025 live: results & scores from Cameron Norrie vs Carlos Alcaraz
'I am really happy. To be able to play another semi-final here at Wimbledon is really special. I want to go as far as I can and I am really happy with the level I played today against a really difficult player like Cam. He is an amazing guy. No one works harder than him and it is nice to see him fighting for great things.' Alcaraz will face the American fifth seed Taylor Fritz in the semi-finals. 'He [Fritz] is playing great,' the world No2 added. 'Grass works for him and he has been successful so far on it. I am going to be ready for that battle. I have played him a few times and he is tough. I will try to play similar to how I did today. I will focus but first, I want to enjoy this moment. 'Today will be great to rest up. I will make the most of the time with my team and family in London. I might try to go to the city centre if I have time. I want to play some golf with my team which will be fun. What I have been doing so far has worked so we will try to switch off together.' Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. And of course, that means that British interest in the singles has been extinguished for another year (James Gheerbrant writes). Norrie wouldn't have been many people's guess for last Brit standing, and he can reflect with pride on a very solid fortnight here, one which should see him jump up the rankings a few spots. But that was a really locked-in performance from Alcaraz, his best of the championships so far, and given Jannik Sinner's struggles against Grigor Dimitrov last night, that ought to solidify him as a heavy favourite for his third straight title. Carlos Alcaraz has done it (James Gheerbrant writes). A glorious reaching volley brings up match point, and he seals it at the first time of asking with an unreturnable serve. Cam Norrie will be disappointed but Alcaraz just never allowed him to bring anything close to his A-game out there. Alcaraz extends his winning streak to 23 matches and advances to the semi-final to play Taylor Fritz. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Norrie saves match point on serve and delivers a gutsy hold, but Alcaraz is serving for the match. An uncharacteristic mistake at the net by the Spaniard makes it 15-15 and then a double fault adds to the pressure on the world No2. He isn't fazed one jot though. An ace, and a textbook serve-volley gives him his second match point. No mistake this time, a service-winner and the twice-defending champion wraps up this quarter final in 99 minutes winning 6-2, 6-3, 6-3. Norrie has been outclassed here and this quarter-final has been very one sided. Alcaraz breaks again for a 4-2 lead in the third set and he follows it up with a rapid hold for 5-2. The crowd are still trying to get behind Norrie, who is now serving to stay in the match. An appreciative eruption of applause comes from the Centre Court crowd as Norrie executes a near-perfect drop shot of his own having been tormented by similar strokes from Alcaraz all match. To make things even better, the world No2 tries to respond with one of his own in the next point only for the ball to nestle into the net. The crowd like that even more. The Brit holds to level things at 2-2 in the third set. Carlos Alcaraz played two poor drop shots in quick succession in that set, but he knows it's a weapon that can hurt Cam Norrie and he has the commitment and cojones to keep going for it (James Gheerbrant writes). A gorgeous little feathery drop over the net gives him an opening, with Norrie serving at 4-5, and though Norrie plays a brilliant point to get to 30-30, he then chucks in two errors, and Alcaraz leads by two sets. Norrie shows some fight as he gets a break point, and the Centre Court crowd a urging him to make this quarter-final a contest. But Alcaraz saves the break with a sublime ace and looks unflappable as he holds to take a 4-2 lead in the second set. Norrie then holds to 15 and makes it 4-3 with an hour of this match played. Carlos Alcaraz can go from gunslinger to gossamer so, so quickly (James Gheerbrant writes). He drags Cam Norrie from corner to corner with his big groundstrokes, and yet when he pulls out the drop shot his touch is utterly unerring. Another absolute beauty has Norrie scampering from the baseline in vain pursuit, and earns Alcaraz the first break of the second set. Another routine hold and the 22-year-old leads 3-1. Over on No1 Court Amanda Anisimova converts match point, on the fourth time of asking and is into her first Wimbledon semi-final. The American saved five set points in the second-set tie-break against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, but she held her nerve and will face world No1 Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. A beautiful, brutally efficient set of tennis from Carlos Alcaraz, finished with a little dink over the net (James Gheerbrant writes). That might be the best set he's played at this year's Wimbledon. Norrie has troubled him in the past, and perhaps that set could have taken a different course had the Briton taken one of those four break points in the second game, but right now Alcaraz looks imperious. He takes the first set 6-2. That was special from Carlos Alcaraz (James Gheerbrant writes). Having carved out break point, he seems to be on the back foot in the ensuing rally when Cam Norrie forces him into the corner, but he whips a glorious forehand which arcs over the head of Norrie at the net, dips, and lands on the baseline. An awed 'woah' sweeps around Centre Court, and Alcaraz has a double-break. He has his foot on the gas pedal, and he keeps it there by rattling through a love service game to lead 5-1. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. A see-sawing first three games on Centre (James Gheerbrant writes). Cam Norrie brings up triple break point in Carlos Alcaraz's first service game with a stunning forehand, but Alcaraz saves them all, and one more for good measure. Alcaraz then nails a backhand return in the next game to earn two break points of his own. Norrie aces, then double-faults to hand over the first break of this quarter-final. Impressive start for Norrie who holds well, then races to a 0-40 lead on the Alcaraz serve and has three break points. The world No2 doesn't panic and saves them all, but finds the net with a backhand slice and Norrie has a fourth chance to break. He fails to convert and a deft drop shot gives Alcaraz the advantage and he holds after Norrie goes long. Good start for the Brit. Karen Khachanov, the player involved in the latest controversy over the automatic line calling system, has said there were other 'questionable' calls during his match with Taylor Fritz (David Brown writes). 'It looks like AI and electronic line calls has to be very precise and no mistakes, but we've seen a couple,' said the Russian following his defeat. 'That's questionable why this is happening. Is it just like an error of the machine or what's the reason? I think there were a few calls. I don't know, very questionable if it's really touching the line or not. 'At the same time during one point, the machine call it just 'out' during the rally. Sometimes it's scary to let machine do what they want' Aryna Sabalenka's victory means that we're not far away from seeing Carlos Alcaraz and Cam Norrie on Centre Court (James Gheerbrant writes). It's a huge ask for Norrie, of course, to beat the two-time defending champion, who has lost just one of his last 30 matches on grass. But Norrie has beaten Alcaraz twice before and speaking a couple of days ago, Alcaraz described Norrie's game-style as 'almost a nightmare' for him. Only four men — Alexander Zverev, Novak Djokovic, Jannik Sinner and Felix Auger-Aliassime — have beaten the Spaniard three times. High drama here on Court 18 where Lleyton Hewitt's playing partner in the invitational doubles is one of the ballgirls (Owen Slot writes). The score tells us that Hewitt's partner is in fact Mark Philippoussis, which makes sense because I saw them playing together earlier. The ballgirl, however, is making a pretty decent fist of it, even though her serve isn't quite hitting the speeds that Philippoussis's did. I am guessing that Philippoussis has gone for a toilet break. In the meantime, the ball girl has just played a neat passing shot beating Xavier Malisse down the backhand tramline. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. The problem with the automatic line calling system during Taylor Fritz's match was caused because a ballboy was retrieving a ball from the middle of the court while the American was preparing to serve, a Wimbledon official has said (David Brown writes). The rally continued for three strokes before the 'fault' call when Fritz hit the ball outside the serving box on No1 Court. A Wimbledon spokeswoman said: 'The player's service motion began while the BBG [ballboy or girl] was still crossing the net and therefore the system didn't recognise the start of the point,' she said. 'As such the chair umpire instructed the point be replayed.' Sabalenka hailed the performance of her opponent post-match. 'She played an incredible match, and I am super happy with the win,' the world No1 said. 'Thank you so much for your support. You don't understand how much you really helped me to stay in game and keep fighting. 'It's a smart game she plays, not annoying. She really makes your work for every point, big server, big hitter, everyone has to run and earn the win. I was trying not to give her that energy, I didn't want her to see I was annoyed even if I definitely was at some points!' Sabalenka breaks to win. What a match (Rick Broadbent writes). It was a clash of contrasts with the top seed's power against the slice, blocks, drop shots and all-round guile of Siegemund. Both deserve enormous credit. Siegemund led 4-3 with a break in the third set and had made the favourite look ungainly and exasperated, but the best players have a way of dragging victories from the jaws of defeat. A final deep forehand and a winning volley gave her a victory that hung by a thread for a time. Credit to Siegemund for presenting Sabalenka with a different sort of challenge, but it's the Belarusian who gets through. 'I need some time to cool down and recover. She pushed me so much. After the first set I was looking to my box [thinking] book the tickets [home].' Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. The umpire berates a fan for applauding between serves for spoiling the game for everyone (Rick Broadbent writes). Everyone applauds. Sabalenka waits. She makes easy work of this game. A rare ace takes her to 40-0. Two points later another gives her the game. It's 5-4 and after all this work, Siegemund will have to dig deeper than ever to serve to stay in the match. I've just been at the Aorangi Park practice courts to run the rule over Jannik Sinner's practice session in order to see what sort of shape he is in following last night's drama and all the uncertainty over his wounded elbow (Owen Slot writes). Sinner was due to start practice at 4pm. However, at just after the appointed hour, we were told that his practice session had been cancelled. That, of course, is an intriguing fact. The most obvious assumption is that his elbow is still causing him too much pain to get back to practice before his next match tomorrow. And that sounds like bad news for Sinner and good news for Ben Shelton, his quarter-final opponent. There is, of course, the possibility that he has gone to train elsewhere in private where he will not be giving away possibly crucial insights into his fitness. And he may also just need one more day's rest to get the elbow right again. Forced to generate her own power with Siegemund blocking and slicing, Sabalenka has struggled for most of this match (Rick Broadbent writes). Guts and nerves are coming into it now and after both players exchange a flurry of slices, the top seed gets a break back point. Siegemund's overhead gives Sabalenka a passing chance but she misses. Then Siegemund goes long by an inch. Another opportunity. And another block goes narrowly long. It's 4-4. Sabalenka appears to be breaking down as Siegemund closes in on a routine hold of serve. The world No1 mistimes a backhand into the tram lines, and then hits the net with a seemingly simple forehand drive. But out of nowhere, Sabalenka changes her approach as the pair exchange slice after slice, with the world No1 comes out on top and has a break back point. She can't see it out first time of asking but Siegemund goes long second time round and we are back on serve at 4-4 in the final set. Errors on both sides of the net now, which is understandable after 154 minutes (Rick Broadbent writes). From a half-court ball Sabalenka makes a costly one and fires a backhand into the net, letting out a cry of anguish. Siegemund has hung in and now leads 4-3 with a break. I suspect that in a match of twisty-turny fare they will contrive more drama yet, but what chance for a woman ranked outside the world's top 100. All square at 3-3 as Sabalenka breaks (Rick Broadbent writes). Siegemund found the wrong time for a double fault in that game. Buckle up. Siegemund misses the biggest sitter you will see this summer with a 3-1 lead (Rick Broadbent writes). That helps Sabalenka to a simple hold. We are getting towards the crunch. It's been a cracker. 3-2 to Siegemund with a break. Deuce, 2-1 and Siegemund gets a time violation on her serve (Rick Broadbent writes). I imagine she is surprised it has taken so long and she is unfazed. She wins the next two points with comfort and leads 3-1. At one point in this game Sabalenka is on her knees, berating herself, the tennis gods, AI or an even higher authority. She needs to show real grit now because this could unravel quickly. Taylor Fritz is through to his first Wimbledon semi-final courtesy of a gutsy performance in the fourth set tie-break (Alyson Rudd writes). There were two malfunctions on No1 Court. The first was Fritz's dramatic dip in form in the third set which he lost 6-1. The second was an erroneous call from the electronic line judge that meant a point had to be stopped mid way through. Neither had a material effect on the match, however. 'I've never had a match that flipped so quickly' Fritz said of the third set. 'I gave him a lot of hope. 'I started making a ton of mistakes.' Having lost in five sets twice before at the quarter-final stage he was mightily relieved to get the job done in four sets this time. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Wimbledon's automatic line judging system is now shouting out calls apparently randomly (David Brown writes). This time the Hawk-Eye system announced 'fault' mid rally in American Taylor Fritz's match against Karen Khachanov on No.1 Court. The umpire, Louise Azemar-Engzell, stopped the match during the first game of the fourth set and made a call to the referees' office. There was slow clapping from spectators before a chorus of boos as the umpire announced: 'Ladies and gentleman, we will replay the last point due to a malfunction with the system.' The All England Club is looking into the cause. Fritz, who went on to win the march, had said on Sunday about problems with the system: 'It's frustrating when you mess up in a match, and then you have to get over it.' Wimbledon blamed 'human error' for problems with the system during the match between Britain's Sonay Kartal and Russia's Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova on Sunday. A point had to be replayed when the line call system's cameras were accidentally switched off on part of Centre Court. Brilliant from Siegemund who gives Sabalenka the runaround to break her to love (Rick Broadbent writes). The last point is a gem, with clever shot selection, a lob and a winner. Sabalenka has never got to grips with the blocked return and the drop shot. A big game coming up for the German who leads 2-1. In the words of a former great commentator: 'Oh I say'. Siegemund is pegged back from 40-0 to 40-30 in her opening service game but her low, flat forehand hits the very top of the net and crawls over (Rick Broadbent writes). Siegemund offers the customary insincere apology and it's 1-1. Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavic, the top seeds in the men's doubles, are through to the semi-finals, after surviving a tight three-setter against the 10th seeds Hugo Nys and Édouard Roger-Vasselin (James Gheerbrant writes). They've prevailed 10-5 in a match tie-break, and will go through to face Rinky Hijikata and David Pel, the unseeded pair who weren't even in the initial draw. Incidentally, Pavic's record of having won his seven grand-slam doubles titles (four in men's, three in mixed) with seven different partners, which I personally think is quite cool, is under threat, as he and Arévalo won last year's French Open together. He has not, however, won one before with Timea Babos, his partner in the mixed: and they'll be in semi-final action against Sem Verbeek and Katerina Siniakova later today. Computer says no. At least in terms of an upset (Rick Broadbent writes). The IBM stats folk now give Siegemund a miserly 12 per cent chance of a win. That seems harsh. You would expect Sabalenka to come through now and she has certainly upped her game, but Siegemund has caused her enough problems to warrant a bit more doubt than that. Another drop shot and Sabalenka throws her hands in the air in disgust (Rick Broadbent writes). She is getting more accurate with her forehand, though, and Siegemund is soon hanging on. Another drop shot hits the net to bring up the first set point. It drifts long. Sabalenka let out her biggest roar yet and that forehand brings her another chance. Siegemund makes an unforced error. It's a set each. Good Tuesday afternoon fare, this — 6-4, 2-6. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. That's a big hold for Sabalenka. Her opponent pulled out all the stops but the Belarusian responded by piling on the power with a huge volley to save break point and lets out her biggest roar yet (Rick Broadbent writes). She gets to 5-2. It is still evenly contested but momentum may just be moving in the expected direction. Fritz received treatment from the physio at the end of what was a very sorry third set for him (Alyson Rudd writes). He had his toes strapped. At 15-0 on the Fritz serve in the opening game the umpire stopped play due to a system malfunction. It did not much bother the Russian who broke serve then held. Fritz stopped the rot by holding to trail 2-1. The so-called malfunction was not as dramatic as that seen in the Sonay Kartal match. But another incident to make us wonder about the reliability of robots. You know it's bad for Sabalenka because people are shouting for her in the way they do for an underdog (Rick Broadbent writes). The novelty of seeing her in trouble has segued into genuine concern that she may be going out in straight sets. It seems to work. Siegemund tosses in a double fault, fluffs a drop shot, and then loses an exchange at the net. That takes them to deuce and a flurry of big groundstrokes give Sabalenka the break. She leads 4-2 in the second. We could be going the distance here. Huge moment in the second set, as Sabalenka breaks Siegemund to take a 4-2 lead. The world No1 pounces on Siegemund's second serve and puts the German under pressure with some powerful groundstrokes. Siegemund miscues a backhand and Sabalenka gets the break and has brought herself some breathing space with new balls in play. Cruz Hewitt, son of Lleyton, has had his run in the boys' singles abruptly terminated by the Finnish 11th seed Oskari Paldanius, by a score of 6-3, 6-0 (James Gheerbrant writes). And in the men's doubles, the final set between the top seeds Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavic and the 10th seeds Hugo Nys and Édouard Roger-Vasselin is going the distance: it's currently 5-5. Okay, we thought this was maybe that turning point. Sabalenka does not have to do much and breaks to go 2-0 up, via a drop shot (Rick Broadbent writes). Take that. Sabalenka has been letting her emotions show here and would be a terrible poker player, but that's better. And then what? Siegemund plays a drop shot off a serve again and has break back points. She sees it through. A phone has been ringing for the past few points. An alarm bell maybe. Did anyone ever mention that tennis can be… weird (Alyson Rudd writes). Fritz, having been broken early in the third set, seems disinterested and clearly of the opinion that breaks matter too much to do anything about them. Out of nowhere Khachanov raced to a 5-0 lead playing inspired, confident strokes. Fritz claws it back to 5-1 but there is a fine line between being relaxed and underpowered. The Russian serves out to take the third set with ease. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. There is still a long way to go and the greats generally find a way back, but all those slices and drop shots have exposed Sabalenka's Harry Maguire-esque pace around the court (Rick Broadbent writes). Siegemund gets another chance in the opening game but lets Sabalenka off the hook. Murmurs all around Centre Court. Taylor Fritz seems to be having a bit of a wobble on No1 Court. After a business-like first two sets, he finds himself 4-0 down in the third and has lost his mojo a little. Maybe he had his mind on an afternoon in the sun a little early? Karen Khachanov has other ideas. He breaks the American straight away at the start of the third and follows that with a double break. It has unsettled Fritz to say the least. Trailing 5-4 on the Siegemund serve, Sabalenka nets on the first point and lets out a huge roar of frustration (Stuart Fraser writes). Then she loses an entertaining exchange at the net, followed by a miscue off a second serve. Three set points for the 37-year-old. She takes the second as Sabalenka makes a hash of another return. Siegemund has played a blinder here. Can she keep it up? Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Aside from the awfully unfortunate injury that Grigor Dimitrov suffered at two sets up on Centre Court last night, there was also a clear physical issue for his opponent Jannik Sinner (Stuart Fraser writes). After walking off the court as the winner through retirement, the world No1 from Italy revealed to reporters that he required an MRI scan on his right elbow. No details of the MRI have been released by his team but Sinner is down on the practice sheet at Aorangi Park for a 4pm start, which suggests that it isn't too serious an issue at this stage. We shall see how he hits the ball later. Funny old game (Rick Broadbent writes). Having played a clever match to get to 5-2, serving for the set proves far harder for Siegemund. A double fault does not help and the game goes quickly. Is that a turning point? It is very hard to see how Khachanov turns this around (Alyson Rudd writes). In the ninth game of the second set Fritz broke to love and not even the Russian's willpower could do anything about his opponent's clinical returns and point management. Fritz served out for the second set as if on the practice court. This is a masterclass from the American in believing in the process — as they say. On No12 Court, the top seeds in the men's doubles, Marcelo Arevalo of El Salvador and Mate Pavic of Croatia, have been taken to a decider by the Franco-Monegasque pairing of Édouard Roger-Vasselin and Hugo Nys, who have just stormed through the second-set tie-breaker, taking it 7-2 (James Gheerbrant writes). Arévalo and Pavic won last year's French Open but haven't reached a grand slam final since then, and they've got work to do now. There are a few signs that Sabalenka is getting to grips with Siegemund but she is still struggling to impose her power game on the wily German who plays as if it's the 1970s with her slice, loops and guile (Rick Broadbent writes). Sabalenka has not lost a set at Wimbledon yet but is on the brink. Siegemund uses all her doubles skill to conjure up a break point with a brilliantly constructed point and winning volley. And she breaks yet again to go to 5-2. I think it's fair to say Siegemund is annoying Sabalenka now (Rick Broadbent writes). She breaks her again to go 3-0 up. This is good news for Nick Kyrgios too. He has revealed he is planning a 'Battle of the Sexes' Ultimate Tennis Showdown with Sabalenka in Hong Kong later this year. The match will be played in eight-minute quarters rather than sets, on a smaller court and with only one serve permitted. A grand final is planned for London later this year. Kyrgios said: 'This is going to be something that I'm really nervous for, to be honest, because she's in her absolute prime and she's getting the wooden legs of me, but I'm still feeling confident that I'll get her.' Back to the real stuff and Sabalenka gets one of those breaks back, but the slice and drop shots are troubling her. She trails 3-2. The crowd on No1 can see how hard it is for the Russian to keep pace with Fritz and are giving him more support than he probably imagined he would receive (Alyson Rudd writes). But the spectators here like stoicism in the face of tough battles. Khachanov has struggled to hold serve in the second set (after losing the first set) but keeps pulling through. Fritz, meanwhile, is brimming with quiet self confidence. Taylor Fritz has opened his quarter-final clash against Karen Khachanov with a commanding performance, taking the first set 6–2 on No1 Court. He broke Khachanov twice early, showcasing aggressive serving and crisp groundstrokes, and wrapped it up in 33 minutes. Fritz looked in control throughout the set, flashing the kind of power and precision that earned him his early edge. There have been four games on Centre Court so far and only one of them has been a held service game. Siegemund has broken Sabalenka twice to lead 3-1 and is proving a nightmare for the world No1, who certainly has her voice on her today. Well there you go (Rick Broadbent writes). Siegemund did what she said she would in that first game. She played three drop shots, one off a serve, and then powered two winners off either flank to get the break in the opening game. It's a good tactic as Sabalenka is not the best mover. The top seed said she would show Siegemund that she could not annoy her. Let's see. Could be an interesting start on Centre Court today (Rick Broadbent writes). Common sense says Aryna Sabalenka will have far too much for Laura Siegemund, ranked 104 in the world, but her frustrating style could add some spice. Certainly, the German's pre-match comments suggested she might try to get inside the No1's head. 'I don't necessarily like or seek to make trouble. You know, that's not my goal. But I know that I have some very controversial habits, let's say. The only thing that I can say about them, they are really about me. I don't try to disturb anyone, although that might be interpreted like that. I have my weird stuff going on. I've been doing it all my life. I was always slow, talking about time violations and stuff.' Let's hope she makes it weirdly competitive. On No5 Court, Cruz Hewitt, the 16-year-old son of 2002 Wimbledon champion Lleyton is about to get underway in the second round of the juniors against Oskari Paldanius, a Finn who reached the semi-finals of the boys' singles at the Australian Open this year (James Gheerbrant writes). With his backwards baseball-cap and war-paint smear of zinc sunscreen across his face, Cruz bears an undeniable resemblance to his father. Whether he has also inherited his dad's signature battle cry of 'Come awwwwnnnnnn!', we wait to see. At 37, Germany's Laura Siegemund has penned an inspiring late-career chapter. Born in 1988 in Filderstadt, she turned pro in 2006 and earned a psychology degree in 2016. A doubles powerhouse, she reached world No4 in January 2024 and boasts 14 WTA doubles titles, including the 2020 US Open and the 2023 WTA Finals. In mixed doubles, she's a two-times grand-slam winner: the 2016 US Open and the 2024 French Open. Although singles success was rarer, she claimed WTA titles in 2016 and 2017, peaking at No 27 in August 2016. Wimbledon 2025 has marked a remarkable milestone—she has become the oldest woman to reach her first Wimbledon singles quarter-final in the Open Era, overcoming Madison Keys and Solana Sierra. Coached by partner Antonio Zucca, Siegemund is celebrated for her tactical variety, creative shot-making, and resilience. A true late bloomer, she's proving that timing and grit can defy the odds. Despite her titles, beating Aryna Sabalenka today would surely be the most impressive win of her career. Centre Court (from 1.30pm) [7] Mirra Andreeva vs Belinda Bencic[22] Flavio Cobolli vs [6] Novak Djokovic No1 Court (from 1pm) [8] Iga Swiatek vs [19] Liudmila Samsonova[1] Jannik Sinner v [10] Ben Shelton Rumour has it I have tipped Taylor Fritz to win the championships (Alyson Rudd writes). This is not strictly accurate but he is one of those big servers who, on their day, certainly could pull it off. The American had already broken serve against Karen Khachanov on No1 court and is serving beautifully and with confidence. What a start for Taylor Fritz over on No1 Court. The American has never been beyond the quarter-finals at SW19, having reached the last eight both in 2022 and last year but he has started like he intends to stay at Wimbledon for another few days at least. He opens the serving and then breaks Karen Khachanov at the first time of asking. Fritz has won more grass-court matches this year than any other player (12) — will this be lucky No13? Aryna Sabalenka's journey at Wimbledon has been a compelling tale of power, patience, and progress. Known for her explosive groundstrokes and fierce intensity, Sabalenka initially struggled on grass, often exiting in early rounds. But in 2021, she made a major breakthrough, reaching her first grand-slam semi-final at Wimbledon — finally proving her game could thrive on the slick surface. She fell just short to Karolina Pliskova, but it marked her arrival as a true all-court threat. Sabalenka missed the 2022 edition due to the ban on Russian and Belarusian players but returned with vengeance in 2023, again reaching the semi-finals before being halted by Ons Jabeur. Each appearance has seen her grow more comfortable with the surface's unpredictability, adapting her power to grass's demands. Now she is the top seed and favourite. In her way today stands Laura Siegemund. Day nine of Wimbledon 2024 delivered drama with a dash of déjà vu and plenty of Centre Court swagger. Daniil Medvedev finally exorcised his Sinner demons, coming from behind to oust top seed Jannik Sinner in a five-set thriller—ending a five-match losing streak and silencing the Italian's grass-court charge. Carlos Alcaraz, not to be outdone, dropped a set to Tommy Paul before shifting into turbo mode to win in four, reminding everyone who the defending champ was. On the women's side, Jasmine Paolini bulldozed past Emma Navarro 6–2, 6–1 in a match that barely gave the crowd time to unwrap their strawberries. Meanwhile, unseeded Donna Vekic played giant-killer yet again, taking down surprise package Lulu Sun in three sets to book her first-ever Slam semi. Elena Rybakina, cool as ever, breezed past Elina Svitolina with a crisp 6–3, 6–2 win. Sunshine, upsets, and star power—Wimbledon served up the goods. Quite a story on No2 Court. The Australian-Dutch doubles pairing of Rinky Hijikata and David Pel were not even placed in the draw at the start of the championships — they only got in as one of the alternate pairs when another team withdrew. They'd never played together at a grand slam before and Pel, a 33-year-old who plays mainly on the Challenger circuit, had only ever won three grand slam matches in doubles in his career. But they've just put out the Brazilian duo of Rafael Matos and Marcelo Melo to reach the semi-finals, where they'll play either the top seeds, Marcelo Arevalo and Mate Pavic, or the 10th seeds, Hugo Nys and Édouard Roger-Vasselin. There is a gap on Wimbledon's CV (Alyson Rudd writes). Forty-five years ago, Evonne Goolagong Cawley won Wimbledon as a mother, which ought to have meant that mums flooded through the gates reaching the latter stages here on a regular basis — but no mother has won the Championships since. That there is a collective desire to see a woman who has started a family prevail was evident on No1 Court where Belinda Bencic, the last remaining of the nine mothers who started out in the singles draw, defeated Ekaterina Alexandrova, the No 18 seed, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4. It was a tense, high-quality affair and afterwards Bencic beamed at the spectators and told them she was 'juggling a lot — just like any mum — so yeah, props to the mums'. This went down very well indeed. Not everyone can identify with being an elite sports star but lots of us understand all too well the challenges of balancing work and family and everyone has a different take on how to do it while keeping guilt to a minimum. The 28-year-old from Switzerland says it is largely about the ability to compromise. ● Read more: Belinda Bencic: Last mum standing wins hearts in bid to end 45-year wait There is a scene in the film Elf where Buddy is testing jack-in-the-boxes and is shocked that every single time one bursts out (Alyson Rudd writes). In a similar vein, every day of the tournament I have failed to prepare myself for the second of panic I experience when I open my desk locker to see that someone has stolen my laptop. They haven't of course. It is just that it is black and the locker is black so it is briefly invisible. It will happen again tomorrow. And just like that, Alfie Hewett is through. He has been all business against Dani Caverzaschi and finishes with a flurry to rip through the Spaniard in 54 minutes. The defending champion wins 6-1, 6-2 and only conceded on his own serve once. Ruthless. Alfie Hewett is starting his 2025 Wimbledon campaign today, facing Dani Caverzaschi of Spain in the first round of the men's wheelchair singles. This is their first meeting at a grand slam but are no strangers to each other outside of the major tournaments. Hewett cruised to victory in the first set, winning 6-1 in little over 30 minutes, and the second set is with serve at present. As the No2 seed, Hewett enters the tournament with a refreshed mindset, aiming to build upon his previous successes. He has expressed a desire to adopt a different approach to his tennis this year. In the doubles draw, Hewett and his long-time partner Gordon Reid are aiming for another grand-slam title together. Hewett has secured a total of 32 grand-slam titles—ten in singles and 22 in doubles. Fair to say he's pretty good. A legal challenge to Wimbledon's expansion plans has been delayed as more than 100 protestors tried to get into the High Court hearing. The Save Wimbledon Park campaign is challenging the Greater London Authority's approval of planning permission for an 8,000 seat stadium and 37 practice courts on a former golf course opposite the All England Club. The judicial review hearing was meant to start at 10.30am but dozens of people could not enter the court room. The hearing is scheduled to last two days with a ruling expected after the summer break. The heart kind of goes out to Alex De Minaur (Owen Slot writes). At least it would have done if there was much heart left. If you spent your tennis life extending sympathy to those who thought flickeringly that they were getting one up on Novak Djokovic, then you'd look as broken as De Minaur looked afterwards. Beaten 6-1, 4-6, 4-6, 4-6, in a thrilling encounter against the preposterously evergreen Serb, De Minaur's last show of impressive pace was the speed with which he made it up to do his media duties. That always tells a tale: get it done, get out, go home. De Minaur sat there politely answering questions that he really had no care for. The weight of the world was such that he could just about hold his head above the table. ● Read more: Just as Novak Djokovic looked his age, he roared his defiance yet again Jannik Sinner was the most fortunate man in Wimbledon last night after his inspired opponent, Grigor Dimitrov, was forced to retire for a fifth consecutive grand-slam while leading by two sets (Rick Broadbent writes). The 19th seed from Bulgaria had dominated the world No 1 to go 6-3, 7-5 up in their fourth-round match when he clutched his chest after serving an ace to make it 2-2 in the third. He collapsed to the turf in clear distress with an apparent muscle injury. Sinner vacated his end of the court to check on him. ● Read more: Jannik Sinner through after injury denies tearful Grigor Dimitrov Before we crack on with previewing today's action, let's revisit yesterday's drama. Here are the selected highlights of today's action. Centre Court (from 1.30pm)Aryna Sabalenka [1] vs Laura SiegemundCameron Norrie vs Carlos Alcaraz [2]No1 Court (from 1pm)Taylor Fritz [5] vs Karen Khachanov [17]Amanda Anisimova [13] vs Anastasia PavlyuchenkovaNo2 Court (from 11am)Rinky Hijikata / David Pel vs Rafael Matos / Marcelo Melo (Men's Doubles QF)Olivia Gadecki / Desirae Krawczyk vs Caroline Dolehide / Sofia Kenin [16] (Women's Doubles QF)Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan vs Tommy Haas / Feliciano López (Men's Invitational Doubles RR) Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages, The Times proudly brings to you the business end of Wimbledon 2025. That's right, we're at the quarter-final stage. Can you believe we're already on day nine? Crazy right. It's been a wild ride so far and we're very much getting into the nitty gritty. We have a banger of a day, featuring Britain's last singles hope after the three peat-chasing defending champion: Cameron Norrie v Carlos Alcaraz. Aryna Sabalenka is the heavy favourite to win her first Wimbledon crown. She is also in action today against 37-year-old world No104, Laura Siegemund. And there is more.