Wimbledon 2021: How to watch, schedule, draw, bracket, tennis scores and more

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Wimbledon returned this year on ESPN after the oldest tennis tournament in the world was canceled last year amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

We will have information about the results , key players and big storylines over the course of the Grand Slam, from the time the draw is released to the time champions are crowned.

How to watch Wimbledon

The entire tournament will be broadcast on the ESPN family of networks, as well as on ESPN+ and the ESPN App.

The women's championship, featuring Ash Barty and Karolina Pliskova , will be broadcast on Saturday at 9 a.m. on ESPN, while the men's championship will be broadcast at 9 a.m. on Sunday.

Thursday at Wimbledon

Barty and Pliskova clinched their spots in the women's singles championship. Barty, the tournament's top seed, defeated three-time Grand Slam champion Angelique Kerber 6-3, 7-6 (3). The 25-year-old Barty is in search of her second Grand Slam title.

To do that, she will need to defeat No. 8 seed Pliskova, who beat second-seeded Aryna Sabalenka 5-7, 6-4, 6-4. Pliskova, 29, has yet to win a major championship. She is appearing in her first Grand Slam final since the 2016 US Open.

What's on tap for Friday at Wimbledon

Top seed Novak Djokovic is two matches away from his 20th Grand Slam singles title, which would tie Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal for the most by a men's player. First up, he faces 22-year-old Canadian Denis Shapovalov .

In the other men's semifinal, seventh-seeded Matteo Berrettini takes on No. 14 seed Hubert Hurkacz , with both trying to reach their first major final.

What happened Wednesday at Wimbledon

The men's quarterfinals got underway with No. 1 Novak Djokovic advancing to the semifinals with a straight-sets win against Marton Fucsovics 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. No. 14 Hubert Hurkacz stunned No. 6 Roger Federer in straight sets 6-3, 7-6, 6-0 to advance. On Court 1, No. 10 Denis Shapovalov of Canada outlasted 25th-seeded Karen Khachanov 6-4, 3-6, 5-7, 6-1, 6-4. But fellow Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime , seeded 16th, fell to No. 7 Matteo Berrettini in the last quarterfinal of the day 6-3, 5-7, 7-5, 6-3.

What happened Tuesday at Wimbledon

The women's semifinals are set after world No. 1 Ash Barty routed fellow Australian Ajla Tomljanovic 6-1, 6-3 and No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka ended the history-making run of Tunisia's Ons Jabeur 6-4, 6-3. Barty will play Angelique Kerber , a 6-2, 6-3 winner over Karolina Muchova in the semifinals while Sabalenka faces Karolina Pliskova in the other semifinal. Pliskova beat Viktorija Golubic 6-2, 6-2 in Tuesday's quarterfinal.

On the men's side, Daniil Medvedev was leading Hubert Hurkacz two sets to one when Monday's fourth-round match was postponed. When it resumed Tuesday, Hurkacz rebounded to oust the world No. 2 in five sets.

What happened Monday at Wimbledon

Novak Djokovic reached his 50th Grand Slam quarterfinal with a straight-sets win over Cristian Garin on Monday. Sixth-seeded Roger Federer beat Lorenzo Sonego in straight sets to move to the quarterfinals.

Also on the men's side, Karen Khachanov defeated American Sebastian Korda in a five-set thriller 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 5-7, 10-8.

While the top two seeds in the women's draw, Ashleigh Barty and Aryna Sabalenka , won their fourth-round matches, seventh-seeded Iga Swiatek lost to 21st-seeded Ons Jabeur in three sets.

American Coco Gauff lost to 2018 Wimbledon winner Angelique Kerber , meaning no American man or woman reached the quarterfinal.

What are the Wimbledon storylines?

Novak Djokovic , who is coming off wins at the Australian Open in February and French Open in June, is seeking his sixth Wimbledon title. If he wins the tournament, he would tie Federer and Rafael Nadal for the most major championships in men's tennis history.

Federer, 39, who withdrew from the French Open before the fourth round, is in search of his ninth Wimbledon championship. Nadal, meanwhile, withdrew from Wimbledon and the Olympics , saying he was "listening to my body" so he could "prolong my career and continue to do what makes me happy."

Nadal is not the only big-name player to pull out of Wimbledon. Naomi Osaka , the second-ranked women's player, withdrew from the tournament in part to prepare for the Tokyo Olympics. Defending women's singles champion Simona Halep , the world No. 3, withdrew early Friday with a calf injury , following world No. 5 Dominic Thiem pulling out of Wimbledon due to a right wrist injury a day earlier.

The women's field is filled with parity, as seven different women have won the past eight majors. Barty, whose only Grand Slam was the 2019 French Open, had not advanced past the fourth round at Wimbledon in her career.

Will there be fans at Wimbledon?

Yes, fans are permitted at this year's tournament. Both singles finals will allow full crowds at Centre Court , making it the first outdoor sporting event in the United Kingdom to have full capacity since the pandemic began. Capacity will be 50% until the finals, which will be 100%.

The All England Club said fans must wear face coverings at the venue grounds but will not be required to wear masks and maintain social distancing when seated. Spectators will also need to present proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test within 48 hours of attending.

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Tennis

The Grand Slams, ATP and WTA all want to control tennis. Do they have the power?

The Grand Slams, ATP and WTA all want to control tennis. Do they have the power?

A grand struggle for power lies at the heart of every tennis match. Right now, it’s also at the heart of the sport itself.

Here at the Madrid Open, the moment that had all the insiders buzzing happened earlier this week, not on a dusty red court, but in the players’ lounge.

There, in plain sight — not cloistered in an office or luxury suite — the de facto leaders of the two competing visions for the future of tennis sat just a few feet from each other, making their cases to whomever they could get to listen: players and agents; tournament directors and owners.

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On one side is the proposal from the Grand Slams for a streamlined elite tennis tour . On the other is the push f rom the existing ATP and WTA tours to maintain something like the status quo, only more of it, with one more big tournament and some more money, thanks to a significant investment from Saudi Arabia .

As the leaders of the biggest tournaments go back and forth with their counterparts about who controls tennis moving forward, there is an odd truth that neither side wants to talk about: what ultimately happens, and who ultimately ends up holding the power, isn’t really up to them.

In reality, the two camps are staging a kind of beauty contest, whose judges are also in two camps.

One: a handful of executives and organizations who control the biggest tournaments outside the four Grand Slams of Wimbledon and the U.S., French and Australian Opens. Two: a couple of dozen players whose participation drives the sport.

That’s why Craig Tiley, the chief executive of Tennis Australia and one of the prime movers for the Grand Slams’ effort to create an elite premium tour, arrived early in Madrid to meet with players and the managers, lawyers and agents who represent them, knowing full well how badly many of them want reform , especially when it comes to the length of their schedule.

It let him impress on them that what the leader of the ATP tour, Andrea Gaudenzi, has been pushing moves them further away from what they want — although, much of what Tiley was discussing wasn’t about the premium tour, but how an additional tournament would mess up their off-seasons and wreck his Australian season of tennis.

They are the two men sitting 30 feet apart that got people’s attention.

For his part, Gaudenzi, an Italian former tennis pro, held his board meetings, ploughing ahead with the process of adding that additional tournament — and likely the Saudi money — to the tour coffers.

Polite and decorous as it might look on the surface, tennis is a brutal sport, and so, too, is the business of running it.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

Two days later, despite Tiley’s efforts, word was spreading via an Italian tennis website that the ATP had reached a deal with Saudi Arabia to hold another mandatory top-level event that will start the season in the coming years. That would threaten the viability of Australian Open tuneups in Australia and New Zealand and the United Cup, a mixed event, also in Australia, that the ATP organizes with Tiley’s Tennis Australia and the WTA. It offers $10million (£8m) in prize money, making it one of the biggest pay weeks for female players.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

By late afternoon, the ATP had put out a message on X, formerly Twitter, that it had not made any decision on the tournament. Final bids for the event were due Wednesday. “We would like to clarify that these reports are inaccurate,” the ATP stated. “No decisions have been made and any updates will be communicated at the appropriate time.”

Welcome to the corridors of tennis power: a fractured hall of mirrors where nothing is quite as it seems.

go-deeper

More prize money, less tennis, equal pay: Grand Slams launch premium tour offensive

As in most sports, there are three forces which drive tennis: money, fame, and inertia, and they are pretty evenly divided among the players and the eight entities that run the sport.

The Grand Slams and the nine largest other tournaments which aren’t Grand Slams, known as the “Masters 1000s”, basically control the money, accounting for something like 80 per cent or more of the revenues in tennis by some estimates. It’s hard to calculate, since plenty of tournaments do not make their finances public, not even with players.

Players control most of the fame. They are the stars of the show, the boldface names who pull fans into the sport, their images plastered onto billboards in major cities all across the world throughout the year.

“Try having a tournament without players,” Stefano Vukov, coach to women’s world No 4 Elena Rybakina, said Friday afternoon. “You can’t do it. I promise you.”

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

At this Madrid Open, the players have been trying to go about their business while confused about what the future holds.

Once they get locked into an important event, they try to actively ignore everything that isn’t their next match. Some also need to be cautious because of the incestuous nature of the sport: their agents often work for companies that own tournaments. Some players who delve into the politics of tennis soon pull back if they sense it is distracting them from trying to win.

go-deeper

Tennis’ top women say the sport is broken. This is why

Iga Swiatek, the women’s world No 1, ticks all three of those boxes, since she is represented by the sports and entertainment conglomerate IMG, which owns the tournament currently ongoing in the Spanish capital and also the Miami Open, played recently in the U.S. Still, she could not hide her ongoing frustration at how the sport operates, with only a limited formal role for player input. 

“I’ve been really involved, last year, especially with all this, politics and sports a little bit, and I feel now I need to kind of focus on myself,” Swiatek said after winning her opening match Thursday night. “But I want to speak out when I feel like it’s important and it’s going to do something.”

“I just really, really hope that it’s going to change and we will have a say, or at least we’re going to be informed much, much earlier of changes.”

Ons Jabeur, the two-time Wimbledon finalist, sounded a similar note about the ongoing battle.

“For me as a player, it’s like a movie,” Jabeur said, following her opening triumph. “I’m watching them fighting it out there. But I feel like whatever is going to happen, the players need to be involved.”

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

The WTA, the men’s game’s ATP — and to a lesser extent the International Tennis Federation — have inertia on their side.

They license and sanction more than 100 other tournaments around the Grand Slams and also help sell some of the media and sponsorship for the tour. They set up a schedule that largely guarantees a professional tennis match is taking place somewhere nearly every day for roughly 11 months. They collect the revenue: media payments, sponsorships and other licensing agreements. Players end up with roughly a quarter of it, with the rest going to overheads and administration.

All that makes the tours seem like the sport’s alpha dogs, which is just what they want.

It might seem like that means they have the power, but the tours don’t control the players. The players are independent contractors, free to play tennis wherever they want if they can find someone to pay them — the way some of the world’s top golfers found a willing partner in Saudi Arabia .

That is especially true at the moment, because the Grand Slams have yet to renew the agreement that obligates them to organize their draws based on the ATP and WTA rankings, which the tours oversee. For now, it’s a detail because Grand Slams are still acting as though the deal is still in place. But there is an implicit threat in their refusal to sign a new agreement; a message that they could use some other rankings systems that ignore the tours, which would allow players into their tournaments whether the tours like it or not.

Still, a great tennis player does not have many alternatives for making millions of dollars from playing the sport without the platform and the competitions the tours offer.

go-deeper

Saudi Arabia's new $1billion proposal and the battle to control tennis

It also might seem like the tours have total control over the tournaments to which they have sold licenses, granting them the ability to operate as official events. But the only important tournaments they actually own are the season-ending tour finals.

They also have the least amount of control over the most important and lucrative tournaments on their tours, those Masters 1000 events that function as the sport’s gilded breakaway republic: Indian Wells, Miami and Cincinnati in the U.S., Monte Carlo in the south of France, Madrid, Rome in Italy, Montreal and Toronto in Canada, China’s Shanghai and Paris.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

Many of these are storied events, such as Indian Wells, known as the “Fifth Slam ”, and the Italian Open. Those tournaments got together and decided to sell their media rights as a separate package, through a separate company called ATP Media. The actual ATP? It has about a 10 per cent stake in that company. In most realms, the people who control the most money hold the most power, and here and overall, tennis is no different.

This is why the battle to control the sport has become a beauty contest between rival proposals from the Grand Slams and the existing tours about how to fix tennis .

Those Masters 1000 events already have some financial separation from the existing tours, though lawyers would have their work cut out trying to undo existing contracts. And pro tennis can’t exist without the best players, who can choose where to take their power and who to bless with it.

Those are each contestant’s top attributes.

What exactly do the judges in this contest want?

Beyond the dreams of winning the biggest titles, most players who have the levels required to play an event such as the Madrid Open want two basic things from their tennis careers. They want an opportunity to make a good living and they want to be able to play in the events they grew up watching on television.

Those are mostly the Grand Slams, maybe their home country’s Masters 1000 if there is one, or the tournament that takes place closest to their hometown. Frances Tiafoe, who grew up in the U.S. state of Maryland, has said he only cares about two tournaments, the U.S. Open and the Citi Open in nearby Washington, D.C.; Swiatek doesn’t miss the WTA event in Poland’s capital Warsaw, her hometown.

In this light, the Masters 1000 tournaments want to be seen as premium events — if not on par with the Grand Slams, then as close as possible to them.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

For the Grand Slams, the key to being able to create a premium tour may come down to convincing a critical mass of the Masters 1000s events to at least threaten to break with the existing tours.

Instead of being closely associated with a score of random tournaments everywhere from Antwerp in Belgium to Houston in Texas, they could be part of an elite group of events that includes Wimbledon, the most historic and important tournament in the sport. Implicit in that is the idea that tennis’ geographic reach is an albatross rather than a calling card, which many figures in all four groups — and many more fans — would dispute.

The Grand Slams will also have to convince the players, especially the stars who hold the most sway over everyone else, they are better off playing on a premium tour which the Slams say will pay them more money for doing less work.

The concept, according to the proposal from the Grand Slams, will double prize money for the top 300 men and nearly quadruple prize money for the top 300 women, who will from inception receive the same prize money as the men on the premium tour, instead of waiting until 2027 for that to happen under the ATP and WTA.

Those players won’t have to spend the year chasing rankings points and feeling like they are losing ground every time they want to take a week or two off between more important events to rest or train. And they will get a six-to-eight-week off-season as well.

Lower-ranked players have been promised more money too, and if their tour is set up properly, with regional circuits and promotion and relegation, they will have to spend less on travel and get more clarity on how they can make the step up.

go-deeper

How to fix tennis

Where would that leave the existing ATP and WTA? Those organizations would likely have a role in helping to govern that premium tour and making sure money from it filters down to the smaller tournaments, on that so-called “Contender Tour”, for the players vying to make the big show and top players seeking extra matches and appearance fees.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

For the tours, winning the beauty contest means convincing the Masters 1000s they don’t need the Grand Slams, that they already exist as a premium tour, and that being the highest quality events on the men’s and women’s tours is better than being the poor relations of the Grand Slams, especially given the litigation they would likely face if they tried to break away.

They have also dangled a windfall of roughly a billion dollars in front of the Masters 1000s and the players, which will arrive in full when they add an additional top-level event as soon as 2026, though it’s not clear they can deliver on that figure. Advocates for players say it’s more like $500m at the moment, and once it filters through the system, there won’t be much left over for them.

It’s a contest that should go on for a while, with moves and countermoves, back and forth, surges and lead changes.

Not unlike a tennis match.

(Top photos: Adrian Denis/AFP; Tim Clayton/Corbis; Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

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Matthew Futterman

Matthew Futterman is an award-winning veteran sports journalist and the author of two books, “Running to the Edge: A Band of Misfits and the Guru Who Unlocked the Secrets of Speed” and “Players: How Sports Became a Business.”Before coming to The Athletic in 2023, he worked for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Star-Ledger of New Jersey and The Philadelphia Inquirer. He is currently writing a book about tennis, "The Cruelest Game: Agony, Ecstasy and Near Death Experiences on the Pro Tennis Tour," to be published by Doubleday in 2026. Follow Matthew on Twitter @ mattfutterman

Andy Murray could play huge event as latest positive practice footage emerges

When will Andy Murray announce his retirement?

Andy Murray could be in line for a sensational clay court return after footage emerged of the former world No 1 practising on the surface.

Murray has largely shunned playing on the dirt in recent years, last playing at the French Open in 2020 and only playing Madrid twice – and Rome and Monte Carlo once – since his hip surgery.

And doubts circled about whether we would see the former Roland Garros finalist ever play on clay again after his ankle ligament injury earlier this season, which looked set to hand him a lengthy spell on the sidelines.

But after footage emerged earlier this month of Murray practising on indoor hard courts, his coach Jonny O’Mara has now shared further footage of the 36-year-old hitting on clay.

The emergence of the video would suggest that the injury Murray sustained at the Miami Open is – as hoped – not as serious as it first appeared.

And it could also imply that the three-time major winner is preparing for one last French Open campaign, in what looks set to be his final season on tour.

Things we LOVE to see @andy_murray back hitting on the clay! @Jonny_OMara on Instagram pic.twitter.com/37neTSCM7Z — LTA (@the_LTA) April 28, 2024

Murray previously expressed hopes he would play at the French Open this year.

Speaking back in February, he said: “Last few years I’ve tried to give myself maybe better preparation for the grass season, but that also doesn’t guarantee that you’re going to play really well on the grass.

“I’ve had experiences through my career where I didn’t play the French Open in 2013 and I won Wimbledon. I also played the French Open and did really well in 2016.

“I don’t think it makes a huge difference if you get an extra week’s practice or so on the grass. So yeah, I would like to play one more time.”

In recent seasons Murray has prioritised grass-court tennis, playing at the Surbiton Trophy in London the past two seasons instead of heading to Paris – winning the ATP Challenger event in 2023.

However, it would appear that Murray is understandably prioritising the biggest events ahead of a potential farewell.

Though there are no guarantees yet that he will head to Roland Garros, a campaign there could feature in a farewell tour including Wimbledon and the Olympic Games – which will also be in Paris this year.

Read More:  Andy Murray shares encouraging footage as Wimbledon quest given huge boost

Dates, players, prize money: Everything you ever wanted to know about the 2024 Italian Open (but never had time to find out) – updated with Sinner and Alcaraz withdrawals

Everything you need to you know about the Italian Open, one of the oldest and most prestigious tops on the tennis calendar

Italian Open tennis

What are the dates of the 2024 Italian Open

The 2024 edition of the Italian Open, also known as the Internazionali BNL d’Italia, starts on May 6, 2024 and runs until May 19, 2024.

Where is the Internazionali BNL d’Italia held?

The tournament is held in Italy on the courts of the Foro Italico sports complex. Located in the north of Rome, in the Della Vittoria district, the complex was built between 1928 and 1938 and hosted the 1960 Olympic Games. The tennis courts are right next to Rome’s Olympic Stadium.

The stadium’s address is: Viale del Foro Italico, 00135 Roma RM, Italy. 

On which surface is the tournament played?

The Internazionali BNL d’Italia is played on outdoor clay courts. It is the final major tune-up event ahead of Roland-Garros, the clay court Grand Slam in Paris in May.

Are Djokovic AND NADAL playing in Rome this year?

Both Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nada l are set to play in Rome this year. Djokovic decided to skip the Madrid Masters while Nadal played in Barcelona and Madrid as he returned to the Tour after three months out through injury, having played just once before that in the past 15 months.

However, both Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz will be absent from the men’s draw in Rome this year. Alcaraz pulled out of the tournament with a lower right-arm injury , while Sinner then withdrew the following day citing the hip injury that also caused him to pull out of the Madrid Open.

This year’s Rome Masters is almost certain to be Nadal’s last. The Spaniard says 2024 is likely to be his last year on Tour, admitting that his body “has been sending me signals” for some time.

wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

Who are the defending champions in Rome?

Daniil Medvedev is the defending men’s champion, having won his first clay-court title, beating Holger Rune in the final in 2023.

Elena Rybakina is the defending women’s champion. The Kazakh beat world No 1 Iga Swiatek in the quarters and then took out surprise finalist Anhelina Kalinina in the final.

Hugo Nys and Jan Zielinski are the defending men’s doubles champions while Elise Mertens and Storm Hunter are the defending women’s champions.

Is the draw for the Italian Open out?

No, the draw for the tournament will be made a few days prior to the event.

What IS the draw size in Rome?

The tournament has 96-player draws in both the men’s and women’s singles, and 32 doubles teams in both the men’s and women’s events.

How many rankings points can players earn at the Italian Open?

The ranking points on offer for the men at the Rome Masters is as follows:

  • Winner: 1000
  • Runner-up: 650
  • Semi-finalists: 400
  • Quarter-finalists: 200
  • Round of 16: 100
  • Third round: 50
  • Second round: 30
  • First round: 10

For the women, the ranking points on offer for is as below:

  • Semi-finalists: 390
  • Quarter-finalists: 215
  • Round of 16: 120
  • Third round: 65
  • Second round: 35

What is the prize money at the 2024 Italian Open?

The total prize money for the men’s ATP Rome Masters is €7,877,020 ( while for the women, the total commitment is $5,509,771 (€4,791,705)

Men’s singles prize money breakdown: Winner: €963,225 Runner-up: €512,260 Semi-finals: €284,590 Quarter-finals: €161,995 4th round: €88,440 3rd round: €51,665 2nd round: €30,255 1st round: €20,360

Women’s singles prize money breakdown Winner: €699,690 Runner-up: €365,015 Semi-finals: €192,405 Quarter-finals: €99,160 4th round: €52,480 3rd round: €30,435 2nd round: €16,965 1st round: €10,495

Who has won the most Italian Open titles?

Rafael Nadal  has won the men’s singles titles in Rome 10 times – the most by any player in the history of the tournament. The Spaniard won the title in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2018, 2019 and 2021. He has also reached the final on two other occasions – 2011 and 2014, going down to Djokovic both times.

American legend Chris Evert leads the tally for most women’s singles titles, having triumphed in Rome on five occasions – 1974, 1975, 1980, 1981, and 1982.

How can I buy tickets for the Italian Open?

Tickets for the 2024 Italian Open can be bought via the official tournament website, which you can access  here .

We've taken #IBI24 to Piazza del Popolo 😍 Tag a friend you'd like to play with on this court 👇 pic.twitter.com/j5hhlNNSII — Internazionali BNL d'Italia (@InteBNLdItalia) April 30, 2024

Where can I watch the Italian Open on television?

In the United States, the Tennis Channel is the host broadcaster. Details of its schedule and overseas broadcasting schedules for the men’s event can be found  here  and the women’s event can be seen  here .

Can I follow the Italian Open on social media?

Yes, you can follow the Italian Open on  Instagram ,  Twitter and  Facebook . The tournament also has its own channel on YouTube, which can be  accessed here .

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IMAGES

  1. Wimbledon 2022: Draws, Dates, History & All You Need To Know

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  2. Djokovic Wimbledon Finals Record

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  3. Atp Tennis Wimbledon 2019 Live Scores

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  4. ATP / WTA Tour Media Guide 2020

    wimbledon draws atp tour tennis

  5. Wimbledon

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  6. ATP Wimbledon, First Round Predictions

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COMMENTS

  1. Wimbledon

    Official ATP tennis draws for singles, doubles and qualifying from men's professional tennis tournaments on the ATP Tour. ... Wimbledon London, Great Britain 2023.07.03 - 2023.07.16 SGL ...

  2. Wimbledon

    Official ATP tennis draws for singles, doubles and qualifying from men's professional tennis tournaments on the ATP Tour.

  3. The Gentlemen's Singles Draw

    The Championships 2023 Draw. The Championships 2023 Draw. Wimbledon.com uses cookies. We use simple text files called cookies, saved on your computer, to help us deliver the best experience for you. ... By joining myWimbledon you are confirming you are happy to receive news and information from The All England Lawn Tennis Club regarding The ...

  4. Wimbledon 2021: How to watch, schedule, draw, bracket, tennis ...

    The women's championship, featuring Ash Bartyand Karolina Pliskova, will be broadcast on Saturday at 9 a.m. on ESPN, while the men's championship will be broadcast at 9 a.m. on Sunday. Thursday at ...

  5. Wimbledon 2022: Draws, dates, prize money and everything ...

    This year marks the 135th staging of The Championships at Wimbledon, which is held at the All England Lawn Tennis Club. Main-draw singles play begins on Monday, June 27. Play begins on all outside courts at 11:00 a.m, No.1 Court at 1:00 p.m. and Centre Court at 1:30 p.m. This year will see the end of Wimbledon's traditional day of rest on ...

  6. 2023 Wimbledon Championships

    Carlos Alcaraz defeated the four-time defending champion Novak Djokovic in the final, 1-6, 7-6 (8-6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 to win the gentlemen's singles tennis title at the 2023 Wimbledon Championships.It was his first Wimbledon title and second major title overall.. Alcaraz, Djokovic, and Daniil Medvedev were in contention for the men's singles No. 1 ranking.

  7. Wimbledon 2023: Dates, draws, prize money and everything ...

    This year marks the 136 of Wimbledon, which is held at the All England Lawn Tennis Club. The tournament features a 128-player singles draw and 64-team doubles draw. Main-draw singles play begins on Monday, July 3. Play begins on all outside courts at 11:00 a.m. No.1 Court at 1 p.m. and Centre Court at 1:30 p.m. until the final weekend.

  8. Wimbledon 2021: Dates, draws, prize money and what you ...

    Singles main-draw play begins Monday, June 28. Doubles begins Wednesday, June 30, with Mixed Doubles kicking off Friday, July 2. Play is provisionally scheduled to start on the outside courts at 11:00 a.m. local, on No.1 Court at 1:00 p.m., and Centre Court at 1:30pm. This changes on Championship Weekend when play will begin on Centre Court at ...

  9. Wimbledon 2023 preview: Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray, Elena ...

    Serbia's Djokovic won a record-equalling 23rd men's major title by clinching the French Open and, speaking at Wimbledon on Saturday, warned his younger rivals he was far from finished.

  10. 2023 Wimbledon Championships

    Tournament. The tournament was played on grass courts, with all main draw matches played at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, Wimbledon, from 3 to 16 July 2023.Qualifying matches were played from 26 to 29 June 2023 at the Bank of England Sports Ground in Roehampton.. The 2023 Championships was the 136th edition, the 129th staging of the Ladies' Singles Championship event, the ...

  11. The Championships, Wimbledon

    Follow the latest scores, order of play and draw information for The Championships, Wimbledon 2024: Grand Slam tournament played in WIMBLEDON, GREAT BRITAIN.

  12. 2022 ATP Tour

    The 2022 ATP Tour was the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2022 tennis season. The 2022 ATP Tour calendar comprised the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the ATP Finals, the ATP Tour Masters 1000, the ATP Cup, the ATP 500 series and the ATP 250 series.

  13. Alexander Zverev

    Alexander Zverev (German pronunciation: [alɛkˈsandɐ ˈtsfeːʁɛf]; born 20 April 1997) is a German professional tennis player. He has been ranked by the ATP as high as world No. 2. Zverev's singles career highlights include a gold medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, and titles at the 2018 and the 2021 ATP Finals.He has won 21 ATP Tour titles in singles and two in doubles, and contested a ...

  14. 2024 Italian Open (tennis)

    The 2024 Italian Open (also known as the Rome Masters or the Internazionali BNL d'Italia for sponsorship reasons) is a professional tennis tournament to be played on outdoor clay courts at the Foro Italico in Rome, Italy.It will be the 81st edition of the Italian Open and is classified as an ATP Tour Masters 1000 event on the 2024 ATP Tour and a WTA 1000 event on the 2024 WTA Tour.

  15. The Gentlemen's Singles Draw

    Ladies' Wheelchair Doubles. Gentlemen's Wheelchair Doubles. Quad Wheelchair Singles. Quad Wheelchair Doubles. Girls' Singles. Boys' Singles. Girls' Doubles. Boys' Doubles. Girls' 14&Under Singles.

  16. Iga Swiatek makes honest confession before Aryna Sabalenka Madrid Open

    Wimbledon; US Open; Tours & Events. ATP Tour; WTA Tour; Davis Cup; Billie Jean King Cup; Players. ATP. Andy Murray; Carlos Alcaraz; ... I know I can still play good tennis and win." ... Are we set for the most unpredictable French Open men's draw in years? 03 May 2024 . Iga Swiatek v Aryna Sabalenka: Their 9 previous matches ahead of Madrid ...

  17. The Grand Slams, ATP and WTA all want to control tennis. Do they have

    On one side is the proposal from the Grand Slams for a streamlined elite tennis tour.On the other is the push from the existing ATP and WTA tours to maintain something like the status quo, only ...

  18. Andy Murray could play huge event as latest practice footage emerges

    In recent seasons Murray has prioritised grass-court tennis, playing at the Surbiton Trophy in London the past two seasons instead of heading to Paris - winning the ATP Challenger event in 2023. However, it would appear that Murray is understandably prioritising the biggest events ahead of a potential farewell.

  19. SWIATEK vs SABALENKA • WTA Madrid 2024 Final • LIVE Tennis Play-by-Play

    Iga Swiatek vs Aryna Sabalenka LIVE at the Mutua Madrid Masters 2024 Final on the WTA Tour. It will be a very interesting match up. Come join in the fun now ...

  20. All you ened to know about the 2024 Italian Open

    No, the draw for the tournament will be made a few days prior to the event. What IS the draw size in Rome? The tournament has 96-player draws in both the men's and women's singles, and 32 doubles teams in both the men's and women's events. How many rankings points can players earn at the Italian Open?

  21. 2024 ATP Tour

    The 2024 ATP Tour is the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organized by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2024 tennis season. The 2024 ATP Tour calendar comprises the Grand Slam tournaments, supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF), the ATP Finals, the ATP Masters 1000, the United Cup (organized with the WTA), the ATP 500 series and the ATP 250 ...

  22. Doubles trial in Madrid: More singles vs. doubles, reduced ...

    The doubles draw will be contested from Tuesday, 30 April through Saturday, 4 May, in the second week of the ATP Masters 1000 tournament, with the draw to be made on Monday, 29 April. ATPTour.com takes a look at the other innovations that will be trialed at the Caja Magica. More Singles Versus Doubles Action There will be 32 teams in the draw.

  23. Daniil Medvedev headlines five Top 15 singles players in ...

    Daniil Medvedev leads a distinguished list of singles stars competing in the Mutua Madrid Open doubles draw, which was released late Sunday evening.. The No. 4 player in the PIF ATP Rankings is partnering American Tommy Paul for the first time. It is only Medvedev's second doubles appearance since June 2022 — he competed with Roman Safiullin earlier this month in Monte-Carlo.

  24. Alexey Iremashvili

    Accompanied as a coach at the Roland Garros and Wimbledon tournaments. Player rating at the time of work 135 WTA. Worked with the player Sofia Dmitrieva. Joint highest ranking 928 WTA from 2015 to ...