
Right, that’s it from us for today – and from me for this Wimbledon. Many thanks for your company this fortnight, it’s been a blast as always. Do join Daniel tomorrow for coverage of Jannik Sinner v Carlos Alcaraz – after their nearly neverending French Open final last month, we can be sure it won’t be as rapid as today’s Wimbledon whitewash. Bye!
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Here’s Tumaini’s match report:
Amanda Anisimova arrived in her first grand slam final in some of the best form of her career, but she fell apart under pressure in front of one of the greatest big-match players the sport has ever seen as Iga Swiatek inflicted a historic 6-0, 6-0 victory in 57 minutes to claim her long-awaited first Wimbledon title.
This is the first time in the open era that the Wimbledon title has been won with a double bagel. The last 6-0, 6-0 result came in 1911, when the sport barely resembled its current modern form, with Dorothea Lambert Chambers’s dominant win over Dora Boothby in the challenge match era, when the defending champion played just once.
Two days after playing an incredible match to topple the world No 1, Aryna Sabalenka, holding her nerve in so many of the tightest moments, Anisimova simply could not handle the pressure. She had the even greater misfortune of coming up against the one opponent who would never allow her a path back in after her early difficulties in the match.
Swiatek has now won each of her first six grand slam finals, a reflection of her remarkable mental toughness and her readiness to produce her best tennis in the biggest moments. Only Margaret Court and Monica Seles have achieved this feat before her in the Open era.
For so long, grass courts were considered Swiatek’s one weakness. The ball’s low bounce, many believed, was too disruptive to her heavy topspin forehand, her movement was too uncertain and there would always be an opponent capable of blasting her off the court. Sometimes she believed this, too.
At the end of a tremendous fortnight on her least successful surface, Swiatek has proven that a player with her rare talent, discipline and sheer force of will has no limitations to her potential.
The victory marks Swiatek’s sixth grand slam title, which breaks her tie with Martina Hingis and Maria Sharapova. The last female player to reach this milestone was Venus Williams in 2007. Alongside her four French Open triumphs and her victory at the US Open in 2022, Swiatek has now won major titles on all three playing surfaces. Only the Australian Open stands between her and a career grand slam.
You can read the rest here.
The new #Wimbledon champion soaking in every single moment 🥹 pic.twitter.com/rV419BKHyH
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 12, 2025
Swiatek has left the court, having probably stuffed every one of her towels into her bag as a mementos. She poses for photos, holding the trophy in front of the list of champions past and now present, before chatting to the Princess of Wales and stepping out on the balcony to show off her trophy. She’s jumping up and down, stirring up the crowd; what a release of emotion. She’s played with such freedom and joy this fortnight and her celebrations are no different; it’s been lovely to see her personality come out. But now she has to hand over the trophy, at least until tomorrow’s Wimbledon ball. I wonder if they’ll have strawberries and pasta on the menu in tribute to the new champion.
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Swiatek’s name has already been inscribed on to the board of champions: that’s Wimbledon efficiency for you. And for the ninth successive championships, we have a different women’s winner. With her sixth grand slam title, she’s now won majors on all three surfaces, the youngest woman to do so since Serena Williams. And she’s finally figured out the riddle of grass. There’s a parallel with Andre Agassi; he never thought grass was for him until he cracked it in 1992. And perhaps even with Rafa Nadal, who of course took a while to get going at Wimbledon despite being a multiple French Open champion.
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Credit to Anisimova, who showed some guts there to speak to the crowd. It had echoes of Jana Novotna, when she cried on the Duchess of Kent’s shoulders after being beaten by Steffi Graff in the 1993 final. And let’s not forget Novotna came back to win Wimbledon five years later. Hopefully this is the start for Anisimova too.
She did so well to stun Sabalenka in the semi-finals; perhaps she just didn’t have anything left to take it to Swiatek today. Having dreamed of reaching a grand slam final for most of her life, it was all over in less than an hour. She’ll probably be having nightmares tonight – if she manages to get any sleep, that is – but hopefully over time she’ll be able to remember the rest of the fortnight and not just this record destruction.
And having reached the final only a year after her mental health break from tennis, she offers us all an important reminder that seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. She’s got a good team around her who’ll help her get over this too.
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Now it’s Swiatek’s turn to speak, the first Polish winner of a Wimbledon singles title. She starts by addressing Anisimova: “It doesn’t matter what happened today, you should be proud of what you’ve done.” Asked what it means to win Wimbledon, she says she never expected to win this title and it hasn’t really sunk in yet. “I’d never won this title, I was anxious about that [in previous years], but this year I really really enjoyed it and felt so comfortable. It’s amazing and I’m going to enjoy this moment and hopefully you’re going to enjoy the men’s final too.”
Anisimova takes a few seconds to compose herself before speaking to Annabel Croft: “Congratulations Iga. Thank you to everyone who’s supported me. It’s been an incredible fortnight for me and even though I ran out of gas today and I wish I could have put in a better performance for you today, you guys still lifted me up, so thank you so much.” She then thanks her mum who flew in for the match this morning; and then the tears flood out. “She’s put in more work than I have, honestly,” Anisimova says through her tears, before joking that the reason she lost was “definitely not” because her mum turned up for the occasion.
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Trophy time. Anisimova trudges up to collect her runners-up plate and just about manages to hold it together. And here comes our new champion, as Swiatek is presented with the Venus Rosewater Dish for the first time by the Princess of Wales. Wonderful scenes for Swiatek; but, jeez, this is so hard for Anisimova.
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“A real shame for Anisimova, and in another way the fans in Centre Court and at home too,” emails Simon McMahon. “Hope it doesn’t affect her long term. She’s in the Wimbledon final for goodness sake, which is more than 99.9999% of tennis players will ever even come close to achieving. Godspeed.”
Swiatek is up in the player’s box, hugging her father and sister. She seems to be the only one in the house not in an absolute state of shock. Anisimova has hurried off court, but soon returns to a standing ovation. She’s crying. I’m crying for her too. Man, sport can be so cruel sometimes.
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Swiatek wins 6-0, 6-0
This scoreline is all the more staggering given that only 48 hours ago, Anisimova was staring down the world No 1 in the semi-finals on this very court. But this has been one of the all-time final beatdowns. Given Swiatek’s dominance this afternoon, it’s easy to forget she hasn’t won a title since the French Open last year. This has been a supreme display from a player who’d never previously been comfortable on grass. And Swiatek brings up two championship points at 40-15. Can Anisimova at least stretch this match to an hour? Swiatek blinks on the first championship point, a rare long rally plays out on the second, and Swiatek strikes a winner that lands bang on the line! Swiatek is a Wimbledon champion for the first time, turning her crisis of the past year into one of her crowning moments! Swiatek has salvation after her annus horribilis; for a shell-shocked Anisimova this is as horrible as it gets.
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Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-6, 0-5 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
Flicking through the history books, there’s been only one 6-0, 6-0 women’s singles final scoreline at Wimbledon, when Dorothea Lambert Chambers thumped Dora Boothby in 1911. Anisimova will be desperate to avoid taking such a dubious place in history, but it’s a similar story on her serve as she falls 0-30 behind. Her mother has got her face in her hands. Swiatek, meanwhile, is prowling on the baseline ready to receive and go in for the kill. At 15-40, Swiatek flicks a backhand pass beyond a stranded Anisimova and Swiatek will serve for a Wimbledon final whitewash. This has been the most uncomfortable of watches; a crushed Anisimova is trying to hold back the tears at the changeover. But as brutal as it’s been for her, it’s been absolutely brilliant from Swiatek.
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Second set: Anisimova* 0-6, 0-4 Swiatek (*denotes next server)
“With Anisimova being the player listed first, the “0 0” on her part of the scoreboard looks like a visual depiction of the eyes of a rabbit being caught in the headlights. Which feels all too appropriate,” sighs David Howell. Meanwhile BJK and the Princess of Wales are having a little chat in the Royal Box; perhaps they’re trying to come up with a gameplan for Anisimova. They should send it down swiftly, though, because Swiatek is a point away from her 10th consecutive game at 40-30. This time Anisimova has Swiatek reeling with a punchy return … and then Anisimova swats a winner to the open court! Deuce. But it’s another American horror story from there as Swiatek holds.
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Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-6, 0-3 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
The Centre Court crowd are in raptures when Anisimova claws herself back to 30-all on serve. If she can get a first game on the board, perhaps it’ll sow a little seed of doubt in Swiatek’s mind. But it’s a very small perhaps. Anisimova is swiping her racket in the air when she gives away a break point from deuce; Swiatek is striding to the other side of the court ready to receive. Just like Graf, she’s hurrying around as if there’s no tomorrow. Swiatek doesn’t secure the first break point but soon, predictably, has a second, and Anisimova bashes a backhand into the net. Her best shot, which is usually such a brutal weapon, just hasn’t got going today. Much like the rest of her game.
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Second set: Anisimova* 0-6, 0-2 Swiatek (*denotes next server)
Swiatek stirs memories of Rafa with her vicious spin, Roger with her footwork and Steffi in her efficiency, as she glides 30-0 ahead. She briefly errs with a first double fault, but that doesn’t distract her, as from 30-all she holds, after smartly changing up her serve. She’s thinking so clearly out there; while Anisimova’s mind is totally scrambled. And speaking of Steffi, the fastest victory in a grand slam final was sealed by Graf at the 1988 French Open, when she double-bageled Natasha Zvereva in just 34 minutes. We’ve been going 37 minutes here, so that’s one record Swiatek can’t claim. I wonder how many slam finals have actually ended 6-0, 6-0 though?
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Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-6, 0-1 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
The second set starts in a similar vein, as Anisimova slumps 0-30 down on serve. But she wins just her tenth and 11th points of the match to scramble back to 30-all. “Chris Evert lost the first set 6-0 in a Wimbledon final to Billie Jean King,” Sam Smith offers up on the BBC commentary, in a way that suggests there’s some hope for Anisimova. But no, Smith then recalls that BJK went on to win in straight sets. And you know what happens here, right? Anisimova, with her first-serve percentage down at 35%, concedes yet another break. She still hasn’t got a game on the board.
“Before the match I felt nearly neutral about whom I wanted to win, but now I realize that all I want is a close match, no matter who emerges victorious,” emails Cynthia Meredith. “For the sake of Amanda and the Wimbledon crowd, I dearly hope that Iga cools off.”
And this from Tomasz Rykala: “Anisimova’s demeanour resembles Djokovic’s yesterday. It’s like she’s thrown in the towel already. Shame for her but, as a Pole myself, I have to be happy for Swiatek.”
And David Howell: “I don’t see how Swiatek loses games, let alone sets, given how settled her opponent isn’t. This could be over very, very quickly indeed.”
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Swiatek wins the first set 6-0
Swiatek is serving for the first set after 22 minutes. It feels as if it’s been about five. 15-0, 30-0. Then 40-0, after the point of the match: the pair engage in some tete-a-tete at the net, Anisimova hits it right at Swiatek (that’s one way to stop her), but Swiatek still finds a way to win the point. And the next. Swiatek’s bagel bakery is open on Centre Court. This may be grass, but the Pole’s playing like peak Swiatek on clay. And just how does Anisimova recover?
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Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-5 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
A third double fault from Anisimova on the opening point. Followed by another errant shot. And another. 0-40, three more break points. This is uncomfortable viewing. She just can’t shake the stage fright off. She needs the crowd to help her get into it, but they’re as subdued and shocked as she is. Even more so when Anisimova concedes the break to love. Anisimova has been known in the past for sometimes being fragile mentally on court, but had held her nerve so well in this tournament, especially when seeing off Sabalenka in the semi-finals. But she just can’t get going here.
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First set: Anisimova* 0-4 Swiatek (*denotes next server)
“The first thing Anisimova needs to do is accept this situation is overwhelming,” McEnroe says. “Play safer. Go to the middle of the court. Give some positive energy. It’s a harsh start but there’s time to get this going.” Anisimova perhaps hears her fellow American’s pep talk as she swings freely for one of the first times this afternoon to put away a backhand winner. Swiatek shanks a forehand – which sometimes happens, because of her extreme grip – and it’s 15-30. A glimmer for Anisimova. But Swiatek’s shot clips the sideline, the bounce is unkind, and Anisimova nets. 30-all. And that’s very soon game.
Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-3 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
Anisimova does get ahead for the first time, at 15-0, but then serves up a double fault. 15-all turns into 40-15. Cue a big exhale from Anisimova. She sorely needs this hold. Swiatek comes back at her with an inside-out backhand for 40-30, and a netted forehand from Anisimova makes it deuce. Anisimova’s Russian-born mum Olga, who coached her until the age of seven, winces in the stands. Swiatek’s father, Tomasz, who was an Olympic rower, is also in the stands today. Apparently he used to make her practise her tennis shots while balancing on a board in the water, which goes some way to explaining her supreme balance and co-ordination. Swiatek is left stumbling into the grass, though, as Anisimova brings up advantage. But the American can’t seal the game and soon Swiatek is eyeing up another break. And Anisimova double faults. Ach.
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First set: Anisimova* 0-2 Swiatek (*denotes next server)
Swiatek is such a ferocious frontrunner, Anisimova can’t afford to let Swiatek run away with this first set. But after two quick points Swiatek is at 30-0. Anisimova then biffs a backhand long and it’s 40-0. “She’s as tight as a drum,” observes John McEnroe. Swiatek concedes only her second point of the final with a netted attempted cross-court forehand, but holds to 15 when Anisimova’s return whistles beyond the baseline. Swiatek has made her intentions clear from the off.
Swiatek breaks: Anisimova 0-1 Swiatek* (*denotes next server)
Anisimova has the honour of getting the 131st Wimbledon women’s final under way. But it’s an inauspicious start for the 13th seed in her first grand slam final, as she drops 0-30 down. And then 0-40, with a meek forehand into the net. That looked very nervy. Anisimova steadies herself a little by getting into a longer rally, setting it up on her favoured backhand side, before drilling away a forehand winner. That’ll shake off some tension. But a wild forehand on the second break point and Swiatek, in her sixth grand slam final having won the previous five, strikes early with the break!
Britain’s Oliver Bonding and his American partner Jagger Leach, the son of former champ Lindsay Davenport, have lost in the boys’ doubles final, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 10-5, to Oskari Paldanius and Alan Wazny.
There’s so much excited chatter on Centre Court I can’t even hear who won the coin toss, though I can tell you that Swiatek, a bundle of energy with her jumping on the spot and practice swings, looks very up for this. The players start warming up. “Is strawberry jam any stranger than apple sauce, orange sauce, plum sauce on roast meat?” muses Marlon Andre Seton.
Iga's got fast feet 👣#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/5atcfsf99I
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 12, 2025
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They arrive on court just after the clock strikes 4pm, a sentence I’ve never written before on women’s final day. It’s boiling, about 29C. Another sentence I’ve never typed before on women’s final day. But some traditions don’t change, as a youngster is invited on to court to perform the coin toss. Today the honour goes to 12-year-old Sophie Kneen, who’s representing AFC Wimbledon Foundation and its efforts to increase female participation in sport.
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Here they come, the players weaving and winding their way through the corridors of the All England Club, walking past pictures of former great champions, but Swiatek, headphones on as always, has got her head down. Anisimova pauses for a second to take in her surroundings. What a moment for both of them in their first Wimbledon final.
Meanwhile, Swiatek’s love of strawberry pasta has got me thinking about the strangest meals athletes eat (or any of us for that matter). If you’d like to serve up anything, you can get in touch here. My offering: my mother-in-law putting strawberry jam on her roast dinners.
“Hi Katy,” emails Carrie Ilbrey. “Not the final I wanted, but nonetheless I’m looking forward to a cracker. I reckon this is Iga’s big chance. Jazda Iga!”
A huge cheer as the Princess of Wales arrives in the Royal Box – she’ll also be presenting the Venus Rosewater Dish to the winner. The box is also jam packed with Wimbledon champions, including Conchita Martinez, Navratilova and BJK – who’ve both hot-footed it up there after their turn on the BBC.
We’ve still got five minutes until the players appear, so let’s talk tactics. Swiatek is all about her spin and vicious forehand – Anisimova is all about her destructive power and huge backhand. Anisimova, with her big, flat, early ball-striking, will know she’s the kind of player that Swiatek can sometimes struggle against on the faster surfaces, and getting the first strike in and taking time away from Swiatek will be key for the American, even when she’s feeling the nerves in her first slam final. Swiatek tends to produce her best tennis when it matters the most: she’s 5-0 in grand slam finals (with only one of those going to three sets) and won’t mind the pressure of being the favourite.
The BBC is screening emotional montages about Anisimova’s career-saving break from tennis to protect her mental health and about how Swiatek never thought she’d be able to conquer the grass of Wimbledon. Jeez, I’ve already got a tear in my eye and they haven’t even got going yet. Johnny Mac then appears to say he picked Anisimova about 10 days ago to win Wimbledon and is sticking by his prediction. “She’s got the bigger game,” he says.
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The head-to-head. I mentioned they’ve not played each other before in the senior ranks (Swiatek and Anisimova that is, definitely not Chrissy, Martina and BJK), despite being born only three months apart, but they did meet as 15-year-old whippersnappers in the 2016 Junior Fed Cup, when Swiatek won in straight sets.
The BBC has brought out the big guns for the final. Chrissy Evert is going for Swiatek to win. Martina Navratilova seems to agree. And Billie Jean King talks about how much it would mean to Swiatek to win grand slam titles on all three surfaces; it certainly was hugely self-affirming to her when she did it in the 1970s, she says.
“Poland has gone completely Wimbledon (and strawberry pasta) mad, with one news channel showing a live cooking class on how to prepare a perfect makaron z truskawkami (with a Michelin-starred chef, no less) to get ready and cheer Swiatek on during the final today,” reports our Europe blogger Jakub Krupa, who’s also helped to serve up this delight on Swiatek’s favourite dish and much more:
Getting ready for the grande finale at the @Wimbledon only with #pastawithstrawberries @iga_swiatek @WTA #Deski #GabrielNowakowski @JakubKrupa https://t.co/o3VuMpcCqB pic.twitter.com/uqoDXXPqid
— Michał Koczalski (@MichalKoczalski) July 12, 2025
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Swiatek says:
I never dreamed it would be possible to play in this final … I’m super proud of myself. Tennis keeps surprising me. Every slam final has been totally different. It’s hard to compare these journeys. For now I am enjoying this new feeling of being more comfortable on grass.
Anisimova says:
When I took my break, a lot of people told me that you would never make it to the top again if you take so much time away from the game. That was a little hard to digest because I did want to come back and still achieve a lot and win a grand slam one day. I think it goes to show that it is possible. Just me being able to prove that you can get back to the top if you prioritise yourself has been incredibly special to me.
Iga is such an unbelievable player, but she’s also been an inspiration to me. Hopefully I can bring some high quality tennis and make it a battle out there. I’m going to go out and enjoy every moment and try to not think about what’s on the line.
Road to the final. When Anisimova whitewashed Yulia Putintseva 6-0, 6-0 in the first round, perhaps we should have known she was going to do something special this fortnight. She dealt well with the pressure of being the favourite in every round until the semi-finals, where she dealt even better with the world No 1 Sabalenka. Swiatek, meanwhile, hasn’t dropped a set since the second round, gaining confidence and momentum as the rounds have gone by on a surface that had previously befuddled her.
Anisimova
First round def Yulia Putintseva 6-0, 6-0
Second round def Renata Zarazua 6-4, 6-3
Third round def Dalma Galfi 6-3, 5-7, 6-3
Fourth round def Linda Noskova 6-2, 5-7, 6-4
Quarter-final def Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-1, 7-6
Semi-final def Aryna Sabalenka 6-4, 4-6, 6-4
Swiatek
First round def Polina Kudermetova 7-5, 6-1
Second round def Caty McNally 5-7, 6-2, 6-1
Third round def Danielle Collins 6-2, 6-3
Fourth round def Clara Tauson 6-4, 6-1
Quarter-final def Liudmila Samsonova 6-2, 7-5
Semi-final def Belinda Bencic 6-2, 6-0
Tale of the tape
Swiatek - Anisimova
24 Age 23
4 Seeding 13
4 World ranking 12
5 Grand slam titles 0
5 Grand slam finals (before today) 0
22 Singles titles 3
0 Wimbledon finals 0
0 Head-to-head 0
And here’s our match report on the history makers Cash and Glasspool:
Here’s our tennis correspondent Tumaini’s preview of the women’s final:
And his superb interview with Anisimova on her tennis timeout:
There was defeat earlier, however, for Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid in the men’s wheelchair doubles final. The six-times champions were beaten 7-6, 7-5 by Spain’s Martin de la Puente and the Netherlands’ Ruben Spaargaren. Another Brit, Gregory Slade, lost in straight sets in the quad wheelchair doubles final, while the 18-year-old Oliver Bonding is partnering Jagger Leach, the son of the 1999 women’s champion Lindsay Davenport, in the boys’ doubles final. They’re a set up, 7-5, against Finland’s Oskari Paldanius and Poland’s Alan Wazny.
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The moment of victory.
Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool are the 2025 Gentlemen's Doubles Champions! 🏆
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 12, 2025
With a 6-2, 7-6(3) victory over Rinky Hijikata and David Pel, the pair become the first all-British team to win a Grand Slam men’s doubles title since 1936 🇬🇧
A sensational run at #Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/M2Lnc2mB0k
And here come the champions. “There was a lot of pressure on our shoulders going into this event, the fact we could do it was so surreal,” says Cash. “We had two goals this year – one was to make it [to the season-ending event in] Turin, another was to win a slam. A lot of people probably wouldn’t have believed us. Our team backed us the whole way. To do it here – it couldn’t mean more. Playing doubles you’re not always on the biggest court, so to play on the biggest and most special court in the world, to do it here? Incredible.”
As for Glasspool, he says: “We’ve given you one British champion [Henry Patten won the Wimbledon men’s doubles title last year with Finland’s Harri Heliovaara], but now we’ve given you two.”
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The runners-up speak. “It was our first time speaking on the first day of the tournament,” says Pel. “It’s amazing actually.” Hijikata adds: “It’s been a crazy ride. It’s been so much fun playing with David. It’s a dream come true to be playing out here on Centre Court.”
GB's Cash and Glasspool win men's doubles title
Currently on Centre Court: wonderful scenes as Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool celebrate adding their names to the annals of Wimbledon, becoming the first British pair to win the men’s doubles title in 89 years. So it’s been an even longer wait than from Fred Perry in 1936 to Andy Murray in 2013 in the men’s singles. Glasspool and Cash defeated David Pel and Rinky Hijikata, 6-2, 7-6 (3), the Dutch-Australian pairing who hadn’t even met each other before this year’s tournament. What a way for finals weekend to begin.
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Preamble
What a difference five weeks can make. Last month Iga Swiatek, overwhelmed by her own doubts, relinquished the French Open crown she’d held since 2022. Her aura of invincibility was shot to pieces. She’d already lost her world No 1 ranking to Aryna Sabalenka towards the end of last season after testing positive for a substance she’d inadvertently taken in a contaminated medicine; while she was banned for only one month, the mental toll had lasted for much longer. And as she left Paris, having failed to reach a final in 12 months, let alone win a title, it’s fair to say she was at a career low.
Some questioned (me included) if the Pole would ever win another slam; parallels were even drawn with Bjorn Borg’s sudden demise after his period of Wimbledon domination ended in 1981. He retired 18 months later aged 26, burnt out and disillusioned, having lost his relentless will to win. Was Swiatek, at the age of 24, in danger of going the same way? Certainly in the short-term no one expected her to do much at Wimbledon, given that the former Queen of Clay had always been among the mere ranks on grass, having never been beyond the quarter-finals, despite her status as a junior champion in 2018.
But thanks to a grass-court training camp in Mallorca and a confidence-building run to the Bad Homburg final, and fuelled by a Wimbledon diet of strawberries and cream pasta, she has grabbed every opportunity (and towel) that has come her way this fortnight as the players in her half of the draw – most notably Coco Gauff and the former champ Elena Rybakina – departed. At last, Swiatek says, the balls are listening to her on the grass. She looks happy and relaxed. She’s shown more of her personality in the on-court interviews. And she goes into this final as the favourite.
But Amanda Anisimova is enjoying an empowering revival of her own. Having come within a few games of reaching the French Open final as a 17-year-old prodigy in 2019, the American took an eight-month break from the game in 2023 because of burnout. She didn’t even get through Wimbledon qualifying last year. But she held her nerve brilliantly against Aryna Sabalenka in Friday’s semi-final, displaying courage every bit as big as her shots.
She wants this just as much as Swiatek does; victory would be so self-affirming for either. I wish they could split it, but I’m not sure the All England Club would countenance the beautiful Venus Rosewater Dish being cut in half. Add into the mix they’ve never played each other before on tour, and that makes this unexpected final even more intriguing.
Play begins: in a departure from tradition at 4pm BST. And remember you can get in touch in the usual way. It would be great to hear from you.