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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Sport
Kieran Jackson

Wimbledon draw live: Latest updates as Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu learn fate

The 2025 Championships at Wimbledon are upon us as the All England Club opens its doors to the tennis world once again.

Carlos Alcaraz is eyeing a third consecutive title in SW19, and is also looking to become the second player to win Roland Garros, Queen’s and Wimbledon in the same year. World No 1 Jannik Sinner and British No 1 Jack Draper are the other favourites in the men’s draw.

World No 1 Aryna Sabalenka is the favourite for the women’s title, with 2022 champion Elena Rybakina and French Open winner Coco Gauff also leading contenders. Czech player Barbora Krejcikova is the defending champion.

Emma Raducanu, who has narrowly missed out on a seeding, leads the British contingent in the women’s draw, having overtaken Katie Boulter as British No 1 recently.

Follow live coverage of the Wimbledon draw with The Independent

WIMBLEDON 2025 - LATEST UPDATES

  • Wimbledon 2025 starts on Monday 30 June
  • Emma Raducanu to face British 17-year-old Mingge Xu in round one
  • Katie Boulter draws ninth seed Paula Badosa in tough opener
  • Jack Draper faces Sebastian Baez in first round; Marin Cilic could await in round two
  • Carlos Alcaraz to face Fabio Fognini in round one

Emma Raducanu will face British teen at Wimbledon while Katie Boulter handed tough test

11:41 , Kieran Jackson

Emma Raducanu will face 17-year-old wild card Mingge Xu in an intriguing all-British first round match-up at Wimbledon.

British No 1 Raducanu, who narrowly missed out on a seeding, has been handed a difficult path to the second week.

The 22-year-old could face 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova or 32nd seed McCartney Kessler in the second round, with world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka a potential opponent in round three.

Full story below:

Emma Raducanu takes on British teen at Wimbledon with Katie Boulter handed tough test

Jack Draper handed difficult Wimbledon draw despite fourth seed billing

12:02 , Kieran Jackson

Jack Draper has been handed a difficult draw at Wimbledon – with world No 38 Sebastian Baez lying in wait in round one.

British No 1 Draper, seeded fourth at this year’s Championships, could face former US Open winner Marin Cilic in round two, while the in-form Alexander Bublik is a potential third round opponent. Bublik defeated Draper at the French Open earlier this month.

Further ahead, Draper could face seven-time champion Novak Djokovic in the quarter-finals.

Full story below:

Jack Draper handed difficult Wimbledon draw despite fourth seed billing

Jack Draper's potential pathway to Wimbledon glory:

11:20 , Kieran Jackson

Round one – Sebastian Baez

Round two - Marin Cilic

Round three - Alexander Bublik

Round four - Jakub Mensik

Quarter-finals - Novak Djokovic

Semi-finals - Jannik Sinner

Final - Carlos Alcaraz

British first-round matches - men's singles:

11:05 , Kieran Jackson

Jack Draper vs Sebastian Baez

George Loffhagen vs Pedro Martinez

Johannus Monday vs Tommy Paul (13)

Jack Pinnington Jones vs Tomas Martin Etcheverry

Dan Evans vs Jay Clarke

Arthur Fery vs Alexei Popyrin

Billy Harris vs Hubert Hurkacz

Henry Searle vs Ethan Quinn

Jacob Fearnley vs Joao Fonseca

Oliver Crawford Mattia Bellucci

Cameron Norrie vs Roberto Bautista Agut

Oliver Tarvet vs Leandro Riedi

Men's singles draw done!

11:02 , Kieran Jackson

Some very exciting matches to look forward to.

Carlos Alcaraz against Fabio Fognini is a fun first round contest to start proceedings on Monday.

Elsewhere, an all-British clash between Dan Evans and Jay Clarke, while big-serving Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard takes on Taylor Fritz in round one.

Carlos Alcaraz vs Fabio Fognini

10:58 , Kieran Jackson

The men’s defending champion faces Italian maverick Fognini first up.

That’s a lovely match first up on Centre Court on Monday!

(EPA)

Cameron Norrie vs Roberto Bautista Agut

10:57 , Kieran Jackson

The Spanish veteran first up for Norrie.

Could face Frances Tiafoe in round two...

Oliver Tarvet vs Leandro Riedi

10:57 , Kieran Jackson

The British qualifier - the world No 719 - takes on a fellow qualifier.

It could be Alcaraz in round two!

Jacob Fearnley vs Joao Fonseca

10:55 , Kieran Jackson

That is a tasty first round match-up for the British No 2!

Henry Searle vs Ethan Quinn

10:52 , Kieran Jackson

Searle drawn to face American player Quinn.

Billy Harris vs Hubert Hurkacz

10:50 , Kieran Jackson

Harris to face 2021 Wimbledon semi-finalist Hurkacz in round one.

Arthur Fery vs Alexei Popyrin

10:48 , Kieran Jackson

The Australian 20th seed first up for British wild card Fery.

Dan Evans vs Jay Clarke

10:44 , Kieran Jackson

An all-British wild card match up in round one.

And the winner could face Novak Djokovic in round two.

Jack Pinnington Jones vs Tomas Martin Etcheverry

10:40 , Kieran Jackson

Argentine player Etcheverry in round one for the British wild card.

Jack Draper vs Sebastian Baez

10:39 , Kieran Jackson

Again, a tough matchup for Draper!

He takes on world number 38 Sebastian Baez in round one.

Grand Slam winner Marin Cilic could await him in the second round.

Johannus Monday vs Tommy Paul (13)

10:37

British wild card Monday gets a tough opener against American Tommy Paul!

In addition, Brit George Loffhagen will face unseeded Spaniard Pedro Martinez.

Jannik Sinner vs Luca Nardi

10:36 , Kieran Jackson

An all-Italian clash in round one.

Draper's path to final from R3 onwards

10:34 , Kieran Jackson

By seeding, this would be Draper’s path:

Round three - Bublik

Round four - Mensik

Quarter-finals - Djokovic

Semi-finals - Sinner

Final - Alcaraz

Overall, that’s just about as tough as it gets for the British No 1.

Jack Draper in same half as Jannik Sinner!

10:32 , Kieran Jackson

The world No 4 would be forecast to play Sinner in the semi-finals!

And Draper is in the same quarter as... Novak Djokovic!

Obviously, as tough as it gets for the Brit!

(Getty Images)

Men's singles underway!

10:30

Here we go!

British first round matches – women’s singles:

10:29 , Kieran Jackson

Emma Raducanu vs Mingge Xu

Katie Boulter vs Paula Badosa (9)

Hannah Klugman vs Leylah Fernandez (29)

Harrie Dart vs Dalma Galfi

Sonay Kartal vs Jelena Ostapenko (20)

Jodie Burrage vs Caty McNally

Heather Watson vs Clara Tauson

Fran Jones vs Yulia Starodubtseva

Women's singles draw!

10:26 , Kieran Jackson

That’s the women’s singles done.

The standout round one match for me has to be British No 2 Katie Boulter taking on Paula Badosa, the ninth seed from Spain!

Other decent clashes include Hannah Klugman - the 16-year-old British wild card - taking on 29th seed Leylah Fernandez, while second seed Coco Gauff faces Dayana Yastremska.

Men’s singles to take place shortly!

Emma Raducanu has backed the comments of British rival Katie Boulter (Adam Davy/PA) (PA Wire)

Coco Gauff vs Dayana Yastremska

10:22 , Kieran Jackson

A tough first round for the French Open champion!

Fran Jones vs Yulia Starodubtseva

10:22 , Kieran Jackson

The Brit takes on the Ukrainian in round one!

Heather Watson vs Clara Tauson

10:20 , Kieran Jackson

Watson faces the 23rd seed from Denmark in round one!

Jodie Burrage vs Caty McNally

10:19 , Kieran Jackson

British player Burrage avoids a seed, but could play Iga Swiatek in round two!

Jodie Burrage failed to take match points (Adam Davy/PA) (PA Wire)

Petra Kvitova vs Emma Navarro

10:17 , Kieran Jackson

In her last Wimbledon appearance, two-time winner Kvitova faces 10th seed Emma Navarro!

Could that be the Czech’s SW19 farewell?

Naomi Osaka vs Talia Gibson

10:16 , Kieran Jackson

The four-time major winner - unseeded - will face Australian Talia Gibson!

Qinwen Zheng could await in round two!

Sonay Kartal vs Jelena Ostapenko!

10:15

The British No 3 takes on the 20th seed in round one!

Harriet Dart vs Dalma Galfi!

10:13 , Kieran Jackson

Dart avoids a seed in round one. She will face Hungarian player Galfi.

Hannah Klugman vs Leylah Fernandez

10:12 , Kieran Jackson

The 16-year-old British wild-card draws the 29th seed Leylah Fernandez!

Again, a tough opener.

Katie Boulter vs Paula Badosa!

10:11 , Kieran Jackson

Oh jeez... that’s a tough opener for the British No 2!

Boulter faces ninth seed Badosa in the first round!

Emma Raducanu to play a Brit in round one!

10:10 , Kieran Jackson

Raducanu will face British 17-year-old wild card Mingge Xu!

Could face ex-champion Marketa Vondrousova or 32nd seed McCartney Kessler in round two.

So just about the best early draw Raducanu could have received... though Sabalenka would await in round three!

Emma Raducanu has avoided a seed in round one (PA Archive)

Aryna Sabalenka learns first round opponent!

10:08 , Kieran Jackson

Carson Branstine is Sabalenka’s first opponent!

Last year’s quarter-finalist Lulu Sun could await in round two!

All the seeds are in their place!

10:07 , Kieran Jackson

Sofia Kenin could face Coco Gauff in the third round!

Now time for the first round matches to be drawn...

Seeds being placed in the draw!

10:05 , Kieran Jackson

By random allocation, the 32 seeds are currently being placed in the draw.

At the top, Elina Svitolina could play top seed Aryna Sabalenka in the fourth round.

Ladies singles draw!

10:02 , Kieran Jackson

We start with the women’s singles!

Fourth seed Jasmine Paolini is drawn in the same half as first seed Aryna Sabalenka, while third seed Jessica Pegula is in the same half as second seed and US compatriot Jessica Pegula!

Who is seeded for Wimbledon?

09:58 , Kieran Jackson

And here are the seeds for the women’s singles!

  1. Aryna Sabalenka
  2. Coco Gauff
  3. Jessica Pegula
  4. Jasmine Paolini
  5. Qinwen Zheng
  6. Madison Keys
  7. Mirra Andreeva
  8. Iga Swiatek
  9. Paula Badosa
  10. Emma Navarro
  11. Elena Rybakina
  12. Diana Shnaider
  13. Amanda Anisimova
  14. Elina Svitolina
  15. Karolina Muchova
  16. Daria Kasatkina
  17. Barbora Krejcikova
  18. Ekaterina Alexandrova
  19. Liudmila Samsonova
  20. Jelena Ostapenko
  21. Beatriz Haddad Maia
  22. Donna Vekic
  23. Clara Tauson
  24. Elise Mertens
  25. Magdalena Frech
  26. Marta Kostyuk
  27. Magda Linette
  28. Sofia Kenin
  29. Leylah Fernandez
  30. Linda Noskova
  31. Ashlyn Krueger
  32. McCartney Kessler

When is the Wimbledon draw?

09:55 , Mike Jones

We’re just five minutes away from the draw!

The draw for Wimbledon 2025 takes place on Friday 27 June at 10am (BST) for both singles competitions.

A total of 128 players will be drawn, with 32 seeded players, 16 qualifiers and eight wild cards.

The doubles draw takes place at 12pm (BST).

Wimbledon begins on 30 June this year, with the men's singles final taking place on 13 July (Getty Images)

Who is seeded for Wimbledon?

09:49 , Kieran Jackson

A reminder of the seeds in the men’s singles this year!

  1. Jannik Sinner
  2. Carlos Alcaraz
  3. Alexander Zverev
  4. Jack Draper
  5. Taylor Fritz
  6. Novak Djokovic
  7. Lorenzo Musetti
  8. Holger Rune
  9. Daniil Medvedev
  10. Ben Shelton
  11. Alex de Minaur
  12. Frances Tiafoe
  13. Tommy Paul
  14. Andrey Rublev
  15. Jakub Mensik
  16. Francisco Cerundolo
  17. Karen Khachanov
  18. Ugo Humbert
  19. Grigor Dimitrov
  20. Alexei Popyrin
  21. Tomas Machac
  22. Flavio Cobolli
  23. Jiri Lehecka
  24. Stefanos Tsitsipas
  25. Felix Auger-Aliassime
  26. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
  27. Denis Shapovalov
  28. Alexander Bublik
  29. Brandon Nakashima
  30. Alex Michelsen
  31. Tallon Griekspoor
  32. Matteo Berrettini

Jack Draper can go all the way at Wimbledon, says ex-champion Conchita Martinez

09:45 , Kieran Jackson

“You can tell when a player really wants it,” 1994 Wimbledon champion Martinez told BoyleSports, who offer the latest tennis betting. “He [Draper] is very professional. I didn’t see him play a lot but then you pay attention and he can play on any surface. He is already there, he’s beaten top players.

“Carlos and Jannik are a bit ahead of Jack. He needs to be consistent the whole year. He needs to be consistent from the baseline to play against these guys. Jack has the game to go to the net and be aggressive but you’re up against two guys that can produce amazing shots.

“Jack has a very good chance of making the semi-finals at Wimbledon. Once you get to the semi-finals, why not go all the way? I think Alcaraz will be suitable for Jack’s game. He has the potential to go all the way.”

Jack Draper practises at Wimbledon (Ben Whitley/PA) (PA Wire)

From San Diego to Wimbledon: meet Britain’s college hotshot Oliver Tarvet

09:36 , Kieran Jackson

Two weeks ago, 21-year-old Oliver Tarvet concluded his third and penultimate year at the University of San Diego, basking in the sunshine on America’s west coast.

“Excited for one more,” he posted on Instagram, at that stage unaware of the green-floored opportunity ahead.

Fast-forward a fortnight, to Friday, and Tarvet will be one of 128 players to take his place in the men’s singles draw for Wimbledon. Not half bad.

From San Diego to Wimbledon: meet Britain’s college hotshot Oliver Tarvet

10 players to watch out for at Wimbledon

09:29 , Mike Jones

9. Alexander Bublik

The maverick from Kazakhstan – who prefers a getaway to Las Vegas to a training block – knocked Draper out of the French Open and accounted for Sinner on his way to the Halle title last week in a blur of pinpoint serving, thunderous winners and a drop shot which lands like a butterfly with sore feet. Temperamental, gloriously unpredictable and brilliant fun to watch.

(Getty Images)

10. Jack Draper

Britain’s great hope will go into his home slam seeded fourth after a stellar start to the season, winning a maiden Masters 1000 title at Indian Wells, reaching another final in Madrid and the semi-finals at Queen’s. Now free of the fitness issues which dogged his formative years, Draper is one of the most feared players on the ATP Tour and is desperate to emulate Andy Murray and claim the Wimbledon crown.

10 players to watch out for at Wimbledon

09:22 , Mike Jones

7. Jannik Sinner

The world number one from Italy has reached two finals since returning from a three-month doping ban but is probably still having nightmares about the three championship points he held against Alcaraz at Roland Garros. An aggressive baseliner with excellent movement, Sinner will certainly be a threat but question marks remain over his stamina in five-set matches.

(EPA)

8. Novak Djokovic

In reaching the French Open semi-finals, Djokovic proved he can still beat 98 per cent of the field in men’s tennis. It is just the other two who are preventing him from landing that record 25th grand slam title. Sinner got the better of him at Roland Garros, while Alcaraz has beaten him in the last two Wimbledon finals. Aged 38, can the last of the ‘big three’ still standing find a way past them and land an eighth SW19 title?

10 players to watch out for at Wimbledon

09:15 , Mike Jones

5. Qinwen Zheng

With a huge Chinese fanbase, Olympic champion Zheng probably has a claim to be the most recognisable female player worldwide. She has also built a reputation for some frowned-upon antics, from flouting warm-up convention by hitting winners to changing her rackets and shoes during an opponent’s service game, most recently against Raducanu at Queen’s.

(EPA)

6. Carlos Alcaraz

Now on a career-best 18-match winning streak taking in Rome, the French Open and a second Queen’s title on Sunday, the defending champion remains the man to beat at SW19. A five-time grand slam winner at the age of just 22, Alcaraz has reached five consecutive finals and lost just one match since April. It is hard to see anyone stopping the Spaniard over the next fortnight.

Wimbledon men's singles winner odds

09:12 , Kieran Jackson
  • Carlos Alcaraz - 7/5
  • Jannik Sinner - 17/10
  • Novak Djokovic - 6/1
  • Jack Draper - 11/1
  • Alexander Bublik - 25/1
  • Alexander Zverev - 30/1
  • Jiri Lehecka - 33/1
  • Taylor Fritz - 40/1

Odds provided by Grosvenor Sport

10 players to watch out for at Wimbledon

09:08 , Mike Jones

3. Emma Raducanu

Now back at the top of the British rankings, Raducanu is playing probably some of her best tennis since her remarkable US Open triumph in 2021 – although that bar is quite low after a turbulent few years. The 22-year-old is having to manage a back problem, but her informal coaching arrangement with Mark Petchey appears to be working.

(AFP via Getty Images)

4. Tatjana Maria

The German mother of two came from out of nowhere to be crowned the Queen of Queen’s Club earlier this month. Maria went on an incredible run through qualifying before slicing four top-20 players into submission to become the oldest WTA 500 champion at the age of 37. Could bringing 1980s-style tennis back to Wimbledon land the ultimate prize?

10 players to watch out for at Wimbledon

09:01 , Mike Jones

1. Coco Gauff

The charismatic American heads to Wimbledon as the new French Open champion, but her grass ceiling remains the fourth round. Yet if her forehand and serve hold up, Gauff has all the weapons and athleticism to master her least favourite surface. The 21-year-old will be seeded second so there should be little danger until the latter stages of the tournament.

(Getty Images)

2. Aryna Sabalenka

The runaway world number one has yet to make a major impact at Wimbledon and had to withdraw from last year’s tournament through injury. Sabalenka’s ragged display in the Roland Garros final was hard to take, so the powerful Belarusian will be determined to reassert her authority at the top of the women’s game by adding the SW19 title to her US and Australian Open crowns.

Britain’s leading trio have more on the line than just pride at Wimbledon

08:56 , Mike Jones

Britain’s leading women will have an extra incentive to perform strongly at Wimbledon over the next fortnight.

While motivation for a home grand slam is usually a given, there is a battle at the top of the game in this country which is driving Britain’s main trio forward.

And, unlike in previous generations, when competition on the court often resulted in strained relations off it, Katie Boulter, Emma Raducanu and Sonay Kartal are proving that rivalry really can be friendly.

Britain’s leading trio have more on the line than just pride at Wimbledon

Emma Raducanu hoping to get her head right in time for Wimbledon

08:51 , Mike Jones

Emma Raducanu admits she needs to “get my head in the game” ahead of Wimbledon after she exited the Eastbourne Open.

Raducanu almost pulled off an incredible comeback in her second-round match against Maya Joint before losing on a final-set tiebreak.

“Unfortunately I couldn’t get over the line today but I can get some rest ahead of next week,” she told the BBC.

“I feel quite tired. Just going through some stuff and I need to do my best to get my head in the game ahead of next week.

“Realistically, the turnaround is pretty soon – it’s only four days away really that Wimbledon starts.

“I think I’m just going to start with (a day off) [on Thursday] and then hopefully I can get on the court on Friday.”

Emma Raducanu was beaten in three sets (Adam Davy/PA) (PA Wire)

What is Jack Draper expecting from Wimbledon?

08:46 , Mike Jones

“I focus on what I can control,” said the British No.1. “I can’t control what people say, what noise people say, what hype there is, what criticism, all I can do is try my hardest and focus every day on what I’m going to do to prepare and play my best tennis in order to try to win the matches.

“I’m really excited to go out there to compete. Full of excitement knowing the crowd is right behind me, that I’m going to be playing on the courts that I wanted to play on since I was young, watching Murray, watching all these great players perform out there and it feels amazing to know that.

“It’s sinking in that I’m there now and I’ve got the chance to show people what I can do.”

Jack Draper practises at Wimbledon (Ben Whitley/PA) (PA Wire)

Jack Draper determined to make his mark at Wimbledon

08:41 , Mike Jones

Jack Draper has set out his intention to make Wimbledon his stage.

The 23-year-old is one of 23 British players in Friday’s singles draw, the most since 1984, but there is no doubt he represents the best hope of a first home champion since Andy Murray nine years ago.

“I definitely feel like a very different person, that’s for sure,” said Draper, who last year went into the tournament ranked 28th.

“I feel a lot more confident, a lot more calm in myself. I feel like I’ve got great people around me who have been with me every year (going) up the rankings.

“Seeing yourself play in some big matches and in big environments, that helps more and more when you’re coming into big places like Wimbledon. I think the home support that I’m going to have and people right behind me is going to be amazing.

“It’s going to be a privilege to play as the British number one and that’s what I’ve always wanted, I’ve wanted to make Centre Court or Wimbledon my environment, and I’m looking forward to hopefully starting that.”

(Getty Images)

Wimbledon semi-finalist Donna Vekic: ‘I always have a heartbreaker on the grass’

08:36 , Kieran Jackson

It was one of those Wimbledon matches that took your breath away. The emotional peaks and troughs of elite-level sport, played out in front of an enthralled Centre Court crowd, on a bright afternoon in July.

A record-setter, too: at two hours and 51 minutes, the longest semi-final at the All England Club in the 147-year history of the ladies’ singles competition.

Wimbledon semi-finalist Donna Vekic: ‘I always have a heartbreaker on the grass’

Sue Barker on Jack Draper’s transformation, her kinship with Emma Raducanu and returning to Wimbledon

08:31 , Flo Clifford

From her days as a player, to helming the BBC’s coverage of Wimbledon, to now attending as a fan, the first thing Sue Barker does on arrival at the All England Lawn Tennis Club is to look out over Centre Court.

An experience that was always “terrifying” as a player – particularly as a home favourite – has nonetheless never lost its shine.

Barker’s love for tennis – if it was in any doubt – is apparent the moment we start talking:

Sue Barker interview: Jack Draper’s transformation and a kinship with Emma Raducanu

Wimbledon set to unveil statue of Andy Murray in 2027

08:26 , Kieran Jackson

Andy Murray will be honoured by Wimbledon with a special statue at the All England Club in two years.

Murray, who won the men’s singles at Wimbledon amid joyous scenes in 2013 and 2016, retired from professional tennis last year after a fifth and final Olympic appearance.

Fred Perry, the last British winner of the men’s singles at Wimbledon prior to Murray, has a full-length statue outside Centre Court, and Wimbledon chairperson Debbie Jevans confirmed plans are in place for Murray to receive a similar honour.

Wimbledon set to unveil statue of Andy Murray in 2027

Andy Murray plans to keep his kids away from ‘damaging’ social media

08:21 , Mike Jones

Andy Murray says he will not let his children on social media until they are older to protect them from its “damaging” impact.

Murray is the latest high-profile player in the sport to open up about the topic, following Katie Boulter’s revelation that she receives vile social media abuse, including death threats.

The 38-year-old told the BBC: “I think it’s positive any time anyone can speak out about it. It’s great that (Katie) talked about it.

“Me and my wife are trying to keep our children off social media until they are much older, because I think it can be pretty damaging.

“Athletes across all sports have been discussing this for a long time, but it hasn’t really changed. Hopefully something can get done soon.”

Andy Murray does not want his children going on social media (John Walton/PA) (PA Wire)

Barbora Krejcikova picks up injury scare ahead of Wimbledon title defence

08:16 , Mike Jones

Barbora Krejcikova is an injury doubt ahead of her Wimbledon title defence after withdrawing from the Eastbourne Open due to a thigh problem.

The world number 17, who defeated Jasmine Paolini in the women’s singles final at SW19 last year, was due to face France’s Varvara Gracheva in the quarter-finals at Devonshire Park.

“I’m very sorry to have to withdraw from my quarter-final in Eastbourne as I’m having some soreness in my right thigh,” said Krejcikova.

“Overnight it just didn’t get any better; it actually got worse. I think it’s better with Wimbledon in the next couple of days just to rest it and to see what’s going on and to resolve that.”

How much do players earn at Wimbledon round-by-round?

08:11 , Mike Jones

Men’s and women’s singles

First round - £66,000

Second round - £99,000

Third round - £152,000

Fourth round - £240,000

Quarter-finals - £400,000

Semi-finals - £775,000

Runner-up - £1.52m

Winner - £3m

Overall increase from 2024: 8.2%

How much do players earn at Wimbledon?

08:06 , Mike Jones

The winners of the singles titles at Wimbledon this year will take home £3m, as the tournament announced a record prize pot for players.

Carlos Alcaraz is eyeing a third consecutive men’s singles crown at SW19, while Czech player Barbora Krejcikova is the defending champion in the women’s singles.

Both received £2.7m for winning in 2024, but the singles champions in 2025 will receive a £300,000 increase.

The total prize pot has increased from £50m to £53.5m, a 7 per cent jump, while first round losers will receive £66,000 – a 10 per cent increase from last year.

French Open breakout star Lois Boisson sees Wimbledon hopes dashed

08:01 , Will Castle

Roland Garros surprise package Lois Boisson will not get the chance to emulate her heroics at Wimbledon after seeing her hopes of a first main-draw appearance end abruptly in qualifying.

Boisson, 22, stunned the world in a storybook run to the French Open semi-finals, doing so as a 361st-ranked wildcard.

Her journey in Paris ended at the hands of eventual champion Coco Gauff in the last four, but her sensational campaign nevertheless shot her up the rankings to 65 in the world.

French Open breakout star Lois Boisson sees Wimbledon hopes dashed

Who are the Wimbledon wildcards? Meet the 14 British hopefuls handed SW19 opportunity

07:51 , Flo Clifford

With the grass-court season in full swing and Wimbledon looming on the horizon, the tournament has released its allocation of wildcards, rewarding a raft of home-grown talent with the chance to compete in SW19.

Several British players are ranked highly enough to earn direct access into the main draw, including world No 4 Jack Draper, Cameron Norrie, Billy Harris, and Jacob Fearnley on the men’s side, and Katie Boulter, Emma Raducanu, and Sonay Kartal on the women’s.

Who are the Wimbledon wildcards? Meet the 14 British hopefuls handed SW19 opportunity

How to watch Wimbledon on TV

07:46 , Mike Jones

Wimbledon will be shown on the BBC in the UK, with full coverage of the tournament available to watch on BBC One, BBC Two and across BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website.

TNT Sports will air a daily 90-minute highlights show and will also have live coverage of both singles finals.

What is the full Wimbledon schedule?

07:41 , Mike Jones

Monday 30 June – Singles first round

Tuesday 1 July – Singles first round

Wednesday 2 July – Singles second round; Men’s and Women’s doubles first round

Thursday 3 July – Singles second round; Men’s and Women’s doubles first round

Friday 4 July – Singles third round; Men’s and Women’s doubles second round; Mixed Doubles first round

Saturday 5 July – Singles third round; Men’s and Women’s doubles second round; Mixed Doubles first round; Juniors (18 & under) singles first round

Sunday 6 July – Singles fourth round; Men’s and Women’s doubles third round; Mixed Doubles second round; Juniors singles first round

Monday 7 July – Singles fourth round; Men’s and Women’s doubles third round; Mixed Doubles quarter-finals; Girls singles second round; Boys Doubles first round

Tuesday 8 July – Singles and doubles quarter-finals; Mixed Doubles semi-finals; Wheelchair Singles first round; Boys singles Second Round; Girls doubles first round

Wednesday 9 July – Singles and doubles quarter-finals; Quad wheelchair singles quarter-finals; Wheelchair doubles quarter-finals; Junior singles third round; Junior doubles second round

Thursday 10 July – Women’s singles semi-finals; Men’s doubles semi-finals; Mixed Doubles final; Wheelchair singles quarter-finals; Wheelchair doubles semi-finals; Junior singles and doubles quarter-finals

Friday 11 July – Men’s singles semi-finals; Women’s doubles semi-finals; Men’s, Women’s and Quad Wheelchair singles semi-finals; Junior singles and doubles semi-finals

Saturday 12 July – Women’s singles final (4pm); Men’s Doubles final (1pm); Women’s wheelchair singles final; Men’s and Quad wheelchair doubles final; Girls singles and doubles final; Boys doubles final

Sunday 13 July – Men’s singles final (4pm); Women’s doubles final (1pm); Men’s and Quad wheelchair singles final; Women’s wheelchair doubles final; Boys singles final

When does Wimbledon start?

07:36 , Mike Jones

The 2025 Championships start on Monday 30 June and will finish on Sunday 13 July.

Play will start at 11am (BST) on all the outside courts, with Court 1 starting at 1pm and Centre Court at 1:30pm.

As tradition dictates, Alcaraz, the defending men’s singles champion, will open the tournament on Centre Court on Monday 30 June.

Krejcikova, the defending women’s singles champion, will open Centre Court proceedings on Tuesday 1 July.

Who is seeded for Wimbledon?

07:31 , Mike Jones

Women’s singles

  1. Aryna Sabalenka
  2. Coco Gauff
  3. Jessica Pegula
  4. Jasmine Paolini
  5. Qinwen Zheng
  6. Madison Keys
  7. Mirra Andreeva
  8. Iga Swiatek
  9. Paula Badosa
  10. Emma Navarro
  11. Elena Rybakina
  12. Diana Shnaider
  13. Amanda Anisimova
  14. Elina Svitolina
  15. Karolina Muchova
  16. Daria Kasatkina
  17. Barbora Krejcikova
  18. Ekaterina Alexandrova
  19. Liudmila Samsonova
  20. Jelena Ostapenko
  21. Beatriz Haddad Maia
  22. Donna Vekic
  23. Clara Tauson
  24. Elise Mertens
  25. Magdalena Frech
  26. Marta Kostyuk
  27. Magda Linette
  28. Sofia Kenin
  29. Leylah Fernandez
  30. Linda Noskova
  31. Ashlyn Krueger
  32. McCartney Kessler

Who is seeded for Wimbledon?

07:26 , Mike Jones

Men’s singles

  1. Jannik Sinner
  2. Carlos Alcaraz
  3. Alexander Zverev
  4. Jack Draper
  5. Taylor Fritz
  6. Novak Djokovic
  7. Lorenzo Musetti
  8. Holger Rune
  9. Daniil Medvedev
  10. Ben Shelton
  11. Alex de Minaur
  12. Frances Tiafoe
  13. Tommy Paul
  14. Andrey Rublev
  15. Jakub Mensik
  16. Francisco Cerundolo
  17. Karen Khachanov
  18. Ugo Humbert
  19. Grigor Dimitrov
  20. Alexei Popyrin
  21. Tomas Machac
  22. Flavio Cobolli
  23. Jiri Lehecka
  24. Stefanos Tsitsipas
  25. Felix Auger-Aliassime
  26. Alejandro Davidovich Fokina
  27. Denis Shapovalov
  28. Alexander Bublik
  29. Brandon Nakashima
  30. Alex Michelsen
  31. Tallon Griekspoor
  32. Matteo Berrettini

Wimbledon draw live

07:16 , Mike Jones

The 2025 Championships at Wimbledon are upon us as the All England Club opens its doors to the tennis world once again.

Carlos Alcaraz is eyeing a third consecutive title in SW19, and is also looking to become the second player to win Roland Garros, Queen’s and Wimbledon in the same year. World No 1 Jannik Sinner and British No 1 Jack Draper are the other favourites in the men’s draw.

World No 1 Aryna Sabalenka is the favourite for the women’s title, with 2022 champion Elena Rybakina and French Open winner Coco Gauff also leading contenders. Czech player Barbora Krejcikova is the defending champion.

Emma Raducanu, who has narrowly missed out on a seeding, leads the British contingent in the women’s draw, having overtaken Katie Boulter as British No 1 recently.

Good morning!

07:12 , Mike Jones

Welcome to The Independent’s coverage of Wimbledon 2025. Today’s blog will focus on the build up to the tournament which begins in earnest on Monday.

Defending champions Carlos Alcaraz and Barbora Krejcikova will look to retain their titles while British hopefuls Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper look to impress at SW19.

The draw for the men’s and women’s singles will take place later today so stick with us and we run through everything you need to know ahead of the competition beginning next week.

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