Wimbledon, iga świątek and Amanda Anisimova
Digest more
Therapy and Tennis: Madison Keys cracks open a door players have historically preferred to keep shut
Alexander Zverev's admission shed a light on mental health issues in tennis—exacerbated by the growing threat of burnout.
Iga Swiatek captured her sixth Grand Slam title at the Wimbledon Championships this year. She outclassed Amanda Anisimova in the finals, 6-0, 6-0.
The 24-year-old eighth seed was merciless as she took brutal advantage of Grand Slam final debutant Amanda Anisimova's leg-sapping nerves in front of a stunned Centre Court.
Sinner halted Alcaraz’s 20-match win streak at the All England Club to celebrate his first Grand Slam victory away from hard courts on Sunday evening. The world No. 1, now 2-0 against the 22-year-old at Wimbledon, had previously been a semifinalist two years earlier in London and triumphed at Halle in June 2024 for his first grass-court title.
Swiatek will receive 2,000 ranking points for winning the title, the same as other Majors. She will also walk away £3,000,000 richer, the prize money reserved for this year's singles champions. The 24-year-old is now one step closer to completing the career Grand Slam.
Liudmila Samsonova’s first Slam quarterfinal at Wimbledon comes after years of waiting, a breakthrough built on grass-court grit and careful routines.
Keys, the No. 6 seed, was easily beaten in straight sets by 104th-ranked Laura Siegemund of Germany, while Sabalenka fought off a partisan crowd to beat Britain's Emma Raducanu.
Iga Swiatek, once labeled a clay-court specialist, silenced critics by storming into her maiden Wimbledon final in 2025, to set the new benchmark.