Jump to content

2025 Wimbledon Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 Wimbledon Championships
2025 Wimbledon poster illustrated and designed by Sarah Madden, Leeds, UK.
Date30 June – 13 July 2025
Edition138th
CategoryGrand Slam (ITF)
Draw128S / 64D / 32XD
Prize money£53,550,000
SurfaceGrass
LocationChurch Road
SW19, Wimbledon,
London, England
VenueAll England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club
Champions
Men's singles
Italy Jannik Sinner
Women's singles
Poland Iga Świątek
Men's doubles
United Kingdom Julian Cash / United Kingdom Lloyd Glasspool
Women's doubles
Veronika Kudermetova / Belgium Elise Mertens
Mixed doubles
Netherlands Sem Verbeek / Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková
Wheelchair men's singles
Japan Tokito Oda
Wheelchair women's singles
China Wang Ziying
Wheelchair quad singles
Netherlands Niels Vink
Wheelchair men's doubles
Spain Martín de la Puente / Netherlands Ruben Spaargaren
Wheelchair women's doubles
China Li Xiaohui / China Wang Ziying
Wheelchair quad doubles
Israel Guy Sasson / Netherlands Niels Vink
Boys' singles
Bulgaria Ivan Ivanov
Girls' singles
Slovakia Mia Pohánková
Boys' doubles
Finland Oskari Paldanius / Poland Alan Ważny
Girls' doubles
United States Kristina Penickova / Czech Republic Vendula Valdmannová

Boys' 14&U singles
Austria Moritz Freitag

Girls' 14&U singles
Japan Sakino Miyazawa
Gentlemen's invitation doubles
United States Bob Bryan / United States Mike Bryan
Ladies' invitation doubles
Zimbabwe Cara Black / Switzerland Martina Hingis
Mixed invitation doubles
Sweden Thomas Johansson / United Kingdom Katie O'Brien
← 2024 · Wimbledon Championships · 2026 →

The 2025 Wimbledon Championships was a major tennis tournament which took place at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London, England from 30 June to 13 July with the preliminary rounds played from 23 to 26 June.[1] It consisted of singles, doubles, mixed doubles, junior, wheelchair and Invitational tournaments play.

It was the 138th edition of the Wimbledon Championships and the third major tournament of 2025. For the first time in Wimbledon's history, line judges were replaced with automated electronic line judges.[2][3]

The women's and men's singles finals, held on the second Saturday and Sunday, began at 4:00 PM instead of the traditional 2:00 PM start time, and both finals were scheduled as the last matches of the day. The organisers stated that these adjustments aimed to enhance viewership in North and South America.[4]

Tournament

[edit]

The defending champion of the Men's singles draw was the Spanish player, Carlos Alcaraz, who lost in the final to Jannik Sinner who became the first Italian Wimbledon singles champion in the Open Era.[5] The Women's singles defending champion was Barbora Krejčíková from the Czech Republic, but she lost in the third round to Emma Navarro.[6] Iga Świątek won against Amanda Anisimova in the final and became the first Polish Wimbledon singles champion in the Open Era.[7][8]

In the men's and women's singles, a total of eight top-10 seeds were eliminated in the first round, the most at a Grand Slam event in the Open Era.[9][10][11]

Singles players

[edit]
Gentlemen's singles players
Champion Runner-up
Italy Jannik Sinner [1] Spain Carlos Alcaraz [2]
Semifinals out
Serbia Novak Djokovic [6] United States Taylor Fritz [5]
Quarterfinals out
United States Ben Shelton [10] Italy Flavio Cobolli [22] Karen Khachanov [17] United Kingdom Cameron Norrie
4th round out
Bulgaria Grigor Dimitrov [19] Italy Lorenzo Sonego Croatia Marin Čilić Australia Alex de Minaur [11]
Australia Jordan Thompson Poland Kamil Majchrzak Chile Nicolás Jarry (Q) Andrey Rublev [14]
3rd round out
Spain Pedro Martínez Austria Sebastian Ofner (PR) Hungary Márton Fucsovics (LL) United States Brandon Nakashima [29]
Spain Jaume Munar Czech Republic Jakub Menšík [15] Denmark August Homgren (Q) Serbia Miomir Kecmanović
Spain Alejandro Davidovich Fokina [26] Italy Luciano Darderi Portugal Nuno Borges France Arthur Rinderknech
Brazil João Fonseca Italy Mattia Bellucci France Adrian Mannarino (Q) Germany Jan-Lennard Struff
2nd round out
Australia Aleksandar Vukic Argentina Mariano Navone France Corentin Moutet United States Tommy Paul [13]
Australia Rinky Hijikata France Gaël Monfils United States Reilly Opelka Georgia (country) Nikoloz Basilashvili (Q)
United Kingdom Jack Draper [4] Hungary Fábián Marozsán United Kingdom Jack Pinnington Jones (WC) United States Marcos Giron
France Arthur Cazaux (Q) Czech Republic Tomáš Macháč [21] Netherlands Jesper de Jong United Kingdom Dan Evans (WC)
Canada Gabriel Diallo Netherlands Botic van de Zandschulp United Kingdom Arthur Féry (WC) France Benjamin Bonzi
United Kingdom Billy Harris Japan Shintaro Mochizuki (Q) United States Ethan Quinn Chile Cristian Garín (LL)
United States Learner Tien United States Jenson Brooksby (PR) Czech Republic Jiří Lehečka [23] United States Frances Tiafoe [12]
South Africa Lloyd Harris (PR) France Valentin Royer (Q) Canada Félix Auger-Aliassime [25] United Kingdom Oliver Tarvet (Q)
1st round out
Italy Luca Nardi Chinese Taipei Tseng Chun-hsin United Kingdom George Loffhagen (WC) Canada Denis Shapovalov [27]
Japan Yoshihito Nishioka Argentina Francisco Comesaña Serbia Hamad Medjedovic United Kingdom Johannus Monday (WC)
Australia Alex Bolt (Q) Belgium David Goffin United States Aleksandar Kovacevic France Ugo Humbert [18]
China Bu Yunchaokete Kazakhstan Alexander Shevchenko Portugal Jaime Faria (Q) Italy Lorenzo Musetti [7]
Argentina Sebastián Báez Belgium Raphaël Collignon Australia James McCabe (Q) Kazakhstan Alexander Bublik [28]
Kazakhstan Beibit Zhukayev (Q) Argentina Tomás Martín Etcheverry Argentina Camilo Ugo Carabelli France Hugo Gaston
Spain Roberto Carballés Baena Australia Adam Walton France Quentin Halys Bosnia and Herzegovina Damir Džumhur
United States Alex Michelsen [30] United States Christopher Eubanks United Kingdom Jay Clarke (WC) France Alexandre Müller
France Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard Germany Daniel Altmaier Italy Matteo Arnaldi United States Brandon Holt
Australia Alexei Popyrin [20] Roman Safiullin Czech Republic Vít Kopřiva Daniil Medvedev [9]
Argentina Francisco Cerúndolo [16] Serbia Dušan Lajović (LL) Italy Giulio Zeppieri (Q) United States Mackenzie McDonald
Italy Matteo Berrettini [32] United Kingdom Henry Searle (WC) Luxembourg Chris Rodesch (Q) Germany Alexander Zverev [3]
Denmark Holger Rune [8] United States Nishesh Basavareddy United Kingdom Jacob Fearnley Netherlands Tallon Griekspoor [31]
Bolivia Hugo Dellien United Kingdom Oliver Crawford (WC) Spain Roberto Bautista Agut Denmark Elmer Møller
Serbia Laslo Djere Belgium Zizou Bergs Australia Christopher O'Connell Greece Stefanos Tsitsipas [24]
Australia James Duckworth Austria Filip Misolic (Q) Switzerland Leandro Riedi (Q) Italy Fabio Fognini
Ladies' singles players
Champion Runner-up
Poland Iga Świątek [8] United States Amanda Anisimova [13]
Semifinals out
Aryna Sabalenka [1] Switzerland Belinda Bencic
Quarterfinals out
Germany Laura Siegemund Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova Mirra Andreeva [7] Liudmila Samsonova [19]
4th round out
Belgium Elise Mertens [24] Argentina Solana Sierra (LL) Czech Republic Linda Nosková [30] United Kingdom Sonay Kartal
United States Emma Navarro [10] Ekaterina Alexandrova [18] Denmark Clara Tauson [23] Spain Jéssica Bouzas Maneiro
3rd round out
United Kingdom Emma Raducanu Ukraine Elina Svitolina [14] Spain Cristina Bucșa United States Madison Keys [6]
Kamilla Rakhimova Hungary Dalma Gálfi France Diane Parry (Q) Japan Naomi Osaka
United States Hailey Baptiste Czech Republic Barbora Krejčíková [17] Turkey Zeynep Sönmez Italy Elisabetta Cocciaretto
United States Danielle Collins Kazakhstan Elena Rybakina [11] Australia Daria Kasatkina [16] Ukraine Dayana Yastremska
2nd round out
Czech Republic Marie Bouzková Czech Republic Markéta Vondroušová United States Ann Li Aliaksandra Sasnovich (Q)
United Kingdom Katie Boulter Croatia Donna Vekić [22] Canada Leylah Fernandez [29] Serbia Olga Danilović
Italy Jasmine Paolini [4] Germany Eva Lys Brazil Beatriz Haddad Maia [21] Mexico Renata Zarazúa
Diana Shnaider [12] Bulgaria Viktoriya Tomova United States Ashlyn Krueger [31] Czech Republic Kateřina Siniaková
Italy Lucia Bronzetti Canada Victoria Mboko (LL) United States Caroline Dolehide Veronika Kudermetova
China Wang Xinyu Netherlands Suzan Lamens France Elsa Jacquemot (Q) United States Katie Volynets
United States Caty McNally (PR) Slovenia Veronika Erjavec (Q) Anna Kalinskaya Greece Maria Sakkari
Romania Irina-Camelia Begu Ukraine Yuliia Starodubtseva United States Sofia Kenin [28] Anastasia Zakharova (Q)
1st round out
Canada Carson Branstine (Q) New Zealand Lulu Sun United Kingdom Mimi Xu (WC) United States McCartney Kessler [32]
Czech Republic Linda Fruhvirtová (Q) Switzerland Viktorija Golubic France Varvara Gracheva Hungary Anna Bondár
Spain Paula Badosa [9] Australia Olivia Gadecki Romania Anca Todoni Australia Kimberly Birrell
United Kingdom Hannah Klugman (WC) United States Peyton Stearns China Zhang Shuai (Q) Romania Elena-Gabriela Ruse
Latvia Anastasija Sevastova (PR) Japan Aoi Ito China Yuan Yue United States Bernarda Pera
Slovakia Rebecca Šramková United Kingdom Harriet Dart (WC) Belgium Yanina Wickmayer (PR) Kazakhstan Yulia Putintseva
Japan Moyuka Uchijima Croatia Petra Martić (Q) Tunisia Ons Jabeur Latvia Jeļena Ostapenko [20]
United Kingdom Mika Stojsavljevic (WC) Australia Ajla Tomljanović Australia Talia Gibson (Q) China Zheng Qinwen [5]
Egypt Mayar Sherif Switzerland Jil Teichmann Romania Sorana Cîrstea (PR) Poland Magdalena Fręch [25]
Philippines Alexandra Eala Netherlands Arantxa Rus China Zhu Lin (PR) Czech Republic Petra Kvitová (WC)
Czech Republic Karolína Muchová [15] Romania Jaqueline Cristian United States Iva Jovic (Q) Australia Priscilla Hon (Q)
Poland Magda Linette [27] United States Alycia Parks Germany Tatjana Maria United States Jessica Pegula [3]
Polina Kudermetova United Kingdom Jodie Burrage (WC) Colombia Camila Osorio Ukraine Marta Kostyuk [26]
United Kingdom Heather Watson (WC) Serbia Nina Stojanović (Q) Anna Blinkova Armenia Elina Avanesyan
Colombia Emiliana Arango Slovenia Kaja Juvan (Q) United Kingdom Francesca Jones (WC) Australia Maya Joint
United States Taylor Townsend (Q) Germany Ella Seidel (Q) Victoria Azarenka United States Coco Gauff [2]

Events

[edit]

Gentlemen's singles

[edit]

Ladies' singles

[edit]

Gentlemen's doubles

[edit]

Ladies' doubles

[edit]

Mixed doubles

[edit]

Wheelchair gentlemen's singles

[edit]

Wheelchair ladies' singles

[edit]

Wheelchair quad singles

[edit]

Wheelchair gentlemen's doubles

[edit]

Wheelchair ladies' doubles

[edit]

Wheelchair quad doubles

[edit]

Boys' singles

[edit]

Girls' singles

[edit]

Boys' doubles

[edit]

Girls' doubles

[edit]

Boys' 14&U singles

[edit]
  • Austria Moritz Freitag defeated Greece Rafael Pagonis, 4–6, 6–1, [10–4]

Girls' 14&U singles

[edit]
  • Japan Sakino Miyazawa defeated Ukraine Sofiia Bielinska, 3–6, 7–5, [10–5]

Gentlemen's invitation doubles

[edit]

Ladies' invitation doubles

[edit]

Mixed invitation doubles

[edit]

Point and prize money distribution

[edit]

Point distribution

[edit]

Below are the tables with the point distribution for each phase of the tournament.

Senior points

[edit]
Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 128 Q Q3 Q2 Q1
Men's singles 2000 1300 800 400 200 100 50 10 30 16 8 0
Men's doubles 1200 720 360 180 90 0 N/A
Women's singles 1300 780 430 240 130 70 10 40 30 20 2
Women's doubles 10 N/A

Prize money

[edit]

The Wimbledon Championships total prize money for 2025 is £53,550,000, an increase of 7.0% from the 2024 edition.[12] The men's and women's singles champions each receive £3,000,000, a rise of 11.11% compared to 2024.[13]

Event W F SF QF Round of 16 Round of 32 Round of 64 Round of 1281 Q3 Q2 Q1
Singles £3,000,000 £1,520,000 £775,000 £400,000 £240,000 £152,000 £99,000 £66,000 £41,500 £26,000 £15,500
Doubles * £680,000 £345,000 £174,000 £87,500 £43,750 £26,000 £16,500
Mixed Doubles * £135,000 £68,000 £34,000 £17,500 £9,000 £4,500
Wheelchair Singles £68,000 £36,000 £24,000 £16,250 £10,750
Wheelchair Doubles * £30,000 £15,000 £9,000 £5,500
Quad Singles £68,000 £36,000 £24,000 £16,250
Quad Doubles * £28,000 £14,000 £9,000

*per team

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Wimbledon dates". www.wimbledon.com. Retrieved 24 March 2025.
  2. ^ Eccleshare, Charlie (9 October 2024). "Wimbledon replaces line judges with electronic line calling from 2025". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 March 2025.
  3. ^ "Wimbledon embraces live electronic line calling". Association of Tennis Professionals. 9 October 2024. Retrieved 24 March 2025.
  4. ^ Carayol, Tumaini (9 October 2024). "You cannot be serious? Wimbledon abolishes line judges after 147 years". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 March 2025.
  5. ^ Sridhar, Shrivathsa. "Sinner dethrones Alcaraz to capture maiden Wimbledon crown". Reuters. Retrieved 13 July 2025.
  6. ^ "American Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova in third round". ESPN. 5 July 2025. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  7. ^ Barton, Ben Church, Thomas Schlachter, Issy Ronald, Jamie (12 July 2025). "Iga Świątek wins Wimbledon final against American Amanda Anisimova in historic fashion". CNN. Retrieved 14 July 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "25 incredible things Iga Swiatek achieved by winning 2025 Wimbledon". Tennis.com. 18 July 2025.
  9. ^ "No one is safe at Wimbledon this year as seeds 'left scattered on the ground'". News.com.au. 4 July 2025. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  10. ^ "Wimbledon 2025: A record-breaking number of top-10 players are out". ESPN. 1 July 2025. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  11. ^ "Why have record number of seeded players lost at Wimbledon?". BBC Sport. 3 July 2025. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
  12. ^ "The Championships, Wimbledon, 2025 Prize Money" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 June 2025. Retrieved 13 June 2025.
  13. ^ "Wimbledon Prize Money 2025". Perfect Tennis. Archived from the original on 14 June 2025. Retrieved 14 June 2025.
[edit]
Preceded by Wimbledon Championships Succeeded by
Preceded by Grand Slam events Succeeded by