Key events
Cam Norrie, a semi-finalist here in 2022 remember, is out on court 18 and on serve against Spanish veteran Roberto Bautista Agut. It’s 3-2 to the Brit.
I really didn’t see this momentum change after Ostapenko won the second set, but following a game where the No 20 seed was broken to love with a double fault, Kartal is now 3-0 up and serving to make it 4-0 in the deciding third set!
Two other results to tell you about, the first of these championships not affected by injury.
No 14 seed Elina Svitolina is through after a straight sets win over Anna Bondar, while No 22 seed Donna Vekic has beaten Kimberly Birrell 6-0, 6-4.
Ons Jabeur retires hurt!
The two-time Wimbledon finalist had a medical timeout in the first set, which she lost 7-6 (5) to Viktoriya Tomova, before bowing out with an injury when 2-0 down in the second set. I’m not sure of the cause of Jabeur’s injury, but that is a huge shame. Tomova progresses to the second round.
This is the first year where there are no line judges, as Wimbledon gets it in line with the majority of ATP and WTA tournaments, along with two of the other three grand slam tournaments is using electronic line calling.
The technology allowing challenges was first introduced in 2007, but will now be utilised to automatically call all outs, faults, and foot faults. Wimbledon say the system is almost failsafe, and that in the qualifying at Roehampton this year it broke just once for one point.
For more info on that, click here for Connor Myers’s handy article on what new things to watch out for this year, from more expensive strawberries to the total prize money pot rising 7% to £53.5m.
Having lost the first set to Kartal, Ostapenko looks visibly peeved and on a mission to put things right in the second, with some thunderous returns that are just too powerful for the Brit. The Latvian is 4-1 up in the second set and has another break point to make it 5-1.
Three matches in the men’s draw to update you on.
Two Brits, the aforementioned Oliver Tarvet, at No 719 the lowest-ranked player at Wimbledon, and Oliver Crawford are both a set up against their respective opponents, Leandro Riedi and Monica Mattia Bellucci. Tarvet leads 6-4 and is a break up in the second set, 3-2. Crawford won the first-set tie-break 7-6 (2) and is on serve in the second set, 1-2.
Elsewhere, No 12 seed American Frances Tiafoe is cruising against Elmer Møller, 6-3, 3-1.
Jabeur left the court for a medical timeout during her first set against Viktoriya Tomova. The Tunisian looked visibly upset in her chair and spent about 14 minutes off the court. It’s unclear what the issue is, or if it is just the heat – let’s hope she’s OK. Regardless of the cause, Jabeur is back out there, it’s 5-5 and Tomova’s serve.
Kartal beats Ostapenko to the first set, 7-5!
From 3-0 down to now 6-5 up, Sonay Kartal now has a chance to serve for the first set against Jelena Ostapenko, the former French Open winner and Wimbledon semi-finalist! The British No 3 is really hitting his cleanly and looks very mobile at the back of the court, with Ostapenko visibly frustrated.
In the set’s deciding game, Kartal sends an ace down the T to move to 40-0 up, and after a wayward forehand, an unforced error from Ostapenko gifts the first set to the Brit. She is halfway to a real shock here!
Another player who has previously gone very deep into the women’s draw is Elina Svitolina, twice a semi-finalist in 2019 and 2023. She is giving the Hungarian Anna Bondar a bit of a pasting on court 18, 6-3 and a break up in the second set, 1-0.
Ons Jabeur, who was a beaten finalist here in both 2022 and 2023, has had a rocky start against a fellow unseeded player, Bulgarian Viktoriya Tomova, but after going a break down, has brought things back to 2-3. The Tunisian is back on serve, out on court 14.
Answers to my game. Thank you all for playing.
1) Wimbledon! The Southfields sign in the background and Waitrose plastic bag in the foreground were a bit of a giveaway.
2) Glastonbury, 2008.
3) I don’t need to tell you the answer, do I?
4) A tougher one but this is Rufus the Harris’s Hawk, used to keep pigeons away from the Wimbledon courts, pictured with handler Donna Davis.
5) Wimbledon. My Spanish is poor but “Cabeza, corazon, cojones” translates to “Head, heart, balls”. I assume they are off to see defending champion Carlos Alcaraz, who starts his campaign on Centre Court against Fabio Fognini at 1.30pm BST.
“The grass looks simply amazing and people dressed as strawberries are daft but endearing,” emails Carrie Ilbrey. “So looking forward to the next two weeks.”
Another Brit wildcard, the 5ft3in Sonay Kartal, has had a tough start against the formidable Jelena Ostapenko on Court No 3. The former French Open champion had raced into a 3-0 lead in the first set but Kartal slowly clawed her way back into the match. Kartal held serve and now has two break points to get things back to 3-2, on serve but blows a forehand return wide and sends another forehand just wide to allow Ostapenko to get back to deuce. From there, the Latvian holds. A chance missed for the Brit, alas.
Out on Court 4, the lowest-ranked player in the men’s draw is 21-year‑old British qualifier Oliver Tarvet, who is currently on serve in the first set against Leandro Riedi.
As mentioned in Tumaini Carayol’s piece on Sunday, the No 719 in the world spends most of his time playing tennis in college for the University of San Diego, something that has had a direct effect on the prize money he can claim. Players that qualify for the first round normally bag £66,000 but college rules in the US mean that under NCAA rules, players are restricted in how much they can claim from professional tournaments. On Friday, Tarvet explained players are allowed $10,000 (£7,290) in profit every year, as well as any expenses incurred during the events.
“I know there have been complaints about it but I don’t want to speak too much about it and overstep the mark,” he told the BBC. “But in my opinion, I’ve worked hard to get this money. I don’t feel like it’s undeserved the money that I’ve got. I think it would be good to see a change in the rules of the NCAA, but at the same time, I don’t want to get involved. It’s not really my place. But I’ve done well this week. I think I deserve this money.”
Wimbledon is officially underway!
Play has begun on the outer courts!
This wouldn’t be a Wimbledon liveblog without us mentioning the weather. Today’s weather is … scorchio! That’s bad news for the planet and bad news for the players.
The latest heatwave is expected to push temperatures close to record levels for June and result in the hottest ever start to Wimbledon.
Amber heat alerts remain in place until Tuesday evening for all of southern, western and eastern England with a warning of excess deaths particularly among those over 65, and increased demand on health and social care services.
Meanwhile, the London fire brigade has highlighted a “severe” risk of wildfires.
After the temperature rose to more than 30C (86F) in parts of southern England this weekend, it is forecast to hit 34C on Monday. This would make it the hottest day of the year so far, and just short of the UK’s record temperature for June of 35.6C, recorded in Southampton in 1976.
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Here’s what some of the favourites in the women’s and men’s draw have had to say for themselves in the lead up to the tournament.
Wimbledon and Glastonbury are two English institutions on the complete opposite ends of the spectrum, yet they do share some similarities. I wonder if anyone has travelled from Worthy Farm directly to the queue at SW19. Hopefully they have had a shower.
Let’s play a game. It’s a simple one, where you guess whether the image is from Glastonbury or Wimbledon. Answers to come a little later, if they are not too obvious. Get yours in to michael.butler@theguardian.com.
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
To get you in the mood before the action starts, why not have a read of some preview content.
First, Simon Cambers on Emma Raducanu, who admitted her first-round battle with the 17-year-old Welsh player Mimi Xu that “truthfully I don’t expect much from myself this year.”
Next, Tumaini Carayol on Carlos Alcaraz. At just 22, he is seeking to become only the fifth man in the open era to win three consecutive Wimbledon titles. He would also become the fourth man to win the French Open and Wimbledon back‑to-back on multiple occasions in the open era, after Rod Laver, Björn Borg and Rafael Nadal. Ooooof.
Preamble
Here we go again. The first day of Wimbledon is here. The sun is out, the grass is so green it looks like it has been dyed (for the first week at least), the strawberries are prepped, the hamstrings are stretched, the players’ white uniforms and patrons’ red trousers have each been perfectly ironed, the ballboys and ballgirls have been trained to within an inch of their lives and here I am, dressed like Luke Wilson in the Royal Tenenbaums (minus the magnificent beard and arm bandages), sitting in my front room, on the edge of my seat, ready to bring the latest updates from SW19.
The live action starts at 11am BST on the outer courts, with notable seeds Frances Tiafoe, Daniil Medvedev, Elina Svitolina, Jeļena Ostapenko among those first up in action against their lesser-ranked opponents. Others like this year’s Australian Open winner Madison Keys and British male Cameron Norrie are due to begin just after midday, while the show courts will start at 1pm/1.30pm. Carlos Alcaraz kicks things off on Centre Court against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini, which is a particularly tasty encounter. World No 1 Arnya Sabalenka, Emma Raducanu, Alexander Zverev, teenage upstart João Fonseca and American hopeful Taylor Fritz are all in action on a bumper opening day.
Here is an order of play, for your perusal.
Quick Guide
Wimbledon 2025: day one order of play
Show
Centre Court (1.30pm BST start)
F Fognini (It) v C Alcaraz (Sp, 2)
P Badosa (Sp, 9) v K Boulter (GB)
A Rinderknech (Fr) v A Zverev (Ger, 3)
No.1 Court (1pm BST start)
A Sabalenka (Blr, 1) v C Branstine (Can)
J Fearnley (GB) v J Fonseca (Bra)
E Raducanu (GB) v M Xu (GB)
No.2 Court (11am BST start)
B Bonzi (Fr) v D Medvedev (Rus, 9)
E Ruse (Rom) v M Keys (US, 6)
J Paolini (It, 4) v A Sevastova (Lat)
T Fritz (US, 5) v G Mpetshi-Perricard (Fr)
No.3 Court (11am BST start)
S Kartal (GB) v J Ostapenko (Lat, 20)
H Rune (Den, 8) v N Jarry (Chi)
M Berrettini (It, 32) v K Majchrzak (Pol)
K Siniakova (Cz) v Q Zheng (Chn, 5)
Court 12 (11am BST start)
E Moller (Den) v F Tiafoe (US, 12)
V Royer (Fr) v S Tsitsipas (Gr, 24)
L Fernandez (Can, 29) v H Klugman (GB)
M Vondrousova (Cz) v M Kessler (US, 32)
Court 18
A Bondar (Hun) v E Svitolina (Ukr, 14)
C Norrie (GB) v R Bautista Agut (Sp)
M McDonald (US) v K Khachanov (Rus, 17)
N Osaka (Jpn) v T Gibson (Aus)
Do get in touch with me today with your thoughts, predictions, musings or reflections: michael.butler@theguardian.com.