The 2025 Wimledon Championships are here, with the world’s best tennis players making the annual pilgrimage to SW19 for their shot at one of the biggest prizes in tennis.
Here’s everything you need to know.
TUESDAY’S SCHEDULE
Brackets:
Men’s singles | Women’s singlesMen’s doubles | Women’s Doubles | Mixed doubles
Note: The first match of the day on each court is listed first and subsequent matches are listed below.
CENTRE COURT (from 1.30 p.m. BST)
Barbora Krejcikova (17) vs. Alexandra EalaArthur Rinderknech vs. Alexander Zverev (3)Alexandre Muller vs. Novak Djokovic (6)Dayana Yastremska vs. Coco Gauff (2)
COURT 1 (from 1 p.m. BST)
Jannik Sinner (1) vs. Luca NardiNot before 2.30 p.mTaylor Fritz (5) vs. Giovanni Mpetshi PerricardPetra Kvitova vs. Emma Navarro (10)Jack Draper (4) vs. Sebastian Baez (34)
COURT 2 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Elisabetta Cocciaretto vs. Jessica Pegula (3)Nikoloz Basilashvili vs. Lorenzo Musetti (17)Marie Bouzkova vs. Polina KudermetovaBen Shelton (15) vs. Alex Bolt
COURT 3 (from 11 a.m. BST)Johannus Monday vs. Tommy Paul (13)Katerina Siniakova vs. Qinwen Zheng (5)Mirra Andreeva (6) vs. Mayar SherifGrigor Dimitrov vs. Yoshihito NishiokaElina Avanesyan (11) vs. Elena Rybakina (11)
COURT 4 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Alex Michelsen (30) vs. Miomir KecmanovicNot before 12.30 p.m.Shintaro Mochizuki vs. Giulio ZeppieriCamila Osorio vs. Danielle CollinsAnastasia Potapova (25) vs. Magdalena FrechAlexander Shevchenko vs. Reilly Opelka
COURT 5 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Chun-Hsin Tseng vs. Aleksandar VukicJil Teichmann vs. Lucia BronzettiCarroline Dolehide vs. Arantxa RusRinky Hijikata vs. David Goffin
COURT 6 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Arthur Cazaux vs. Adam WaltonQuentin Halys vs. August HolmgrenVeronika Kudermetova vs. Zhu Lin
COURT 7 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Suzan Lamens vs. Iva JovicJesper De Jong vs. Christopher EubanksAleksandar Kovacevic vs. Marton Fucsovics
COURT 8 (from 11.00 a.m. BST)
Jaime Faria vs. Lorenzo SonegoSebastian Ofner vs. Hamad MedjedovicMaria Sakkari (9) vs. Anna BlinkovaJessica Bouzas Maneiro vs. Ella Seidel
COURT 9 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Irina-Camelia Begu vs. Kaja JuvanZeynep Sonmez vs. Jaqueline CristianHailey Baptiste vs. Sorana CirsteaMarcos Giron vs. Camilo Ugo Carabelli
COURT 10 (from 11 a.m. BST)
James McCabe vs. Fabian MarozsanAnna Kalinskaya vs. Nina StojanovicFrancisco Comesana vs. Corentin MoutetMagda Linette (27) vs. Elsa Jacquemot
COURT 11 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Daria Kasatkina (16) vs. Emiliana ArangoJaume Munar vs. Alexander Bublik (28)Raphael Collignon vs. Marin CilicVictoria Azarenka vs. Anastasia Zakharova
COURT 12 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Katie Volynets vs. Tatjana MariaKarolina Muchova (15) vs. Xinyu WangDamir Dzumhur vs. Tomas Machac (21)Brandon Nakashima (29) vs. Yunchaoekete Bu
COURT 13 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Veronika Erjavec vs. Marta Kostyuk (26)Pedro Martinez vs. George LoffhagenFlavio Cobolli (22) vs. Beibit ZhukayevAlycia Parks vs. Belinda Bencic
COURT 14 (from 11 a.m. BST)
Priscilla Hon vs. Ekaterina Alexandrova (18)Mariano Navone vs. Denis Shapovalov (27)Yuliia Starodubtseva vs. Francesca JonesTomas Martin Etcheverry vs. Jack Pinnington Jones

Monday’s Wimbledon weather forecast
The Met Office is forecasting a sunny day with highs of 34 degrees Celsius. Sunset is expected at 9.20 pm.

How to watch
Dates: June 30 to July 13
Venue: The All England Lawn Tennis Club, Wimbledon
How to watch: In the UK, Wimbledon will be broadcast live on BBC as usual, although the men’s and women’s singles finals will also be shown on TNT Sports.
In the United States, ESPN is the home of the All England Club showing 250 hours of live action available across ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN+, Disney+ and ESPN Deportes
You can also follow the latest coverage on ESPN.com.

Who are the favourites?
Wimbledon can always spell an upset, and there are plenty of contenders for this year’s singles titles.
Last month’s French Open saw both singles events sport a final between the No.1 and No. 2 seeds — the first time that has happened at Roland Garros since 1984.
CompetitionScheduleWinnersAustralian OpenJan. 6 – Jan. 27Sinner, KeysFrench OpenMay 25 – June 8Alcaraz, GauffWimbledonJune 22 – July 14US OpenAug. 17 – Sep. 8
Carlos Alcaraz fought from behind and outlasted Jannik Sinner to take the men’s trophy, while Coco Gauff won her first French Open title by beating Aryna Sabalenka.
You’d be bold to bet again those four making the latter stages, or even the final, of this year’s Wimbledon. But the All England Club rarely goes according to plan.
Novak Djokovic is vying to add to his seven Wimbledon crowns, while Alexander Zverev, Jack Draper and Taylor Fritz will also be looking to upset the order win their first Grand Slam title.
In the women’s bracket, Jessica Pegula enters as the third seed, although she has never made it past the quarterfinals in SW19. Jasmine Paolini has fared much better — she lost to Barbora Krejčíková in last year’s final — although she has shown mixed form so far this year.

Prize money
The total prize money for the championships this summer is £53.5 million, with the winners of the men’s and women’s singles titles each taking home £3m — an 11% increase from last year.
Men’s and women’s doubles champions will earn £680,000, while mixed doubles winners claim £135,000.
Breakdown of single’s prize money:
Winner: £3mRunner-up: £1.52mSemifinal: £775,000Quarterfinal: £400,000Fourth round: £240,000Third round: £152,000Second round: £99,000First round: £66,000

Where can fans find more ESPN tennis coverage?
ESPN’s tennis page has all the latest breaking news, analysis, features, rankings, Grand Slam title winners and more.
– Ranking the top contenders at Wimbledon 2025- Why are there so few women coaches in professional tennis?- WATCH: Will this be Djokovic’s ‘last dance’ at SW19?



















