Wimbledon, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz
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Wimbledon, Iga Swiatek and Anisimova
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The Wimbledon men’s singles championship will conclude the tournament on Sunday with Jannik Sinner aiming to deny Carlos Alcaraz a third straight title.
Qasa Alom hosts Today at Wimbledon daily throughout the tournament on BBC iPlayer, available from 9pm in week one and 8pm in week two, giving audiences instant access to highlights and expert analysis when and where they want them. The highlights programme will also be broadcast after live play ends, daily on BBC Two and iPlayer.
Kensington Palace has confirmed Kate Middleton will watch the Wimbledon men's singles final with Prince William today, after the Princess was spotted at SW19 yesterday
The women's doubles title will be decided as the duo of Hsieh Su-wei and Jeļena Ostapenko faces Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens on Sunday.
Not the grass courts attached to the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, R.I.. Why? Surely those places would be more logical venues for a coach who was part of 15 Wimbledon titles to make the required adjustments to Fritz’s footwork and strokes for success in June and July?
Mr Griffiths was not born blind. At the age of two he had to have both eyes removed to stop the spread of a rare cancer called retinoblastoma. He has been "totally blind" since the procedure but the setback has not stopped him from living a fulfilling life.
Fritz and Mpetshi Perricard’s match, by contrast, was at the mercy of the most sacred and strange tradition of them all: the 11 p.m. curfew imposed on a sporting event beamed across the globe. Wimbledon is the only Grand Slam with an early bedtime, and the lights go out on time, every time, with no exceptions — almost.