Wimbledon 2023: Andy Murray watched by Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe at All England Club
Andy Murray says it was “brilliant” to be watched at Wimbledon by Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who revealed watching his 2016 win gave her rare joy in prison.
Andy Murray says it was “brilliant” to be watched at Wimbledon by Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who revealed watching his 2016 win gave her rare joy in prison.
Wimbledon will be playing catch-up on Wednesday after rain delays saw only eight matches completed on Tuesday.
On a disrupted day at Wimbledon, Andy Murray outclasses fellow Briton Ryan Peniston and Cameron Norrie beats Czech qualifier Tomas Machac.
After a day in which rain wiped out most of play at Wimbledon, fans will see nearly double the action on what promises to be a manic Wednesday at The All England Club with the likes of Novak Djokovic, Daniil Medvedev, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Dominic Thiem all in action.
Djokovic will play his second-round match Wednesday while players who did not compete Tuesday due to rain — or those whose matches were suspended Monday evening due to darkness — will be in first-round action.
Thiem took a 6-3, 3-4 lead over Tsitsipas on No. 2 Court before play was suspended due to rain. Thiem leads the pair’s Lexus ATP Head2Head series 5-4.
See below for the Wednesday schedule at SW19.
CENTRE COURT – 1:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Daria Kasatkina [11] v Jodie Burrage (GBR)
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Iga Swiatek (POL) [1] v Sara Sorribes Tormo (ESP)
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Jordan Thompson (AUS) v Novak Djokovic (SRB) [2]
NO.1 COURT – 1:00 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Daniil Medvedev [3] v Arthur Fery (GBR)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Heather Watson (GBR) v Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) [10]
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Jannik Sinner (ITA) [8] v Diego Schwartzman (ARG)
NO.2 COURT – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Maria Sakkari (GRE) [8] v Marta Kostyuk (UKR)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Yannick Hanfmann (GER) leads Taylor Fritz (USA) [9]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Dominic Thiem (AUT) leads Stefanos Tsitsipas (GRE) [5]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Alexander Zverev (GER) [19] v Gijs Brouwer (NED)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Nadia Podoroska (ARG) v Victoria Azarenka [19]
NO.3 COURT – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Frances Tiafoe (USA) [10] v Yibing Wu (CHN)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round George Loffhagen (GBR) leads Holger Rune (DEN) [6]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Sonay Kartal (GBR) v Madison Keys (USA) [25]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Jasmine Paolini (ITA) v Petra Kvitova (CZE) [9]
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Andrey Rublev [7] v Aslan Karatsev
COURT 12 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Beatriz Haddad Maia (BRA) [13] v Yulia Putintseva (KAZ)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Denis Shapovalov (CAN) [26] leads Radu Albot (MDA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Matteo Berrettini (ITA) leads Lorenzo Sonego (ITA)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Karolina Muchova (CZE) [16] v Jule Niemeier (GER)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Jan Choinski (GBR) v Hubert Hurkacz (POL) [17]
COURT 18 – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Sho Shimabukuro (JPN) v Grigor Dimitrov (BUL) [21]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Katie Boulter (GBR) leads Daria Saville (AUS)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Karolina Pliskova (CZE) [18] v Natalija Stevanovic (SRB)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Kimmer Coppejans (BEL) v Alex De Minaur (AUS) [15]
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Lorenzo Musetti (ITA) [14] v Jaume Munar (ESP)
COURT 4 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Shuai Zhang (CHN) v Donna Vekic (CRO) [20]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Ysaline Bonaventure (BEL) leads Zhuoxuan Bai (CHN)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Shintaro Mochizuki (JPN) v Tommy Paul (USA) [16]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Matteo Arnaldi (ITA) v Roberto Carballes Baena (ESP)
COURT 5 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Camila Osorio (COL) v Elisabetta Cocciaretto (ITA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Alexandre Muller (FRA) leads Arthur Rinderknech (FRA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Christopher Eubanks (USA) v Thiago Monteiro (BRA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Marco Cecchinato (ITA) v Nicolas Jarry (CHI) [25]
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Xinyu Wang (CHN) v Sofia Kenin (USA)
COURT 6 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Anett Kontaveit (EST) v Lucrezia Stefanini (ITA)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Varvara Gracheva (FRA) v Camila Giorgi (ITA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Marcos Giron (USA) leads Hugo Dellien (BOL)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Yanina Wickmayer (BEL) v Anna Blinkova
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Tomas Barrios Vera (CHI) v David Goffin (BEL)
COURT 7 – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Dominic Stricker (SUI) v Alexei Popyrin (AUS)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Madison Brengle (USA) leads Sara Errani (ITA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Adrian Mannarino (FRA) v Alexander Shevchenko
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Irina-Camelia Begu (ROU) [29] v Rebecca Marino (CAN)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Maximilian Marterer (GER) v Michael Mmoh (USA)
COURT 8 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Sorana Cirstea (ROU) v Tatjana Maria (GER)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Benjamin Bonzi (FRA) leads Harold Mayot (FRA)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Bernarda Pera (USA) [27] leads Viktoriya Tomova (BUL)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Maxime Cressy (USA) v Laslo Djere (SRB)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Alexander Bublik (KAZ) [23] v J.J. Wolf (USA)
COURT 9 – 11: a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Lloyd Harris (RSA) v Gregoire Barrere (FRA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Ilya Ivashka v Federico Coria (ARG)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Christopher O’Connell (AUS) leads Hamad Medjedovic (SRB)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Viktorija Golubic (SUI) v Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (SVK)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Alycia Parks (USA) v Ana Bogdan (ROU)
COURT 10 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Jaqueline Cristian (ROU) v Lucia Bronzetti (ITA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Roman Safiullin leads Roberto Bautista Agut (ESP) [20]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Nao Hibino (JPN) v Alize Cornet (FRA)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Marc-Andrea Huesler (SUI) v Yosuke Watanuki (JPN)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Aliaksandra Sasnovich v Nuria Parrizas Diaz (ESP)
COURT 11 – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Jiri Lehecka (CZE) v Sebastian Ofner (AUT)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Kaja Juvan (SLO) leads Margarita Betova
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Carol Zhao (CAN) v Tamara Korpatsch (GER)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Jason Kubler (AUS) v Ugo Humbert (FRA)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Katerina Siniakova (CZE) v Lesia Tsurenko (UKR)
COURT 14 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Sloane Stephens (USA) v Rebecca Peterson (SWE)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Borna Coric (CRO) [13] leads Guido Pella (ARG)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Ben Shelton (USA) [32] leads Taro Daniel (JPN)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Anna Bondar (HUN) v Bianca Andreescu (CAN)
Not Before: 4:30 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Diane Parry (FRA) v Petra Martic (CRO) [30]
COURT 15 – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Francisco Cerundolo (ARG) [18] v Nuno Borges (POR)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Alison Riske-Amritraj (USA) v Paula Badosa (ESP)
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Marton Fucsovics (HUN) leads Tallon Griekspoor (NED) [28]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Linda Noskova (CZE) v Dalma Galfi (HUN)
COURT 16 – 11 a.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Milos Raonic (CAN) v Dennis Novak (AUT)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Anastasia Potapova [22] leads Celine Naef (SUI)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Mirra Andreeva v Xiyu Wang (CHN)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Jessica Bouzas Maneiro (ESP) v Anhelina Kalinina (UKR) [26]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (ESP) [31] v Arthur Fils (FRA)
COURT 17 – 11 a.m.
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Danielle Collins (USA) leads Julia Grabher (AUT)
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Emma Navarro (USA) leads Ekaterina Alexandrova [21]
Ladies’ Singles – First Round Greet Minnen (BEL) v Jelena Ostapenko (LAT) [17]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Jiri Vesely (CZE) v Sebastian Korda (USA) [22]
Gentlemen’s Singles – First Round Zhizhen Zhang (CHN) v Botic Van De Zandschulp (NED)
TO BE ARRANGED
Not Before: 5 p.m.
Ladies’ Singles – Second Round Elise Mertens (BEL) [28] v Elina Svitolina (UKR)
Not Before: 5 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round TBD v Stan Wawrinka (SUI)
Not Before: 5 p.m.
Gentlemen’s Singles – Second Round Aleksandar Vukic (AUS) v TBD
When Yannick Hanfmann steps on a tennis court, he has more than one motivation in his mind.
The 31-year-old German, who was locked in a fifth-set battle with ninth seed Taylor Fritz on Monday before rain suspended play at Wimbledon, has a plan in place for some of the money he earns as a professional tennis player. Inspired by a 2017 visit to a cheetah conservation centre in Stellenbosch, South Africa, Hanfmann aims to use his success to contribute to a cause close to his heart.
“Cheetahs were my favourite animal when I grew up and they still are,” Hanfmann told ATPTour.com last month. “I’m trying to put some money to charity every year, depending on how I play. The first few years it was the cheetahs in Stellenbosch and now it shifted to orangutans in Borneo.
“I love animals in general, but orangutans, gorillas, certain monkeys and cheetahs [are my favourites]. I see documentaries and stuff and I just can’t help but feel emotional about them. It’s something I’m passionate about.”
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As a pro travelling year-round on the ATP Tour, the time Hanfmann can devote to off-court hobbies and passions is limited. Having arrived at Wimbledon this year at a career-high No. 45 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings, the German’s focus is currently solely trained on tennis, but he is keeping an open mind about his post-playing plans.
“At this point I don’t know, but [animals are] definitely something I’m passionate about, so who knows?,” said Hanfmann, when asked if he was interested in becoming more involved in environmental causes in the future. “I don’t want to rule it out. Whatever happens to me after tennis, hopefully I have a little bit of free time and maybe I can get involved with that. It would be cool.”
Sinner Shines, Fritz-Hanfmann Suspended In Fifth Set
Hanfmann has become used to the constant travelling during his ATP Tour career, which began after a four-year stint playing U.S. college tennis at the University of Southern California. While seeing new parts of the world is among his favourite hobbies, he admits that preparing to compete against the world’s best is anything but a holiday.
“I love to travel, but maybe not necessarily for tennis, because we obviously do that a lot,” he said. “If I have a little bit of time at the end of the year, to travel with friends and family, I love that so much. You travel so much with your tennis bag and tennis stuff, I hope that after tennis maybe I can put that away and go for it a little bit more with a touristy approach.”
The global tennis merry-go-round nonetheless offers spontaneous opportunities for Hanfmann to experience new things. The German views venturing away from a tournament site to experience local life as essential for handling the relentless, week-on-week nature of the Tour.
“If I have a little bit of time, I try to do as much as I can, but the days during the tournaments are always a little bit crammed,” said Hanfmann. “The practice days are long, but there’s always a certain amount of hours I can use to get out and see some things.
“A few weeks ago, I was in Rome. Rome is amazing city, so I tried to see as much as I can. Once I lost in the tournament, that night I remember we walked basically throughout the whole city for a few hours. That was pretty nice.”
That stroll through town capped a dream fortnight for Hanfmann in the Eternal City, where he charged to his maiden ATP Masters 1000 quarter-final as a qualifier at the Internazionali BNL d’Italia. He backed up his May run on the Rome clay by reaching his first ATP Tour semi-final on grass at the Mallorca Championships last week, and he is confident of maintaining his good form further on a surface with which he has relatively little experience.
“In general, obviously my belief right now is pretty high,” said Hanfmann. “I feel like I’ve beaten a lot of good players, [even if not] on grass. It’s a bit shorter of a season [than clay]. My grass results over the years, I would say were average. Sometimes OK, sometimes good, sometimes [not good]. I think it’s the same for everyone. We don’t play on it too much, so it’s tough to say, ‘I cannot play on grass’.
“I think my serve is good, I’ve got a good transition game, so I think with a few matches under my belt I can get comfortable and really be dangerous.”
Hanfmann certainly proved that on Monday at Wimbledon, where he took 2022 quarter-finalist Fritz into a fifth set before rain intervened. If he can push on to defeat the World No. 9 for the second time this season when play resumes (he also beat Fritz in the second round in Rome), the German will advance to the second round of a major for just the third time.
Watch an array of “sublime & magical” shots by Ons Jabeur as she beats Magdalena Frech to reach round two at Wimbledon.
Andy Murray opened his 2023 Wimbledon campaign with a grass-court clinic on Tuesday afternoon, when the home favourite outclassed his fellow Briton Ryan Peniston 6-3, 6-0, 6-1 on Centre Court.
The two-time champion was rock-solid from the baseline and showcased top-quality movement on the grass in his two-hour win. After fending off the first two break points of the match in the third and fifth games, respectively, Murray converted six of 12 break points of his own to charge to victory and set a second-round blockbuster against Stefanos Tsitsipas or Dominic Thiem.
“It’s obviously amazing to be back here playing on Centre Court,” said Murray in his on-court interview. “I was quite nervous at the beginning, coming out I wanted to play well but I started off a little bit tentatively. But once I got the break in that first set, I played some good stuff as the match went on and there were some good signs there.”
SIR 👏 ANDY 👏@andy_murray cruises past Peniston 6-3 6-0 6-1 to advance in Wimbledon?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#Wimbledon Wimbledon?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>@Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/RAT6JHVv9Q
— ATP Tour (@atptour) July 4, 2023
Playing under a closed roof in rainy London, Murray faced an early test from Peniston as the No. 268-ranked wild card went toe to toe with the former World No. 1 and twice carved out opportunities for the first break of the match.
Once Murray had saved both to hold for 2-1 and then 3-2, however, the 46-time tour-level titlist raised his level to spectacular effect. He struck the ball cleanly off both wings and frequently drew Peniston forward with clever use of the slice before picking off his out-of-position opponent.
Whenever Murray himself moved forwards, he was clinical. He won all 17 points he played at the net. Those volleying skills will have impressed eight-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer, who was watching on from Centre Court’s Royal Box alongside Catherine, the Princess of Wales.
“It was amazing to have some royalty here, but also some tennis royalty as well,” said Murray of his former ATP Tour rival Federer. “It’s amazing to have Roger here supporting the event. Last time I was on this court and he was watching was in the [London 2012] Olympics and he was sat in Stan Wawrinka’s box supporting against me, so it’s nice to see a couple of claps today after some good shots.”
Roger Federer Returns To Wimbledon, Chats With Catherine, Princess of Wales
With his triumph, Murray improved to 61-12 at Wimbledon, where he lifted the trophy in 2013 and 2016. The 36-year-old lifted back-to-back ATP Challenger Tour titles on grass in June but Tuesday’s win was his first on the surface at tour-level this season.
“It’s been a long time since I’ve felt physically this good coming into Wimbledon, which is really, really positive,” said Murray. “The last few years have been very challenging so I’m hoping I’m fit and ready for a good run.”
British No. 1 Cameron Norrie followed Murray into the second round with a 6-3, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4 victory against qualifier Tomas Machac. The 12th-seeded Norrie reacted well to dropping the second set on Court 1, ultimately converting seven of his 21 break points for a two-hour, 32-minute triumph.
Norrie reached his maiden major semi-final at Wimbledon a year ago, when he fell to eventual champion Novak Djokovic. The 27-year-old lifted his fifth tour-level title in Rio de Janeiro in February and arrived at SW19 off the back of a quarter-final run at The Queen’s Club.
Standing in his way next at the grass-court major will be Mallorca champion Christopher Eubanks or Thiago Monteiro. Their first-round match was one of 34 men’s singles matches cancelled on Wednesday due to rain in the U.K. capital.
In the final match on Centre Court, Daniel Evans was unable to rally from two sets down. The Briton stepped on court to resume his first-round match trailing Quentin Halys 2-6, 3-6. Evans won a tightly contested third set to fire up his home crowd, but Halys ultimately prevailed 6-2, 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-4.
The Frenchman will next play Australian Aleksandar Vukic with the winner to face eighth seed Jannik Sinner or former Top 10 star Diego Schwartzman.
Although Evans was unable to rally, 29th seed Tomas Martin Etcheverry was. The Argentine battled past Spaniard Bernabe Zapata Miralles 6-7(5), 5-7, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5 for his first Wimbledon main draw win. He will next play three-time major winner Stan Wawrinka.
Top seed Carlos Alcaraz wasted little time reaching the second round at Wimbledon on Tuesday, soaring past Jeremy Chardy, who was competing in his final singles match.
Under the roof on Court 1, the Spaniard overpowered the 36-year-old Frenchman with his destructive groundstrokes, sealing a 6-0, 6-2, 7-5 victory in one hour and 53 minutes.
“I think I played really well at the beginning of the match,” said Alcaraz in his on-court interview. “In the third set, he found his level. I was in trouble, but I like to play rallies, I like to play battles, and I’m really happy to have played a great level. Both of us in the third set. It was really close, but I’m really happy to get through this first round.”
The 2022 US Open champion Alcaraz is chasing his second major title this fortnight, and he could not have made a better start to his Wimbledon title bid, with his main scare coming at the start of the first set when he slipped on the slick court.
After shaking out his leg, Alcaraz quickly bounced to his feet and from there it was one-way traffic, with Chardy unable to deal with the Spaniard’s pace off the ground. The Frenchman struck seven double faults in the first set as he showed signs of nerves, but did play with more freedom as the match went on, breaking Alcaraz to lead 4-2 in the third set.
The 36-year-old was unable to sustain any serious pressure on Alcaraz in their first Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting, though, with the top seed rolling off five of the next six games to advance.
“[The roof] doesn’t change too much for me,” said Alcaraz. “I try not to think about it. Obviously without the roof, with sun, is much better for me, I think for everyone as well, but I have to be really focused. With the roof or not, I have to show my best level, but I think the sound of the ball with the roof is really beautiful as well. Even more beautiful playing on grass. I think we hit the ball really cleanly, and it’s so beautiful to play.”
Alcaraz, who holds a 41-4 record on the season, will next meet Arthur Rinderknech or Alexandre Muller. The 20-year-old arrived at SW19 in strong form, having lifted his maiden tour-level grass-court title at The Queen’s Club last month. He is making his third appearance at Wimbledon, where he advanced to the fourth round last year.
If Alcaraz clinches his sixth tour-level title of the season at The Championships, he will remain at No. 1 in the Pepperstone ATP Rankings.
Chardy’s storied 18-year singles career on Tour came to an end following his defeat. The Frenchman lifted his only tour-level trophy in Stuttgart in 2009 and reached a career-high No. 25 in 2013. The 36-year-old, who is now coaching countryman Ugo Humbert, also won seven tour-level doubles titles.
Final Match Or Greatest Win, Chardy Ready For Alcaraz
While he received blow after blow against Alcaraz on Court 1, the Frenchman enjoyed a special moment when he earned his first game of the match at 0-6, 1-2, receiving a standing ovation from the packed crowd. Chardy was also cheered on by his wife, Susan, and son, Stone.
Watch as eight-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer receives a guard of honour on Centre Court.
Rain has interrupted the first-round action at Wimbledon for the second consecutive day, with play suspended at approximately 1:10 p.m. local time (BST) on Tuesday at the grass-court major.
Among those forced to return to the locker room were Stefanos Tsitsipas and Dominic Thiem. Thiem led the fifth-seeded Tsitsipas 6-3, 3-4 on Court 2 in the pair’s 10th Lexus ATP Head2Head meeting when the rain arrived in south-west London. Matteo Berrettini is also behind early: Lorenzo Sonego leads the 2021 finalist 7-6(5) on Court 12.
Ben Shelton is in a commanding position on his Wimbledon debut against Taro Daniel. The #NextGenATP American led 6-4, 4-2 against the Japanese when play was suspended. Another of the ATP Tour’s young stars, Holger Rune, leads home wild card George Loffhagen 7-6(4).
Centre Court and Court 1 at the All England Club each have a retractable roof, meaning the schedule on both is set to proceed regardless of the weather. Home favourite Andy Murray takes on fellow Briton Ryan Peniston second on Centre Court, while top seed Carlos Alcaraz faces Jeremy Chardy on Court 1 before British No. 1 Cameron Norrie, a semi-finalist at SW19 in 2022, takes on Tomas Machac in the final match of the day.