IOL - Wimbledon 2022

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wimbledon 2022


wimbledon 2022

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Men’s Singles Seeds SEED 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

NAME Novak Djokovic Rafael Nadal Casper Ruud Stefanos Tsitsipas Carlos Alcaraz Felix Auger-Aliassime Hubert Hurkacz Matteo Berrettini Cameron Norrie Jannik Sinner Taylor Fritz Diego Schwartzman Denis Shapovalov Marin Cilic Reilly Opelka Pablo Carreno Busta Roberto Bautista Agut

COUNTRY (SRB) (ESP) (NOR) (GRE) (ESP) (CAN) (POL) (ITA) (GBR) (ITA) (USA) (ARG) (CAN) (CRO) (USA) (ESP) (ESP)

18

Grigor Dimitrov

19

Gael Monfils

(BUL) (FRA)

20

Alex De Minaur

(AUS)

21

John Isner

(USA)

22

Botic van de Zandschulp

(NED)

23

Nikoloz Basilashvili

(GEO)

24

Frances Tiafoe

(USA)

25

Holger Rune,

(DEN)

26

Miomir Kecmanovic

(SRB)

27

Filip Krajinovic

(SRB)

28

Lorenzo Sonego

29

Daniel Evans

(GBR)

30

Jenson Brooksby

(USA)

31

Tommy Paul

(USA)

32

Sebastian Baez

(ARG)

(ITA)

Novak Djokovic is this year’s top-seeded men’s player

WIMBLEDON MEN FAST FACTS AND FIGURES

WIMBLEDON woMEN FAST FACTS AND FIGURES

2021 CHAMPIONS Singles: Novak Djokovic (SRB) Doubles: Nikola Mektic (CRO) & Mate Pavic (CRO)

2021 CHAMPIONS Singles: Ashleigh Barty (AUS) Doubles: Su-Wei Hsieh (TPE) & Elise Mertens (BEL)

MOST WIMBLEDON TITLES All competitions: Laurence Doherty (GBR) 5 singles, 8 doubles. Singles: Roger Federer (SUI) 8 Doubles: Todd Woodbridge (AUS) 9 YOUNGEST WINNER Boris Becker (Germany) in 1985 aged 17 OLDEST WINNER Arthur Gore (Britain) in 1909 aged 41 LAST UNSEEDED WINNER Goran Ivanisevic (Croatia) 2001 MOST APPEARANCES Jean Borotra (France) 223 appearances from 1922-1964

LONGEST TIMED SINGLES MATCH 11 hours 5 minutes: John Isner (US) beat Nicolas Mahut (France) 6-4 3-6 6-7 7-6 70-68 in the first round in 2010 which stretched over three days and totalled 183 games.

Singles: £2 million (Runner-up £1 050 000) Semi-finalists: £535 000

MOST WIMBLEDON TITLES All competitions: Billy Jean King (US) 20 (6 singles, 10 doubles, 4 mixed doubles); Martina Navratilova (US) 20 (9 singles, 7 doubles, 4 mixed doubles)

Doubles: £540 000 (Runners-up £270 000) Semi-finalists: £135 000

YOUNGEST WINNER Charlotte “Lottie” Dodd (Britain) in 1887, aged 15.

Mixed doubles: £124 000 (Runners-up £62 000) Semi-finalists: £31 000

OLDEST WINNER Charlotte Cooper Sterry (Britain) in 1908, aged 37.

2022 PRIZE MONEY

Men’s double Seeds SEED TEAM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

Rajeev Ram (USA) / Joe Salisbury (GBR) Marcel Granollers (ESP) / Horacio Zeballos (ARG) Nikola Mektic (CRO) / Mate Pavic (CRO) Wesley Koolhof (NED / Neal Skupski (GBR) Marcelo Arevalo (ESA) / Jean-Julien Rojer (NED) Tim Puetz (GER) / Michael Venus (NZL) Juan Sebastian Cabal (COL) / Robert Farah (COL) John Peers (AUS) / Filip Polasek (SVK) Ivan Dodig (CRO) / Austin Krajicek (USA) Jamie Murray (GBR) / Bruno Soares (BRA) Thanasi Kokkinakis (AUS) / Nick Kyrgios (AUS) Kevin Krawietz (GER) / Andreas Mies (GER) Nicolas Mahut (FRA) / Edouard Roger-Vasselin (FRA) Santiago Gonzalez (MEX) / Andres Molteni (ARG) Matthew Ebden (AUS) / Max Purcell (AUS) Lloyd Glasspool (GBR) / Harri Heliovaara (FIN)

Rajeev Ram and Joe Salisbury are this year’s top-seeded men’s doubles team

MOST APPEARANCES Martina Navratilova (USA) 325 appearances from 1973-1996 and 2000-2006 LONGEST TIMED SINGLES MATCH 3 hours 45 minutes: Chanda Rubin (USA) beat Patricia Hy-Boulais (Canada) 7-6 6-7 17-15 in the second round in 1995 2022 PRIZE MONEY Singles: £2 million (Runner-up £1 050 000) Semi-finalists: £535 000 Doubles: £540 000 (Runners-up £270 000) Semi-finalists: £135 000 Mixed doubles: £124 000 (Runners-up £62 000) Semi-finalists: £31 000


wimbledon 2022 woMen’s Singles Seeds SEED

NAME

COUNTRY

17

Elena Rybakina

1 2

Iga Swiatek

POL

18

Jil Teichmann

SUI

Anett Kontaveit

EST

19

Madison Keys

USA

3

Ons Jabeur

TUN

20

Amanda Anisimova

USA

4

Paula Badosa

ESP

21

Camila Giorgi

5

Maria Sakkari

GRE

22

Martina Trevisan

6

Karolina Pliskova

CZE

7

Danielle Collins

USA

8

Jessica Pegula

USA

9

Garbine Muguruza

ESP

10

Emma Raducanu

GBR

11

Coco Gauff

USA

12

Jelena Ostapenko

LAT

13

Barbora Krejcikova

14

Belinda Bencic

KAZ

ITA (ITA)

23

Beatriz Haddad Maia

24

Elise Mertens

(BRA)

25

Petra Kvitova

CZE

26

Sorana Cirstea

ROU

27

Yulia Putintseva

KAZ

BEL

28

Alison Riske

USA

(CZE)

29

Anhelina Kalinina

UKR

SUI

30

Shelby Rogers

(USA)

Kaia Kanepi

(EST)

Sara Sorribes Tormo

15

Angelique Kerber

GER

31

16

Simona Halep

ROU

32

ESP

Iga Swiatek is this year’s top-seeded women’s player

woMen’s double Seeds SEED

TEAM

1

Elise Mertens (BEL) / Shuai Zhang (CHN)

2

Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) / Katerina Siniakova (CZE)

3

Gabriela Dabrowski (CAN) / Giuliana Olmos (MEX)

4

Lyudmyla Kichenok (UKR) / Jelena Ostapenko (LAT)

5

Asia Muhammad (USA) / Ena Shibahara (JPN)

6

Lucie Hradecka (CZE) / Sania Mirza (IND)

7

Alexa Guarachi (CHI) / Andreja Klepac (SLO)

8

Shuko Aoyama (JPN) / Hao-Ching Chan (TPE)

9

Yifan Xu (CHN) / Zhaoxuan Yang (CHN)

10

Nicole Melichar-Martinez (USA) / Ellen Perez (AUS)

11

Alicja Rosolska (POL) / Erin Routliffe (NZL)

12

Latisha Chan (TPE) / Samantha Stosur (AUS)

13

Natela Dzalamidze (GEO) / Aleksandra Krunic (SRB)

14

Monica Niculescu (ROU) / Elena-Gabriela Ruse (ROU)

15

Nadiia Kichenok (UKR) / Raluca Olaru (Rou)

16

Kirsten Flipkens (BEL) / Sara Sorribes Tormo (ESP)

Elise Mertens and Shuai Zhang are this year’s top ranked women’s doubles team

It is a historic year for the All England Lawn Tennis Club and The Championships 2022: • Centre Court celebrates its centenary in its current Church Road location. • Record total prize money fund of £40 350 000.

• The Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Singles Champions will each receive £2 million. • A full capacity Championships is being staged for the first time in three years. • Play on Middle Sunday (Sunday 3 July) will feature as a permanent part of the tournament schedule for the first time. • A final set tie-break, with the first to 10 points with a twopoint advantage at 6-all in the final set will be introduced this year, achieving consistency with the other Grand Slams.

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wimbledon 2022

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leading contenders – men NOVAK DJOKOVIC

RAFAEL NADAL

CASPER RUUD

Born in Serbia in 1987, Novak Djokovic began playing tennis at the age of four. After a steady ascent to the top levels of the sport, he won his first Grand Slam, the Australian Open in 2008, and then led the Serbian national team to its first Davis Cup win in 2010. In 2011, he won three of the four Grand Slams and compiled a 43-match winning streak en route to claiming the world number 1 ranking for the first time. Widely regarded as one the best men’s tennis players of all time, he is the only player to win all four majors, all nine ATP Masters 1000 tournaments and the ATP Tour Finals in their career, with him winning each at least twice. His 2021 French Open win saw him become the first man in Open Era history to achieve a double Career Grand Slam. Currently world number 3, Djokovic is the defending Wimbledon champion and bidding for his seventh title.

Current world number 4, Rafael Nadal has endured a bittersweet relationship with Wimbledon. His two titles (in 2008 and 2010) have been accompanied by three lost finals as well as injury-enforced absences in 2004, 2009, 2016 and 2021. Although there remains a question mark over his durability for the two weeks at Wimbledon (having played the entire French Open with his troublesome left foot anaesthetised), the Spaniard is seeded at number 2 for this year’s Championships thanks to his wins at the opening two Grand Slams of the year in Melbourne and Paris. These victories took his Grand Slam tally to 22 – the most in history - and put him halfway to the first men’s calendar Grand Slam in more than half a century. He holds the record for the most French Open titles (14), is only one of four men in history to complete a double Career Grand Slam in singles, and is the only man to win multiple majors in three separate decades.

Born in Oslo, Norway, 23-year-old Casper Ruud created history in September 2021 by becoming the first Norwegian tennis player to break into the men’s top 10 in the world. He is currently ranked world number 5 - a career-best that makes him the highest-ranked Norwegian tennis player in history. He has won eight ATP Tour singles titles, seven of which were on clay. He is the first Norwegian man to win an ATP singles title (he currently has eight), to reach a Grand Slam final (2022 French Open), and make it into an ATP Masters 1000 final (2022 Miami). His best performance at a Grand Slam was reaching the final of this year’s French Open, where he lost to his idol Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-3, 6-0. The Norwegian reached the third round at Roland Garros for three years in a row (2019 to 2021) and the third round at the US Open in 2020, before making the round of 16 at the Australian Open in 2021.

Seeding: 1

Age: 35 Birthplace: Belgrade, Serbia Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Height: 1.88m Weight: 77kg Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2003 Career single titles: 87 Grand slam titles: 20 Career prize money: $156 541 453 Wimbledon Championships played: 16 Best singles performance: Champion (2011, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021)

Seeding: 2

Age: 36 Birthplace: Manacor, Mallorca, Spain Height: 1.85m Weight: 85kg Plays: Left-handed Turned pro: 2001 Career single titles: 92 Grand slam titles: 22 Career Prize Money: $130 681 472 Wimbledon Championships played: 14 Best singles performance: Champion (2008, 2010)

Seeding: 3

Age: 23 Birthplace: Oslo, Norway Residence: Oslo, Norway Height: 1.83m Weight: 77kg Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2015 Career single titles: 8 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $7 608 685 Wimbledon Championships played: 2 Best singles performances: 1st round (2019, 2021)


wimbledon 2022

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leading contenders – men STEFANOS TSITSIPAS

CARLOS ALCARAZ

FELIX AUGER-ALIASSIME

HUBERT HURKACZ

Born in Greece, Stefanos Tsitsipas is known for his aggressive baseline play with powerful ground strokes - his signature shot is a flourishing one-handed backhand. Raised in a tennis-playing family, he turned professional in 2013 and became the world number 1 junior in May, 2016. He has been ranked as high as world number 3 - making him the highest-ranked Greek player in history - and currently occupies the world number 6 spot. The 23-year-old is seeded 4 at Wimbledon, and on his day can upset the best in the game. While he might not be the most natural player on grass, he’s definitely one of the best players on the ATP tour right now. This year he won the Monte Carlos Masters and enjoyed a successful run at the Australian Open, reaching the semis. His other noteworthy achievements in 2022 include reaching the ATP Rotterdam and Italian Open finals, and making the semi-finals of both the Mexican Open and Madrid Open.

At just 19 years old and ranked world number 7, Carlos Alcaraz is currently the youngest player in the ATP top 10. Described as an all-court, all-round tennis player, he primarily employs an aggressive baseline style of play, with his forehand being his most reliable and potent shot. It is proving to be a breakthrough year for the teenage sensation. At the 2022 Madrid Open, he defeated Djokovic and Nadal on two consecutive days to become the first man to defeat the two legends in a single clay-court tournament. In the final, he beat world number 2 Alexander Zverev - becoming the youngest man to win the tournament, and the youngest player in the history of the ATP Tour to beat three top five players in the same event. He has now won five singles titles in total, including two Masters 1000 titles. His best Grand Slam performances were at the 2021 US Open and 2022 French Open, where he reached the quarter-finals.

Currently at a career-high singles ranking of world number 9, Canadian Felix AugerAliassime is the second-youngest player in the ATP top 10. He has one singles title and one doubles title. He made his top 100 and top 25 debuts at 18, in a year highlighted by his first ATP final in February 2019 at the Rio Open. He reached three ATP finals in 2019, another three in 2020, and two finals in 2021 - a total of eight consecutive runners-up out of eight ATP finals. He underscored his grass court prowess last season when he upset Roger Federer in Halle. He then went on to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals, before losing to Matteo Berrettini. Along the way, he took down Nick Kyrgios and Alexander Zverev. Later in the year, he reached the US Open semi-finals. At this year’s French Open, he was arguably the only player to give Nadal a run for his money when he took the Spaniard to five sets.

Wimbledon seventh seed, Hubert Hurkacz exited the game’s junior ranks in 2015 and played his first professional match in a Davis Cup tie against Argentina in 2016. He broke into the top 100 for the first time in 2018, after reaching the second rounds of the 2018 French Open and 2018 US Open. In 2019, he won his first ATP title at the Winston-Salem Open. The Polish player started the 2021 season ranked 35th and won his first career singles ATP Masters Series title at the Miami Open in March. Seeded 26th, he upset five seeded players to win the title. He also won the titles in Metz and Delray Beach, bringing his career total to five. His best performance in a Grand Slam event was at last year’s Wimbledon, when he stunned eight-time champion Roger Federer in the quarterfinals, winning 6-3, 7-6, 6-0 to hand the Swiss a rare straight-sets defeat. He was defeated by Matteo Berrettini in the semifinals 6-3, 6-0, 6-7, 6-4.

Seeding: 4

Age: 23 Birthplace: Athens, Greece Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Height: 1.93m Weight: 90 kg Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2016 Career single titles: 8 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $19 546 913 Wimbledon Championships played: 4 Best singles performances: 4th round (2018)

Seeding: 5

Age: 19 Birthplace: EI Palmar, Murcia, Spain Residence: Spain Height: 1.85m Weight: 72kg Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2018 Career single titles: 5 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $5 856 924 Wimbledon Championships played: 1 Best singles performances: 2nd round (2021)

Seeding: 6

Age: 21 Birthplace: Canada Residence: Montreal, Canada Height: 1.93m Weight: 88 kg Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2017 Career single titles: 1 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $7 302 200 Wimbledon Championships played: 2 Best singles performances: Quarter final (2021)

Seeding: 7

Age: 25 Birthplace: Wroclaw, Poland Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Height: 1.96m Weight: 81kg Plays: Right Handed Turned pro: 2015 Career single titles: 5 Grand slam titles: 0 Career prize money: $7 306 253 Wimbledon Championships played: 3 Best singles performance: Semi-final (2021)


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wimbledon 2022

MEN’S DRAW Finals


wimbledon 2022

MEN’S DRAW Finals

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wimbledon 2022

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leading contenders – women IGA SWIATEK

ANETT KONTAVEIT

ONS JABEUR

Born in 2001, Iga Swiatek is currently the world number 1 and the youngest player ranked in the top 10. She began playing regularly on the WTA Tour in 2019, and entered the top 50 at age 18 after her maiden WTA final and a fourth-round appearance at the 2019 French Open. She claimed her first major singles title at the 2020 French Open, becoming the first Polish player to win a Grand Slam. With the title, she also became the youngest singles champion at the tournament since Rafael Nadal in 2005, and the youngest women’s singles champion at a major since Maria Sharapova in 2004. Although she has never progressed past the fourth round at the All England Club, she enters this year’s tournament on the back of a 35-match winning streak, after claiming her second Roland-Garros trophy in early June. The two-time Grand Slam winner has now won her last six events and has not lost a match since mid-February.

Anett Kontaveit has six singles titles to her name and is currently at a career-high ranking of number 2 in the world. Her best Grand Slam performance to date was at the Australian Open in 2020, where she lost to Simona Halep in the quarter-final. Her 2021 was a stellar year, in which she won Cleveland, Ostrava, Moscow, and ClujNapoca, and rose up the rankings to secure herself a place in the WTA Finals. Her qualification saw her become the first Estonian to participate in the year-end championship. A 12-match winning streak was ended in the round-robin stage by Garbine Muguruza, who then went on to beat her in the final. She won her sixth career title by overcoming Maria Sakkari in St Petersburg in February this year extending her indoor winning streak to 20 matches, the best by any woman since Justine Henin in 2010. She has had limited success at Wimbledon, and has never made it past the third round.

Born in 1994, Ons Jabeur was first introduced to tennis at the age of three by her mother. Her professional career began with two junior major singles finals at the French Open in 2010 and 2011, with her winning the latter. At the 2020 Australian Open she became the first Arab woman to reach the quarterfinals of a Grand Slam, a feat she repeated at the 2021 Wimbledon Championships. She then became the first Arab woman to win a WTA Tour title when she lifted the trophy at the 2021 Birmingham Classic. At the 2022 Italian Open she reached her second consecutive WTA 1000 final, defeating fourth seed Maria Sakkari among others, before saving a match point in the semifinals against Daria Kasatkina for her 11th straight win. On June 20, a week before the start of Wimbledon, she won the Berlin title and became the new world number 3 – making her the highest-ranked Arab and African tennis player in ATP and WTA rankings history.

Age: 21 Birthplace: Warsaw, Poland Residence: Raszyn, Poland Height: 1.75m Plays: Right Handed Turned pro: 2016 Career single titles: 9 Grand slam titles: 2 Career prize money: $11 256 371 Wimbledon Championships played: 2 Best singles performance: 4th round (2021)

Age: 26 Birthplace: Tallinn, Estonia Residence: Viimsi, Estonia Height: 1.75m Plays: Right Handed Turned pro: 2010 Career single titles: 6 Grand slam titles: 0 Career prize money: $7 464 976 Wimbledon Championships played: 7 Best singles performance: 3rd round (2017, 2018, 2019)

Age: 27 Birthplace: Ksar El Hellar, Tunisia Residence: Tunis, Tunisia Height: 1.68m Plays: Right handed Turned pro: 2010 Career single titles: 3 Grand slam titles: 0 Career prize money: $6 239 483 Wimbledon Championships played: 4 Best singles performance: Quarter-final (2021)

Seeding: 1

Seeding: 2

Seeding: 3


wimbledon 2022

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leading contenders – women PAULA BADOSA

MARIA SAKKARI

KAROLINA PLISKOVA

DANIELLE COLLINS

Born in 1997 in Manhattan, New York, Paula Badosa began playing tennis at the age of seven after her family returned to Spain. She began her professional career in 2015, after winning the girls’ singles title at the French Open. She impressed during a breakthrough year on the tour in 2018, and has enjoyed a steady rise up the rankings since then. She made her Grand Slam main draw debut at the Australian Open in 2019, before winning her first WTA singles title at the Serbia Open in Belgrade in May 2021. In October last year, she defeated former two-time champion Victoria Azarenka to win the Indian Wells tournament her first WTA 1000 title. Following this successful run, she made her top 10 debut in November, before qualifying for the 2021 WTA Finals, where she reached the semi-finals. After a slow start to her 2022 season, she claimed her third career title at the Sydney International, and is currently ranked world number 4.

Born in 1995, Maria Sakkari was introduced to tennis at the age of six by her parents. She turned professional in 2015 with her first big breakthrough coming at the 2017 Wuhan Open, where she reached the semi-finals, defeating Caroline Wozniacki en route to claim her first win against a top-10 opponent. She won her first – and so far only – WTA singles title at the 2019 Morocco Open, defeating Johanna Konta in the final. In 2020, she made it through to the fourth round at both the Australian Open and US Open. She reached her first Grand Slam semi-finals in 2021 at the French Open and US Open, where she beat three top 10 seeds before going down to eventual champion Emma Raducanu. When she achieved a career-high singles ranking of world number 3 in March 2022, she became the highest ever ranked Greek woman in the Open Era. Known for her aggressive, all-court style of play, she is currently world number 5.

Former world number 1, Karolina Pliskova is the most experienced of the Wimbledon top seeds. The Czech player, who made her professional debut in 2009, is known for hammering aces and groundstroke winners by the dozen in nearly every match she plays. In 2016, her appearance in her first Grand Slam final at the US Open signalled her arrival on the big stage. Since then, she has been competitive at all the important tournaments, challenging the likes of Serena Williams and Simona Halep on a regular basis. She reached the top of the WTA rankings in July 2017 and held the position for eight weeks. Subsequent years brought mixed results but her fortunes turned around at Wimbledon last year when she reached the final for the first time. Although she was ultimately defeated by Ashleigh Barty, being runnerup returned her to the top 10. Her tally of career singles titles now stands at 16, and she is currently ranked number 7 in the world.

Seventh seed, Danielle Collins is currently ranked world number 8 – a career high. Known for her fearless playing style and strong ground strokes, she played collegiate tennis at the University of Virginia in the United States and won the NCAA singles title twice, in 2014 and 2016. She finished her career at Virginia in 2016 as the top-ranked collegiate player. Having first established herself on the WTA Tour when she reached the semi-finals of the 2018 Miami Open, her breakthrough came at the 2019 Australian Open, where she reached the semi-finals, defeating then world number 2, Angelique Kerber en route. She was also a quarter-finalist at the 2020 French Open. Collins has won two WTA singles titles - the 2021 Palermo Open and the 2021 Stanford Classic. She won the titles back-toback in the July-August period, embarking on a career-best 12-match winning streak during that stretch. She reached her first Grand Slam final at this year’s Australian Open by defeating current world number one, Iga Swiatek in the semi-final.

Age: 30 Birthplace: Louny, Czech Republic Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Height: 1.85m Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2009 Career single titles: 16 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $23 538 270 Wimbledon Championships played: 9 Best singles performances: Runner-up (2021)

Age: 28 Birthplace: St Petersburg, Florida, USA Residence: United States of America Height: 1.78m Plays: Right-handed Turned pro: 2016 Career single titles: 2 Grand slams titles: 0 Career prize money: $5 342 389 Wimbledon Championships played: 3 Best singles performances: 3rd round (2019)

Seeding: 4

Age: 24 Birthplace: New York, USA Residence: Dubai, UAE Height: 1.8m Plays: Right Handed Turned pro: 2015 Career single titles: 3 Grand slam titles: 0 Career prize money: $4 748 445 Wimbledon Championships played: 2 Best singles performance: 4th round (2021)

Seeding: 5

Age: 26 Birthplace: Athens, Greece Residence: Monte Carlo, Monaco Height: 1.73m Plays: Right Handed Turned pro: 2015 Career single titles: 1 Grand slam titles: 0 Career prize money: $6 964 545 Wimbledon Championships played: 5 Best singles performance: 3rd round (2017, 2019)

Seeding: 6

Seeding: 7


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wimbledon 2022

WOMEN’S DRAW

Finals


wimbledon 2022

WOMEN’S DRAW Finals

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wimbledon 2022

12

TV BROADCAST TIMES

WIMBLEDON –isSTILL WORLD’S MOST Wimbledon backTHE – bigger and better With the All England Club’s major redevelopment completed last year, PRESTIGIOUS TENNIS TOURNAMENT

the iconic major Wimbledon venue makes triumphantinreturn Thetransformed All England Club’s redevelopment wasacompleted 2020 – bigger and before. Additions include new roof No 1 court, making thebetter iconicthan Wimbledon venue bigger andabetter thanon before. enhanced spectatora access and tennis centre.spectator access Additions included new roof onan Noindoor 1 court, enhanced

and an indoor tennis centre.

No. 1 Court: Retractable roof now in place, similar to Centre Court’s successful design

Date Episode Time 20-Jun-22 Day 1 12:00-23:00 21-Jun-22 Day 2 12:00-23:00 21-Jun-22 Day 2 21:00-23:00 22-Jun-22 Day 3 12:00-23:00 23-Jun-22 Day 4 12:00-23:00 27-Jun-22 2nd Feed: Day 1 11:55-23:00 27-Jun-22 Day 1: Singles 1st Round 11:55-23:00 27-Jun-22 Day 1: Singles 1st Round 20:00-23:00 28-Jun-22 2nd Feed: Day 2 11:55-23:00 28-Jun-22 Day 2: Singles 1st Round 11:55-23:00 28-Jun-22 Day 2: Singles 1st Round 20:00-23:00 29-Jun-22 2nd Feed: Day 3 11:55-23:00 29-Jun-22 Day 3: Singles 2nd Round 11:55-23:00 30-Jun-22 2nd Feed: Day 4 11:55-23:00 30-Jun-22 Day 4: Singles 2nd Round 11:55-23:00 30-Jun-22 Day 4: Singles 2nd Round 20:00-23:00 1-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 5 11:55-23:00 1-Jul-22 Day 5: Singles 3rd Round 11:55-23:00 2-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 6 11:55-23:00 2-Jul-22 Day 6: Singles 3rd Round 11:55-23:00 3-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 7 11:55-23:00 3-Jul-22 Day 7: Singles 4th Round 11:55-23:00 4-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 8 11:55-23:00 4-Jul-22 Day 8: Singles 4th Round 11:55-23:00 5-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 9 11:55-23:00 5-Jul-22 Day 9: Women’s Quarter-finals 11:55-23:00 6-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 10 11:55-23:00 6-Jul-22 Day 10: Men’s Quarter-finals 11:55-23:00 7-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 11 11:55-23:00 7-Jul-22 Day 11: Women’s Semi-finals 11:55-20:00 8-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 12 11:55-23:00 8-Jul-22 Day 12: Men’s Semi-finals 14:25-20:30 8-Jul-22 Mixed Doubles Final 20:30-23:30 9-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 13 11:55-23:00 9-Jul-22 Women’s Final 14:45-18:00 9-Jul-22 Men’s Doubles Final 18:00-21:00 10-Jul-22 2nd Feed: Day 14 11:55-23:00 10-Jul-22 Men’s Final 14:45-18:30 10-Jul-22 Women’s Doubles Final 18:30-21:00

Channel ACT / ACTA ACT / ACTA GSD / GSDA ACT / ACTA ACT / ACTA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA GSD / GSDA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA GSD / GSDA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA GSD / GSDA ACT / ACTA GSD / GSDA / TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA TEN / TENA ACT / ACTA TEN / TENA TEN / TENA

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concept and sales Greg Dardagan 083 457 9879 | greg@dardagan.co.za CO-ORDINATION Linda Zakas Design and Layout Stuart Senar

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