Wimbledon final 2025 LIVE: Latest score and game-by-game updates as the match between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner is DELAYED – as world No1 and No2 prepare to go head-to-head in a thriller at SW19
Follow Mail Sport’s live blog for the latest score and game-by-game updates as defending champion Carlos Alcaraz takes on world No1 Jannik Sinner in the 2025 Wimbledon men’s singles final.
Breaking:Wimbledon’s time change has immediately spelled disaster for scheduling, writes MATTHEW LAMBWELL
The Wimbledon men’s final has been delayed from 4pm to 4.10pm after the women’s doubles final ran on. The All England Club’s decision to switch the time of the finals from 2pm to 4pm in order to better target TV audiences for the first time has already been caught out.
Yes, it is only 10 minutes but there is no way a singles Grand Slam final should be scheduled in such a way that a delay to the start time is possible.
The perfect pre-Wimbledon warm-up routine, by Carlos Alcaraz
Winning the French Open is an achievement that might take everything else from you in the aftermath – ask Coco Gauff. The American starlet lost her one Wimbledon warm-up match in Berlin, and then was summarily knocked out at the All England Club in the first round.
But if you’re Alcaraz, you have a post-Paris routine down pat. First up, a trip to Ibiza to blow off steam.
Then, somehow, you win Queen’s, your Wimbledon warm-up, and then you have a spare week to get used to the grass on the practice courts at Aorangi.
Then, a few weeks later… you step onto Centre Court to defend your title.
Alcaraz leads recent head-to-heads, but last time in SW19…
… it’s a different story. Yes, their last meeting came well before Alcaraz’s dominance on the surface, but Sinner will be lethally motivated after their showdown in Paris.
How does Alcaraz fuel his winning runs in SW19, you might wonder? With everything served to him at Cambio de Tercio.
He’s a ‘perfect, fantastic eater’, says Abel Lusa – why not take a look at how Lusa’s restaurants made him the unofficial epicentre of the tennis tour, below.
But never fear!
As if by Matthew Lambwell-magic, Kudermetova and Mertens have done it in three sets, over nearly two-and-a-half hours, and it’s time to get this ceremony on the road.
I imagine the carpet is being rolled out double-quick…
There’s a crisis brewing on Centre Court, warns MATTHEW LAMBWELL
We are in serious danger of a delay to the men’s final here – in the first year of Wimbledon’s switch to a 4pm start. The women’s doubles final – Su-Wei Hsieh and Jelena Ostapenko vs Veronika Kudermetova and Elise Mertens – began at 1pm and is now 4-5 in the third set with just 35 minutes to go until Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner due to take the court.
Given the amount of time which will be taken up by the trophy presentation and speeches, this is going to be touch and go. It would be an embarrassment for Wimbledon if they are forced to delay – there is absolutely no way a Grand Slam singles final should have a delayed start.
Sinner and Alcaraz’s routes to the final
Alcaraz had his toughest outing, unbelievably, first up against Fabio Fognini, with the firebrand Italian veteran forcing him into a five-set tussle in the searing opening day hint. After a match so good that Fognini brought forward his retirement, Alcaraz then breezed past plucky Brit Oliver Tarvet, Jan-Lenard Struff, Andrey Rublev, Cam Norrie, and Taylor Fritz ahead of today’s clash.
Sinner was forced to knockout compatrior Luca Nardi, before defeating Aleksandar Vukic and Pedro Martinez with minimum fuss. Two sets down in his fourth-round tie, Sinner may in part owe his place in the final due to the tragic retirement of an injured Grigor Dimitrov. Two confident wins against Ben Shelton and Novak Djokovic helped push that thought from most people’s minds, however.
Earlier today, another emerging rivalry threw down on No1 Court
Defending champion Alfie Hewett went looking for a chance to avenge his own Roland-Garros defeat against rising star and No1 seed Tokito Oda in the wheelchair singles.
Oda got the better of Hewett a second time, but the Briton remains the very model of a champion – and will be even hungrier for revenge when they meet again.
The Royal Box will be crowded with star power, but the great and the good of screens big and small will be piling into hospitality seating and general admission seats too in a bid to watch what we hope will be another all-time classic.
Keep an eye on comings and goings, below.
The All England Club’s newest member
Also in attendance in the Royal Box, although perhaps not staying for the men’s final – newly minted Ladies’ singles champion Iga Swiatek.
Fresh from her merciless beatdown of the positively frozen Amanda Anisimova, Swiatek showed off her trophy with a quick photoshoot featuring the court where she triumphed as a background.
Swiatek also flashed another part of her prize for claiming glory in SW19 – her member’s badge, which entitles her to two Centre Court tickets for each day of the tournament in perpetuity.
Alcaraz and Sinner are the perfect study in contrasts, notes MATTHEW LAMBWELL
An early illustration of the contrast between the two finalists: Jannik Sinner warmed up at Aorangi Park away from prying eyes; Carlos Alcaraz at the epicentre of Wimbledon on Championship court 14 – absolutely packed with fans.
Pleasing symmetry in the SW19 draw
Sinner and Alcaraz are likely to get sick of the sight of one another as they scythe through their respective draws at Grand Slams for years to come, but at least the finals this year have shown that rankings hold water.
Not that Alcaraz and Sinner contested the title in the Australian Open at the start of the year, however – it was former world No2 Alexander Zverev who was downed by the Italian on Rod Laver Arena.
But don’t trust me on it. Why not have a leaf through Mail Sport’s tennis correspondent Matthew Lambwell’s thoughts on the matter?
Good afternoon!
Hello and welcome to Mail Sport’s comprehensive coverage of the one we’ve all been waiting for – it’s the Gentlemen’s singles final, the crescendo of two weeks of piping-hot Wimbledon action, live and direct from SW19.
This year’s showing is primed to be unmissable. Will defending champion Carlos Alcaraz secure his three-peat, becoming the first man since Roger Federer to keep hold of the trophy back-to-back-to-back (although Novak Djokovic may feel aggrieved he’s ruled on a Covid-19 technicality)?
Or will world No1 Jannik Sinner get revenge on the Spaniard after he waltzed away with the French Open title in their five-set epic in Paris last month?
Stay tuned here, as we bring you all the build-up and more before proceedings get underway at 4pm.
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Wimbledon final 2025 LIVE: Latest score and game-by-game updates as the match between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner is DELAYED – as world No1 and No2 prepare to go head-to-head in a thriller at SW19
After eight and a half hours of breathless cross-channel duelling, Carlos Alcaraz ran out of miracles and Jannik Sinner got him at last. The world No1 had the trophy within reach in Paris but it was snatched away; 35 days later in London he seized…