Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal train ahead of Wimbledon first round - in pictures
Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal were making last-minute preparations out on the training courts ahead of their Wimbledon first-round matches.
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Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal were making last-minute preparations out on the training courts ahead of their Wimbledon first-round matches.
Excited tennis fans are set to queue overnight to get their hands on tickets for the opening day of Wimbledon, as the tournament returns to normal service after two years affected by the pandemic.
Barbara Schett thinks Andy Murray can make a deep run at Wimbledon as long as he remains injury-free. The two-time Wimbledon champion will be hoping to impress at SW19 after exiting the Grand Slam in the third round to Canada's Denis Shapovalov last year. Ad/> Two weeks ago, Murray reached the Stuttgart Open final before losing to Matteo Berrettini in three sets.
The 2022 Championships begin on Monday and Scottish tennis fans are in for a treat in the evening, with Andy Murray in action on Centre Court.
Matteo Berrettini believes he can secure a first «life-changing» Wimbledon title this year after going so close last year. The Italian lost in the 2021 final to Novak Djokovic, but that is the only match he hasn't won on grass since the beginning of the 2021 season. Ad/> It's some record, and it's perhaps unsurprising — alongside a favourable-looking draw — that Berrettini feels bullish coming into the 2022 edition, which sees him begin his campaign against Chile's Cristian Garin on Tuesday.
You no longer have to wait. Wimbledon is upon us. Two weeks of Sue Barker, Andrew Castle, strawberries and cream and, hopefully, Andy Murray.
Andy Murray has shaken off the abdominal injury which threatened his participation at Wimbledon, the former world number one said on Saturday before declaring that there was still a lot of "good tennis" left in him. Murray, who won the grasscourt Grand Slam in 2013 and 2016, sustained the injury during his Stuttgart Open final defeat by Italian Matteo Berrettini earlier this month, after impressive wins over Stefanos Tsitsipas and Nick Kyrgios. The problem forced Murray, ranked 51st, to skip the Queen's Club event with doubts over his participation at Wimbledon but the Scot said things had improved since.
Andy Murray says not many people still believe in him, but that Ivan Lendl’s continued backing “definitely helps” him as he navigates his return from long-term injury. Murray was in decent form in his run to the Stuttgart Open final earlier in June, beating top seed Stefanos Tsitsipas as he won four straight-set matches in five days. However, he would suffer an injury scare in his loss in the final to Matteo Berrettini.