Summary

Send your views, and questions for our experts

  1. Postpublished at 13:17 BST 7 July

    Sinner 1-1 Struff*

    Greg Rusedski
    Former British number one on BBC Radio 5 Live

    It's very rare we see a contrast in styles in the modern game like this.

    I think Sinner likes this match-up, I expect him to come through today in straight sets.

  2. Postpublished at 13:17 BST 7 July

    Pegula v Gauff

    Pam Shriver
    Five-time Wimbledon doubles champion on BBC Radio 5 Live

    I can't wait for this all American clash, they have quite the history. They've played doubles together, I can't wait.

    Pegula has a lot of great subtleties in her game. She changes up the pace on the serve, she'll change the spin, such a smart tactical player.

  3. Pegula and Gauff eyeing first Wimbledon semi-finalpublished at 13:16 BST 7 July

    Pegula v Gauff

    Coco GauffImage source, Getty Images

    An all-American tie will open play on Centre Court at 13:30 BST, with Jessica Pegula and Coco Gauff battling it out in the first women's singles quarter-final.

    Fourth seed Pegula has matched her career-best showing at Wimbledon (2023) in reaching the last eight.

    Seventh seed Gauff, a four-time Grand Slam champion is on new terrain having never previously advanced beyond the fourth round at SW19.

    The winner of this match will face either Naomi Osaka or Karolina Muchova in the semi-finals.

  4. Sinner holdspublished at 13:15 BST 7 July

    Sinner 1-1 Struff*

    Jan-Lennard Struff was bounding around on the baseline at the change of ends.

    Jannik Sinner took his time to organise his towel box before whistling through a hold to love.

    *denotes next server

  5. 'Sinner has mastered the art'published at 13:14 BST 7 July

    *Sinner 0-1 Struff

    John McEnroe
    Three-time Wimbledon singles champion on BBC Two

    What I love about Jannik Sinner is that he has sort of followed in Novak Djokovic's footsteps. He has mastered the art of timing a slide into a backhand and then doing something big with it. I would say he has become a master at that, despite it being very difficult to do.

    It is something that takes years to master, but he has done it on both the forehand and the backhand. You've got to love that about him.

  6. Postpublished at 13:14 BST 7 July

    Emily Salley
    BBC Sport at Wimbledon

    Some whispered "ooohs" as Jan-Lennard Struff brings up game point with a massive 138mph serve. A solid start by the 6ft 4in German on Court One, which is packed out for the start of this match.

  7. Struff holdspublished at 13:12 BST 7 July

    *Sinner 0-1 Struff

    Jan-Lennard Struff, wearing his cap backwards, shows his intent from the off, following his first serve into the net and picking the ball off his toes. Sinner's reply goes into the net.

    The German holds to 30. We're up and running on Court One.

  8. What are the heat rules at Wimbledon?published at 13:07 BST 7 July

    Ask Me Anything

    For a second year in a row, Wimbledon is set to experience extreme temperatures north of 30C.

    Last year's tournament experienced temperatures exceeding 30C and a similar situation is expected throughout the second week of this year's competition.

    To help keep players safe, Wimbledon has a heat rule for all singles matches when deemed necessary.

    What is the heat rule? When is it enforced? And is there air conditioning? Those questions are answered in this article by the BBC's Ask Me Anything team.

  9. What's the weather forecast for today?published at 13:06 BST 7 July

    In a word - hot.

    The BBC forecast says there's no chance of rain today and temperatures could rise to 30-31C at Wimbledon.

    It's predicted to be that way for much of the rest of the tournament, with temperatures falling slightly towards the weekend.

  10. History-maker Struffpublished at 13:05 BST 7 July

    Sinner v Struff

    Jan-Lennard Struff, wearing a white t-shirt and backwards white cap, raises a clenched right fistImage source, Getty Images

    Prior to Wimbledon, Jan-Lennard Struff had only reached the second week of a Grand Slam three times in 46 appearances.

    Now, the 36-year-old is making history as the oldest first-time men's quarter-finalist in the Open era.

    Struff had an underwhelming warm-up for Wimbledon, posting a 2-2 record across outings in Stuttgart and Mallorca, but has battled through to the last eight, with three of his four matches going to five sets.

    After beating Sebastian Baez and 28th seed Brandon Nakaskima in five, he stunned eighth seed Daniil Medvedev in straight sets to reach the fourth round at Wimbledon for the first time. He trailed Hubert Hurkacz by two sets but fought back to force a decider before his opponent retired hurt.

    “I love Struffi. He’s sensational!” said compatriot Alexander Zverev.

    “Every time we think he’s going to retire, he always puts together a big tournament. What I love about him is he can lose all these first round matches in a row, and then suddenly he’s in the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam.”

  11. Serve success for Sinnerpublished at 13:04 BST 7 July

    Sinner v Struff

    Media caption,

    Sinner on being 'brave' with dominant serving

    After an unconvincing start to his title defence, it's been largely smooth sailing for Jannik Sinner.

    He was on the brink of a first-round exit against Miomir Kecmanovic, trailing by two sets to one, but has come through his past three matches in straight sets, seeing off Nuno Borges, Jenson Brooksby and Shintaro Mochizuki.

    One of his big strengths this Wimbledon has been his serve. The Italian has a first-serve percentage of 66% across his four matches to date, winning 85% of points behind it, and has struck 81 aces.

  12. Britwatch - Hewett in wheelchair singles action, Reid loses in first roundpublished at 13:02 BST 7 July

    Gordon Reid servesImage source, PA Media

    Henry Patten is third up on court two in the men's doubles as he eyes a second Wimbledon crown in three years.

    He and Finnish partner Harri Heliovaara - the top seeds - face Argentine/French duo and eighth seeds Guido Andreozzi and Manuel Guinard in the quarter-finals.

    Gordon Reid has already been in action in the first round of the men's wheelchair singles, losing 6-3 6-1 to top seed and defending champion Tokito Oda on court three.

    Ben Bartram also exited in the first round, losing 6-4 6-4 to Takuya Miki, but Andrew Penney has advanced to round two, beating Maarten Ter Hofte in straight sets.

    Second seed and 2024 champion Alfie Hewett is under way in his first-round meeting with Tom Egberink on court three, with Lucy Shuker facing third seed Xiaohui Li after that.

    Cornelia Oostuhizen begins her women's singles campaign against Kzenia Chasteau on court 15 later today.

  13. Sinner up first against Struffpublished at 13:00 BST 7 July

    Sinner v Struff

    Split image of Jannik Sinner and Jan-Lennard StruffImage source, Getty Images

    Defending champion Jannik Sinner is first up on Court One, taking on German Jan-Lennard Struff for a spot in the last four.

    Top seed Sinner leads the head-to-head 3-0 but was taken to a decider when the two players met on grass in the Halle Open quarter-finals in 2024.

    The winner of this match will face either seven-time champion Novak Djokovic or third seed Felix Auger-Aliassime in the semi-finals.

  14. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 12:58 BST 7 July

    Click 'Get Involved' to have your say

    As always, we want to hear from you!

    Where are you enjoying the Wimbledon action today? Which matches are you looking forward to watching?

    Click 'Get Involved' and let us know - photos always welcome!

  15. Listen to Wimbledon Dailypublished at 12:56 BST 7 July

    BBC Radio 5 Live

    BBC Radio 5 Live is producing a daily podcast rounding up all of the action from Wimbledon 2026.

    Monday's episode reacts to Arthur Fery's fantastic five-set win against Grigor Dimitrov, which secured a quarter-final place for the British wildcard.

    Listen to that and all previous episodes on BBC Sounds.

  16. Postpublished at 12:55 BST 7 July

    Jannik Sinner and Coco Gauff were among the players appearing on the Wimbledon practice courts earlier today, preparing for their respective quarter-finals.

    Jannik Sinner during a practice sessionImage source, PA Media
    Coco Gauff serves during a practice sessionImage source, PA Media
  17. Tuesday's schedule on the show courtspublished at 12:54 BST 7 July

    Centre Court (from 13:30 BST)

    • Jessica Pegula v Coco Gauff
    • Jiri Lehecka v Alexander Zverev - fourth-round match from Monday will resume at 4-6 5-7 3-3
    • Felix Auger-Aliassime v Novak Djokovic

    Court One (from 13:00)

    • Jannik Sinner v Jan-Lennard Struff
    • Naomi Osaka v Karolina Muchova
  18. What else happened on Monday?published at 12:53 BST 7 July

    Media caption,

    'Take a bow!' - best shots from day eight at Wimbledon

    • French Open finalist Flavio Cobolli beat fifth seed Alex de Minaur in straight sets and will be Arthur Fery's quarter-final opponent on Wednesday.
    • Taylor Fritz is also through to the last eight, but Alexander Zverev was unable to complete his match before the 23:00 BST curfew. He will resume two sets up against Jiri Lehecka later today.
    • In the women's draw, former finalist Jasmine Paolini ended Alexandra Eala's Wimbledon run, while there were straight-set wins for Linda Noskova, Marta Kostyuk and Elise Mertens.
    • Brits Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool continued their men's doubles title defence, winning in three sets to reach the quarter-finals, but Neal Skupski and American partner Christian Harrison bowed out.
    • Skupski, partnering American Desirae Krawczyk, also lost in the quarter-finals of the mixed doubles, as did Joe Salisbury and Canadian partner Leylah Fernandez.
  19. Arthur's Fery-tale continuespublished at 12:51 BST 7 July

    A few hours after England's magnificent World Cup win against Mexico, Arthur Fery produced a brilliant performance of his own to reach the Wimbledon men's singles quarter-finals for the first time.

    British wildcard Fery defeated former world number three Grigor Dimitrov in a deciding-set tie-break - watch the highlights and the best of the reaction in the videos below.

    Media caption,

    GB's Fery stuns Dimitrov in five-set battle to reach quarter-finals

    Media caption,

    Reaching the quarter-finals an unimaginable dream - Fery

    Media caption,

    His life will change now - Henman and Murray on Fery's stunning win

  20. Postpublished at 12:50 BST 7 July

    Split image of Jannik Sinner, Naomi Osaka, Novak Djokovic, and Coco GauffImage source, Getty Images

    It's day nine of Wimbledon and it's time to start allocating semi-final spots.

    We've got four singles quarter-finals to bring you today, plus the conclusion of second seed Alexander Zverev's fourth-round meeting with Jiri Lehecka and British players to keep an eye on in the men's doubles and men's and women's wheelchair singles.

    Top seed Jannik Sinner and seven-time champion Novak Djokovic headline the men's singles action while fourth seed Jessica Pegula - the highest-ranked player left in the women's draw, Coco Gauff, Karolina Muchova and Naomi Osaka are all bidding for maiden Wimbledon semi-final appearances.

    But first, let's have a quick reminder of what happened on day eight.