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Wimbledon 2022: Schedule, Prize Money, Players to Watch, and More

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One of the most anticipated fortnights on the sporting calendar is almost here, as all eyes in the tennis world and beyond turn to Wimbledon.

Defending champion Novak Djokovic is unsurprisingly the heavy favorite on the men’s side of the draw. The Serb is on track for the Grand Slam schedule after picking up wins in Melbourne and Paris so far this year, and will move alongside Roger Federer with eight Wimbledon titles if he experiences even more success at SW19.

It’s Carlos Alcaraz who arrives as world number one and top seed, while last year’s runner-up Nick Kyrgios arrives with fitness concerns and Andy Murray looking to bring his form to the Challenger Tour on the biggest stage.

Iga Swiatek leads the women’s standings, but still has something to prove on grass. The 22-year-old, now a four-time Grand Slam champion, is yet to make it past the fourth round at Wimbledon and withdrew from the Bad Homburg Open on Friday due to illness.

Elena Rybakina returns 12 months after seeking to defend her crown, although she too has battled illness, so it could be Aryna Sabalenka, who reached the last four at Wimbledon in her last appearance of 2021, who arrives at London with the most confidence.

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Date, start time and location

Wimbledon begins on Monday July 3, 2022 and will run again for 14 consecutive days due to play taking place on the middle Sunday.

The action at SW19 will wrap up on Sunday, July 16.

Prize money

Men’s and Ladies’ Singles

Champion – £2.35m Runner-up – £1.175m Semi-finalist – £600,000 Quarter-finalist – £340,000 Fourth round – £207,000 Third round – £131,000 Second round – £85,000 First round – £55,000

Men’s and women’s doubles (per pair)

Champion – £600,000 Finalist – £300,000 Semi-finalist – £155,000 Quarter-finalist – £75,000 Third round – £36,250 Second round – £22,000 First round – £13,750

Novak Djokovic beat Nick Kyrgios in the final last year

/ Getty Images

Full schedule

Monday July 3 – first round men’s and women’s singles
tuesday 4th july – first round men’s and women’s singles
Wednesday July 5 – second single round men and women
Thursday July 6 – second single round men and women
friday 7 july – 3rd single round men and women
Saturday July 8 – 3rd single round men and women
Sunday July 9 – 4th single round men and women
Monday July 10 – 4th single round men and women
tuesday july 11 – men’s and women’s singles quarter-finals
Wednesday July 12 – men’s and women’s singles quarter-finals
Thursday July 13 women’s singles semi-finals
friday july 14 – men’s singles semi-finals
Saturday July 15 – ladies’ singles final, men’s doubles final, ladies’ doubles final
Sunday July 16 – men’s singles, mixed doubles finals

The game will start from 11 a.m. on the outside courts, 1 p.m. on court n°1 and 1:30 p.m. on the center. An order of play will be broadcast each evening for the following day.

Semis

Women’s

Iga Swiatek Aryna Sabalenka Elena Rybakina Jessica Pégula Caroline García Ons Jabeur Coco Gauff Maria Sakkari Pétra Kvitova Barbora Krejcikova Daria Kasatkina Veronika Kudermetova Beatriz Haddad Maia Belinda Bencic Ludmila Samsonova Karolina Muchova Jelena Ostapenko Karolina Pliskova Victoria Azarenka Don na Vekic Ekaterina Alexandrova Anastasia Potapova Magda Linette Zheng Qinwen Clés by Madison Anhelina Kalinina Bernarda Pera Élise Merten Irina-Camelia Begu Pétra Martic Mayar Chérif Marie Bouzkova

Iga Swiatek landed his third French Open earlier in June

/ PA

Men’s

Carlos Alcaraz Novak Djokovic Daniel Medvedev Casper Ruud Stefanos Tsitsipas Holgar Rune Andreï Roublev Jannik Pécheur Taylor Fritz Frances Tiafoé Félix Auger-Aliassime Cameron Norrie Borna Coric Lorenzo Musetti Alex de Minaure Tommy-Paul Hubert Hurkacz François Cerundolo Alexandre Zverev Jan-Lennard S truff Roberto Bautista Agut Grigor Dimitrov Sébastien Korda Alexandre Bublik Yoshihito Nishioka Nicolas Jarry Denis Chapovalov Daniel Evans Tallon Griekspoor Tomas Martin Etcheverry Nick Kyrgios Alejandro Davidovitch Fokina

Andy Murray is unseeded as he targets a deep run at Wimbledon

/ Getty Images

Where to watch Wimbledon

You can watch Wimbledon for all 14 days on BBC One, BBC Two and their digital platforms. Click here for more information.

Blog and direct : You can also follow the action throughout the fortnight via Standard Sport’s live blogs.

What time does Wimbledon start on TV on Monday and is there a live broadcast?

Coverage will begin on BBC Two at 10.30am BST on the first day of the Championships, with BBC One showing the action from 1.45pm.

The action will also be available to watch on the BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website will show the action around the pitch. Today at Wimbledon, presented by Qasa Alom, the best of the action will be summarized each evening at 9pm on BBC Two.

Tickets

Everything you need to know about attending Wimbledon and the famous Wimbledon queue can be found here.

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2023-06-30 17:35:04
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