A first Tour-level title on grass for Karolina Muchova ๐#BHO26 pic.twitter.com/afs6DU83yz
— wta (@WTA) June 27, 2026


Karolina doing Karolina things ๐ช
— wta (@WTA) June 27, 2026
She's flown out of the blocks in the final, taking charge of the opening set against Osaka!#BHO26 pic.twitter.com/btwL76c68a
Madison Keys triumphs in Eastbourne for the third time in her career ๐⚡️
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 27, 2026
She defeats Tatjana Maria 7-5, 6-4 in the final!
A special city for Madi ๐#LexusEastbourneOpen pic.twitter.com/HXVc14cv9D
Meanwhile, the English lawns have always been Keys' friend. The Bannerette won her maiden tour title at age 19 in Eastbourne in 2014, then picked up two more grass titles ('16 Birmingham, '23 Eastbourne) in later years, improving to 3-0 in tour finals on the surface. Keys was back in Eastbourne this week, and the familiarity proved beneficial once again. She didn't lose a set all week as she coasted to victories over Talia Gibson, Jessica Bouzas Maneiro (losing 1 game), McCartney Kessler and Petra Marcinko (who ret. after the 1st set) before facing her toughest match, a 7-5/6-4 win in the final over the always-tricky Tatjana Maria. Keys is now a three-time Eastbourne champ. It's the most titles any woman has won in the event since Martina Navratilova won her *eleventh* crown back in 1993. Chris Evert is the only other three-time winner (w/ all three coming between 1974-79).
Number 11 ๐ Love you Eastbourne ๐ค pic.twitter.com/3noXA1U2hi
— Madison Keys (@Madison_Keys) June 27, 2026
Keys is now an impressive 11-5 in career tour finals, winning in her last six appearances. Her last lost came in the pre-Covid Brisbane final (vs. Pliskova) in 2020, and she's 8-1 since she lost in the '17 U.S. Open final to Sloane Stephens. Keys has never played into the deepest rounds at the All-England Club, though, with her best results a pair of QF eight years apart (2015 and '23).
Soarin', flyin’, semifinalist ✈️@Gabriela_Ruse goes from qualifying to the final four in Bad Homburg, defeating Navarro 6-4, 6-2!#BHO26 pic.twitter.com/sYrr8HSXEZ
— wta (@WTA) June 25, 2026
Thus far, though, Ruse is 0-5 in her Wimbledon career.
Brilliant defense from Naomi Osaka ๐ฎ๐จ
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 26, 2026
This is our @BetMGM Shot of the Day ๐ซ #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/b5mBtD0bFO
The rally tolerance, movement, defence, power and precision all into one ๐ซฐ#NaomiOsaka #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/xS0vS2TWXp
— SiscoEyeballs II (@naochieyes) June 26, 2026
:( it’s unfortunate naomi couldn’t continue but so proud she made her first grass final in bad homburg this week. it was a great week and i can’t wait for wimbledon ๐ค๐ค rest upppp @naomiosaka ๐ซถ๐ผ๐ซถ๐ผ pic.twitter.com/BZA03cAJVm
— Ana (@thegreatestana) June 27, 2026
Tatjana Maria is into the Eastbourne final ๐ฑ๐
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 26, 2026
The German moves on after leading 6-1, 1-2 before Jelena Ostapenko was forced to retire.#LexusEastbourneOpen pic.twitter.com/NeEJPCOq6Y
Maria gave Madison Keys her best match of the week in the title match, but lost in a tight 7-5/6-4 contest. It's Maria's first loss in her five tour-level finals, as she failed to add a third different grass court trophy (w/ '18 Mallorca and '25 Queen Club) to her collection. Maria was a surprise Wimbledon semifinalist in 2022, but has gone 0-3 at SW19 since. Other than her final four run effort, she's gone out in the 1r/2r in 11 of 12 other MD appearances dating back 19 years.
Ekaterina Alexandrova and Linda Noskova are the Berlin Ladies Open doubles champions!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 22, 2026
In a rare final played on Monday due to rain delays, they cap off an impressive week, playing together for the first time, beating 3rd seeds Errani and Melichar-Martinez 6-2, 6-4 in the final. pic.twitter.com/aOPY3GpQBa
Then the Hordette was off the Bad Homburg, where she posted her best singles week since reaching the Abu Dhabi final in early February. Standing at just 7-15, Alexandrova had nearly dropped out of the Top 20 after climbing into the Top 10 late in 2025. In Bad Homburg, she posted wins over Ann Li and Mirra Andreeva, the latter her first Top 10 win since Stuttgart last year (and her first Top *20* victory of '26). Alexandrova lost a round short of the SF to Naomi Osaka, but will bump her ranking back into the Top 15. She's reached the Round of 16 in her last two apperances at Wimbledon.
A first Top 20 win of the season for Ekaterina Alexandrova!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 24, 2026
She stuns Roland Garros champion Mirra Andreeva, competing for the first time since her triumph, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the quarterfinals at the Bad Homburg Open.
Very good performance from Katya! pic.twitter.com/eSUZ0xtOVl
After experiencing a breakout '25 season -- climbing to #12, playing in her first 1000 final in Dubai (+ the Montreal semis), notching four Top 10 wins (including over #1 Sabalenka and #3 Swiatek), and recording her most slam match wins (7) in a single season -- Tauson has had a hard time getting going this year. While she reached an early season SF in Abu Dhabi, injuries (a consistent issue in her career) have thwarted any sort of forward progress. She came into the week at 8-13 on the year, with seven straight losses (2 via retirement). But Bad Homburg provided a port in the storm, as she knocked off both Diana Shnaider and Zheng Qinwen for her first consecutive wins since February. She took the 1st set from Karolina Muchova, as well, but the Czech rallied to win their QF in three.
Back to winning ways ๐คฉ
— wta (@WTA) June 22, 2026
Clara Tauson takes down No.7 seed Shnaider in Bad Homburg 6-4, 6-4! #BadHomburgOpen pic.twitter.com/WrO2msCN7P
Tauson will next be defending last year's Round of 16 Wimbledon result.
Madison Keys is through to the Eastbourne final, after Petra Marcinko is forced to retire.
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 26, 2026
The No. 2 seed will face Tatjana Maria in championship match. ๐๐#LexusEastbourneOpen pic.twitter.com/uKYHnZ0QZU
Meanwhile, Wang's SF finish in Bad Homburg was her best result since reaching the Auckland final back in Week 1.
Bad Homburg quarterfinals unlocked ๐
— wta (@WTA) June 23, 2026
Wang Xinyu defeats Fernandez 6-3, 6-4!#BadHomburgOpen pic.twitter.com/7oRvPeRxjF
Wins over Renata Zarazua and Leylah Fernandez put Wang into the QF, where she received a walkover from Elina Svitolina. She then fell in the SF to Naomi Osaka, but will jump from #52 to back inside the Top 40 with her result. Wang reached the 4th Round at Wimbledon two summers ago, upsetting Jessie Pegula in the 2nd Round.
Vera Zvonareva and Aldila Sutjiadi win the Bad Homburg Open title with a superb 6-1, 4-6, [10-5] win over Demi Schuurs and Ellen Perez!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 27, 2026
2 WTA finals in their 2 tournaments together as a pair, and a very impressive performance from them this week. Bepa back into the Top 20! pic.twitter.com/WebbSWk0Fg
The Eastbourne doubles final was pushed back multiple times on Saturday due to rain, and will now take place on Sunday featuring Gaby Dabrowski/Luisa Stefani against Czech Crushers Jesika Maleckova & Miriam Skoch.

...having won her maiden tour title last time out at Rosmalen, Montgomery keeps her '26 grasscourt record spotless (9-0) with a Q-run that included a final round come-from-behind three-set win over Marina Bassols Ribera after having to take an MTO after dropping the 1st set.
๐ฅบ An emotional moment as Bianca Andreescu makes it to the Wimbledon main draw… #wimbledon pic.twitter.com/wUrIU61ylE
— Court of Public Opinion (@copo_tennis) June 25, 2026
...Andreescu's comeback has taken on a long-form structure with no clear ending, but she at least fashioned a nice plot point for herself this week in Wimbledon qualifying by stringing together three wins, the last two over #24 Jil Teichmann in three sets, and #15 Aliaksandra Sasnovich in two after trailing 5-2 in the 2nd, denying Sasnovich when she served for the set, saving three SP to get to a TB and then coming back from 3-1 down to win it 7-4. It'll be her first slam MD appearance since the 2024 U.S. Open.
Bianca Andreescu defeats Aliaksandra Sasnovich 6-3, 7-6(4) and qualifies for the #Wimbledon main draw.
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 25, 2026
Saved 5 set points in the 2nd set, but competed very well.
Andreescu, the 2019 US Open champion, will play her first Grand Slam main draw since the 2024 US Open. pic.twitter.com/NuXBG3Qx21
Kayla Day vence a Katarzyna Kawa (6-2 7-5) y se clasifica para el cuadro principal de Wimbledon en su quinto intento
— Cristian (@Doural_28_) June 25, 2026
Increรญble todo lo que estรก consiguiendo despuรฉs de lo que ha tenido que pasar a nivel personal
Admiraciรณn absoluta pic.twitter.com/WUV8B3wxVR
...Day was the lone women's qualifier to reach the MD without dropping a set, taking out Erika Andreeva and Katarzyna Kawa in her last two matches. After recently revealing that she's lost both of her parents over the past year, she'll now make her Wimbledon debut.
...a few years ago, Gasanova made headlines for all the wrong reasons. But she's never gone away, and has instead built her way back with increasingly good ITF results. She won her biggest career title (a $50K) earlier this year, and this week played her way into her first slam MD since RG22 with wins over Varvara Lepchenko (saving 4 MP) and Q-seeds Emerson Jones (#29) and Darja Semenistaja (#6).
...Thailand's #1 player runs off wins in three straight three-setters, recovering from 3-1 down in the 3rd vs. #25 Mary Stoiana, then saving three MP vs. Oceane Dodin in the final Q-round.
...the 18-year old Serb, after falling in AO and RG qualifying earlier this year, reached her maiden slam MD with back-to-back seeded wins over #16 Rebecca Sramkova (from a set and a break down) and #30 Zhu Lin.
*WI26 QUALIFIERS (#-first slam MD)*
Bianca Andreescu, CAN (26/#180)
Mariam Bolkvadze, GEO (28/#539)
Kayla Day, USA (26/#138)
Anastasia Gasanova, RUS (27/#210)
Lina Gjorcheska, MKD (31/#223)#
Tyra Grant, ITA (18/#173)#
Leolia Jeanjean, FRA (30/#133)
Alina Korneeva, RUS (19/#94)
Teodora Kostovic, SRB (18/#184)#
Ashlyn Krueger, USA (22/#96)
Polina Kudermetova, UZB (23/#116)
Claire Liu, USA (26/#145)
Robin Montgomery, USA (21/#194)
Mananchaya Sawangkaew, THA (23/#164)
Iryna Shymanovich, BLR (28/#216)
Maria Timofeeva, UZB (22/#92)
*YOUNGEST 2026 SLAM QUALIFIERS*
WI - Tyra Grant, ITA (18)
RG - Alina Korneeva, RUS (18)
WI - Teodora Kostovic, SRB (18)
AO - Nikola Bartunkova, CZE (19)
WI - Alina Korneeva, RUS (19)
AO - Linda Fruhvirtova, CZE (20)
RG - Elena Pridankina, RUS (20)
RG - Kaitlin Quevedo, ESP (20)
*MULTI-SLAM QUALIFIERS IN 2026*
2 - Linda Fruhvirtova, CZE (AO/RG)
2 - Alina Korneeva, RUS (RG/WI)
2 - Ashlyn Krueger, USA (RG/WI)
2 - Claire Liu, USA (RG/WI)
2 - Sloane Stephens, USA (AO/RG)
*LOW-RANKED 2026 SLAM QUALIFIERS*
#897 - Sloane Stephens, USA (AO)
#697 - Bai Zhuoxuan, CHN (AO)
#539 - Mariam Bolkvadze, GEO (WI)
#363 - Storm Hunter, AUS (AO)
#361 - Sloane Stephens, USA (RG)
#223 - Lina Gjorcheska, MKD (WI)
#220 - Elena Pridankina, RUS (RG)
#216 - Iryna Shymanovich, BLR (WI)
#215 - Susan Bandecchi, SUI (RG)
#210 - Anastasia Gasanova, RUS (WI)
*RECENT WIMBLEDON "Q-PLAYER OF THE WEEK" WINNERS*
2019 Coco Gauff, USA
2021 Ana Konjuh, CRO
2022 Maja Chwalinska, POL
2023 Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, ESP
2024 Katie Volynets, USA
2025 Carson Branstine, CAN
2026 Robin Montgomery, USA
[2026 slams]
AO: Guiomar Maristany, ESP
RG: Claire Liu, USA
WI: Robin Montgomery, USA


Emma Navarro takes out 2025 Wimbledon champ Iga Swiatek in the Bad Homburg second round ๐จ
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 24, 2026
The American wins 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 to advance to the quarterfinals. Well played, Emma ๐ #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/4OOLcRIddQ
Tereza Valentova - Hannah Klugman pic.twitter.com/KF2hlpqkHs
— AA (@AANG2025) June 22, 2026
Valentova pulled another squandered lead out of the fire in the next round, rallying to win in three over Ajla Tomljanovic after losing a 6-2/3-1 lead, before falling in the QF to Tatjana Maria.
Digging deep ๐ค
— wta (@WTA) June 23, 2026
Elina Svitolina reaches her 9th Tour-level quarterfinal of 2026 with her win over Samsonova!@ElinaSvitolina | #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/ePeDk6nGSA
Pushed to the limits!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 20, 2026
Anastasia Zakharova saves 3 match points to beat the talented youngster Lilli Tagger 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 in a very tough first qualifying round match at the Eastbourne Open.
Nothing could separate them until the last point, a thrilling end to the match! pic.twitter.com/1xSs2rUrEl
Another final-set tiebreak win for Anastasia Zakharova!
— WTARussians (@WTArussians) June 21, 2026
She beats doubles partner Oksana Selekhmeteva 7-6, 2-6, 7-6 after saving a match point to qualify for the main draw at the Eastbourne Open.
Gritty performances and match points saved in both her qualifying matches! pic.twitter.com/z0hEaljQdg
First win on grass ๐ฑ@EmilianaArango defeats last year’s Eastbourne champion 7-6(2), 6-4!#LexusEastbourneOpen pic.twitter.com/VAYFbPMYkg
— wta (@WTA) June 22, 2026
More like falling star 1-13 in her last 14 matches
— Dolo (@sneakylikeafox) June 26, 2026
WOW Sofia Johnson ๐ฌ๐ง who won her first W15 event earlier in the year has just defeated WTA 51st Oliynykova ๐บ๐ฆ 6-0 6-2 in 53 mins to reach final qualifying at WTA Eastbourne ❤️ pic.twitter.com/hXK1dQzQHu
— Chris Goldsmith (@TheTennisTalker) June 20, 2026
Congrats Indianna Spink ๐ฌ๐ง on your first W15 singles title
— Chris Goldsmith (@TheTennisTalker) March 1, 2026
Defeats Gallardo Guevara ๐ช๐ธ 6-3 7-6 to win in Manacor
Another US Collegiate player !! pic.twitter.com/0VxodMtuwm
Indianna Spink ๐ฌ๐ง with her winners trophy at the W15 Manacor singles at the Rafa Nadal Academy ❤️ pic.twitter.com/Gh3nLbeZFQ
— Chris Goldsmith (@TheTennisTalker) March 1, 2026
When dreams become reality ๐คฉ ๐ฌ๐ง
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) June 23, 2026
Esther Adeshina notched the biggest win of her career in Qualifying, defeating No.8 seed Moyuka Uchijima pic.twitter.com/OChMZcdmBZ
(3)Maria Sharapova's run to the 2004 Birmingham title:
— Tennis Historian (@HistorianTennis) June 25, 2026
2R: Jackson 6-2, 6-2
3R: (Q)Stosur 6-4, 6-3
QF: (8)Molik 6-3, 6-1
SF: (2)Schnyder 6-1, 6-7(3), 6-3
F: Golovin 4-6, 6-2, 6-1
๐ธ: Warren Little pic.twitter.com/lGY0EA2pb0
Before the crowning of this year's six champions (half of them Czechs, by the way), the last 85 tuneup title winners came up empty in London. Since Jana Novotna rode her title-winning momentum in Eastbourne to the 1998 Wimbledon title, Sharapova is the only woman to double-up in the 101 grass events from 1999-2025.
A memory for JANA NOVOTNA tennis player WIMBLEDON CHAMPION 1998 ๐ท(19/11/2017) pic.twitter.com/ehNZBe9YON
— Lia (@Lia47019957) November 19, 2019
The six in the draw at SW19 looking to buck history: Robin Montgomery, Donna Vekic, Linda Noskova, Marie Bouzkova, and now Muchova and Keys.

venus williams! that’s mother ๐ฅนpic.twitter.com/PKL3NqviAJ
— ๐พnebby๐พ (@1gamesetmatch) June 22, 2026
What a volley from Venus #Williams!#BHO26 pic.twitter.com/wvN7r606IW
— Bad Homburg Open powered by Solarwatt (@badhomburgopen) June 22, 2026
Irina Begu survives 46yo Venus Williams in Bad Homburg.
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 22, 2026
6-2, 4-6, 7-6(6).
Venus served for the match at 5-3 in the decider. Another heartbreaking loss for her... was super close but she is now down to 0-8 in 2026. pic.twitter.com/4RF4Bzhy8A
Ahead of her re-teaming with Serena at SW19, Venus reached the doubles QF alongside Alex Eala.
This is already too much fun ๐คญ
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 25, 2026
Stream Venus Williams and Alex Eala in the Bad Homburg quarterfinals on https://t.co/04I3E6G9ZH ๐ #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/TGFEhUl2Ik
CUE THE TWIRL ๐
— wta (@WTA) June 24, 2026
Venus Williams and Alex Eala lock in their spot in the doubles quarterfinals!#BadHomburgOpen pic.twitter.com/yHMJRanGKL
Venus Williams and Alexandra Eala into the QFs in Bad Homburg.
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 24, 2026
Incredible serving from Venus and unreal winner on MP.
Alex is lovely. She was so happy to play with Vee. pic.twitter.com/PiKRoJxQLA
Eala could face Serena Williams in the 2nd Round at Wimbledon.

In December, Vondrousova tried to explain herself so she kinda knew this was coming… pic.twitter.com/t6ALn2aXGc
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 22, 2026
All details. https://t.co/e1vFtuqNmS
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 22, 2026
Marketa Vondrousova’s statement on IG after receiving a 4 year ban
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) June 22, 2026
“One of the hardest things was coming to terms with the fact that the future of the career I had spent my entire life building was no longer in my hands.
All the while, you hope that the truth will be enough.… pic.twitter.com/hgeRDG12cN

Looking forward to the gaslighting.
— Trudy Seivwright MD (@SeivwrightTrudy) June 22, 2026
Two actual positive tests for clostebol gets 84 days between slams.
Positive test for a diuretic gets 30 day in installments so that the offender can play Billie Jean King cup.
1461 days for missing A test?@Gill_Gross @AmyLundyDahl…
This is crazy given that Jannik Sinner failed back to back drug tests, Iga Swiatek failed a drug test and both were given much lenient and player friendly punishments, this is a farce and I stand with Marketa Vondrousova full stop!!! This is lunacy at the highest level, ๐ค๐ค๐คฌ
— Gaiven (@Gaiven33) June 22, 2026
No way this survives the (inevitable) appeal….there had to be *some* penalty here. But when actual positive tests get a fraction of the penalty of a test refusal, justice has foot-faulted … pic.twitter.com/HbiR2ACjcn
— Jon Wertheim (@jon_wertheim) June 22, 2026
Vondrousova getting MASSIVE support from fellow players. pic.twitter.com/MhZZtnzZps
— Josรฉ Morgado (@josemorgado) June 22, 2026

They're now producing videos to explain their cases. It *does* help. But it's a pity they don't put the same effort into maintaining the consistency of the penalities and treatment of the cases for *all* players.
Much of Vondrousova's issues in this case stem from her (and, apparently, her agent's) lack of knowledge about the testing rules regarding "random" time period tests, which led to what appear to be two versions of her account of the night in question. There's really no reason to question the veracity of either on the surface, with her only (reluctantly?) belatedly bringing up her anxiety issues when it was clear that the time of night the tester arrived wasn't the outright protocol violation that she first thought. That said, the Alphabet practice of trying to throwing the *entire* book at a violation, even one that didn't include an actual failed test by a first-time offender (MV apparently passed one soon afterward), and going for a *four*-year ban is outright absurdity, especially when one considers the outrageously preferential treatment afforded the likes of Sinner (who failed *two* tests) and Swiatek -- when both were ranked #1 at the time, wink-wink -- regarding the announcing of the violations, the willingless to offer "solutions" and "work with" the players' representatives, and then the actual suspensions' lengths.

Meanwhile, *someone* on the frontlines -- in this case, Ajla Tomljanovic -- actually said the quiet (but oh so obvious) part out loud. She should probably watch her back.

Karolina can open a wildlife center now ๐คญ✨ pic.twitter.com/hODT092uLR
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 27, 2026

Meanwhile, another entry in the "Queen of the Bees" nomination fight...
๐#BHO26 pic.twitter.com/rQC5mNu0qu
— Bad Homburg Open powered by Solarwatt (@badhomburgopen) June 24, 2026
Butterflies love Naochi ๐ฆ#NaomiOsaka #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/iTQPp7pRBA
— SiscoEyeballs II (@naochieyes) June 26, 2026

Nobody tell tennis players ๐ซฃ https://t.co/o7JfZf3lqD
— Genie Bouchard (@geniebouchard) June 24, 2026

— Chris Evert (@ChrissieEvert) June 25, 2026
Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova open up about resilience, friendship, and facing cancer together.
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) June 24, 2026
Watch a deeply personal moment from their documentary 'The Final Set' - premiering June 26th on Netflix ๐ฅ pic.twitter.com/BvB7cUNiB8

| WI26 "PROP PICK" PREDICTIONS |
| 1. | Serena Williams will win at least one match in her return at age 44 ...okay, this one feels a little too easy. She has 1r vs. Joint, then maybe Eala in the 2nd Round and possibly Swiatek in the 3rd. |
| 2. | DC Iga Swiatek will not reach the second week ...she'll face Townsend 1st Rd., then it would be Pliskova/Valentova, with possibly Serena/Eala after that. |
| 3. | Only one of the Top 3 seeds (Sabalena-Rybakina-Swiatek) will reach the QF ...recent years: 2016 (#1), 2017 (#2), 2018 (0), 2019 (0), 2021 (#1/#2), 2022 (#3), 2023 (#1/#2/#3), 2024 (0), 2025 (#1) |
| 4. | At least 2 Czechs will reach the QF ...the last time 2+ were in the last eight was 2021. 2025 was the first year since 2018 w/ none. Recent years: 2019 (2), 2021 (2), 2022 (1), 2023 (1), 2024 (1), 2025(0). |
| 5. | Two "flagless" women will reach the QF ...there were four last year, but just one each in 2023 and '24. |
| 6. | There will be at least one first-time major semifinalist ...there were none at SW19 the last two years |
| 7. | There will be three unseeded woman in the QF, at least one in the SF ...recent QF: 2022(4), 2023(2), 2024(2), 2025(3) recent SF: 2022(1), 2023(2), 2024(1), 2025(1) |
| 8. | The two finalists will have a combined seed of 22+ (unseeded would be 33 alone) ...recent totals for finalists: 2022 (17+3 = 20), 2023 (unseeded + 6 = 39), 2024 (31 + 17 = 48), 2025 (8 + 13 = 21) |
| 9. | At least one finalist will come from the #8-20 seed range |
| 10. | At least one finalist will be a former major finalist, but have never reached a previous final at Wimbledon ...that list would include Andreescu, Andreeva, Chwalinska, Fernandez, Gauff, Kenin, Keys, Muchova, Osaka, Ostapenko, Pegula, Sabalenka, Stephens and Zheng |
| 11. | The winner will be a first-time Wimbledon finalist |
| 12. | Dark Horses (at least 4r/QF??): Chwalinska (hey, Paolini followed up *her* RG final with another at Wimbledon), Samsonova (the AELTC would be a fine place to finally turn the corner on her season), Krejickova (why not?), Navarro (playing like a second-weeker), Montgomery (vs. Paolini in the 1st Rd., is 9-0 this grass season) |



Ready for her close-up ๐@Venuseswilliams is featured in this month's issue of Grazia.
— Mubadala DC Open (@mubadaladcopen) June 25, 2026
๐ท: @GraziaUK | #MubadalaDCOpen pic.twitter.com/kWFGnWJWWe

Novak Djokovic: “My daughter’s favorite tennis player is Sabalenka. She only cares about her matches and how she’s doing. She also keeps asking me if she can go to her house.” ๐❤️pic.twitter.com/N4LenKsOvS
— Danny (@DjokovicFan_) June 23, 2026
On ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐ฅ@karomuchova7 | #BHO26 pic.twitter.com/SRNoF9KHxF
— wta (@WTA) June 26, 2026

Dolomites ๐ฎ๐น⛰️☀️ #MariaSharapova pic.twitter.com/lb7LGbAEsM
— Sharapova News (@NewsSharapova) June 25, 2026

*CAREER WTA GRASS TITLES - active*
8 - Serena Williams, USA
6 - Venus Williams, USA
4 - MADISON KEYS, USA
3 - Karolina Pliskova, CZE
*2026 WTA TITLES WITHOUT LOSING A SET*
Brisbane - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
Adelaide - Mirra Andreeva, RUS
Cluj-Napoca - Sorana Cirstea, ROU
Miami - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
Eastbourne - Madison Keys, USA
Bad Homburg - Karolina Muchova, CZE
*VENUS WILLIAMS LOWEST-RANKED LOSSES*
NR - Kim Clijsters (2009 U.S. Open 4th)
#674 - Bethanie Mattek-Sands (2019 San Jose 1st)
#313 - Coco Gauff (2019 Wimbledon 1st)
#223 - Peng Shuai (2016 Beijing 1st)
#211 - Irina-Camelia Begu (2026 Bad Homburg 1st)
#202 - Celine Naef (2023 Rosmalen 1st)
#161 - Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (2020 Roland Garros 1st)
#199 - Anna Karolina Schmiedlova (2020 Monterrey 1st)
#152 - Bianca Andreeescu (2019 Auckland QF)
*2026 OLDEST WTA FINALISTS*
[singles]
38 - TATJANA MARIA (Eastbourne)
35 - Sorana Cirstea (Cluj-Napoca)-W
32 - Jessie Pegula (Berlin)
32 - Jessie Pegula (Charleston)-W
[oldest WS final]
69 yrs - Eastbourne: Keys (31) d. Maria (38)
62 yrs - Dubai: Pegula (31) d. Svitolina (31)
[doubles/MX]
41 - VERA ZVONAREVA (Bad Homburg)-W
41 - Vera Zvonareva (Rabat)
41 - Vera Zvonareva (Dubai)
40 - Hsieh Su-wei (Doha)
40 - Hsieh Su-wei (Brisbane)-W
39 - Sara Errani (Berlin)
39 - Sara Errani (Roland Garros MX)-W
[WD duos]
73 - Linz: Cirstea/Zhang (36/37)-W
72 - Bad Homburg: SUTJIADI/ZVONAREVA (31/41)-W
72 - Rabat: Sutjiadi/Zvonareva (31/41)
71 - Berlin: Errani/Melichar-Martinez (39/32)
70 - Nottingham: Aoyama/Chan (38/32)
*WIMBLEDON #1 SEEDS SINCE 2010 (w/ result)*
2010 Serena Williams, USA (W)
2011 Caroline Wozniacki, DEN (4th)
2012 Maria Sharapova, RUS (4th)
2013 Serena Williams, USA (4th)
2014 Serena Williams, USA (3rd)
2015 Serena Williams, USA (W)
2016 Serena Williams, USA (W)
2017 Angelique Kerber, GER (4th)
2018 Simona Halep, ROU (3rd)
2019 Ash Barty, AUS (4th)
2021 Ash Barty, AUS (W)
2022 Iga Swiatek, POL (3rd)
2023 Iga Swiatek, POL (QF)
2024 Iga Swiatek, POL (3rd)
2025 Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (SF)
2026 Aryna Sabalenka, BLR
*WI26 MAIN DRAW*
=most by nation (of 39 in original MD)=
18 - USA
10 - CZE
9 - GBR,RUS
6 - UKR
5 - AUS,GER
4 - ESP,FRA,POL,ROU
3 - AUT,CHN,CRO,ITA,SUI,UZB
2 - ARG,BEL,BLR,CAN,COL,GBR,HUN,JPN,KAZ,THA
1 - AND,BRA,DEN,GEO,GRE,INA,LAT,MKD,PHI,SLO,SRB,TUR
[age groups]*
10 - age 19 and under
92 - age 20-29
20 - age 30-34
6 - age 35+
*2026 SLAM MD DEBUTS*
=AUTOMATIC ENTRY MD=
AO - Petra Marcinko, CRO
AO - Oleksandra Oliynykova, UKR
RG - Lilli Tagger, AUT
RG - Hanne Vandewinkel, BEL
WI - Dasha Vidmanova, CZE
=WC=
AO - none
RG - Ksenia Efremova, FRA
RG - Alice Tubello, FRA
RG - Akasha Urhobo, USA
WI - Alicia Dudeney, GBR
=Q=
AO - Nikola Bartunkova, CZE
AO - Linda Klimovicova, POL
AO - Guiomar Maristany, ESP
AO - Himeno Sakatsume, JPN
AO - Lanlana Tararudee, THA
RG - Susan Bandecchi, SUI
RG - Guo Hanyu, CHN
RG - Sinja Kraus, AUT
RG - Elina Pridankina, RUS
RG - Kaitlin Quevedo, ESP
WI - Lina Gjorcheska, MKD
WI - Tyra Grant, ITA
WI - Teodora Kostovic, SRB
=PR=
AO - Mananchaya Sawangkaew, THA
RG - none
WI - none
*2020s GRAND SLAM DEBUTS*
2020: 21
2021: 15
2022: 26
2023: 21
2024: 22
2025: 26
2026: 23 - [AO 8, RG 10, WI 5]
*IN WOMEN'S SLAM SINGLES MD...*
[oldest]
=2022=
AO: Samantha Stosur, AUS (37)
RG: Kaia Kanepi, EST (36)
WI: Serena Williams, USA (40)
US: Venus Williams, USA (42)
=2023=
AO: Kaia Kanepi, EST (37)
RG: Kaia Kanepi, EST (37)
WI: Venus Williams, USA (43)
US: Venus Williams, USA (43)
=2024=
AO: Sara Errani, ITA (36)
RG: Sara Errani, ITA (37)
WI: Sara Errani, ITA (37)
US: Varvara Lepchenko, USA (38)
=2025=
AO: Tatjana Maria, GER (37)
RG: Tatjana Maria, GER (37)
WI: Tatjana Maria, GER (37)
US: Venus Williams, USA (45)
=2026=
AO: Venus Williams, USA (45)
RG: Tatjana Maria, GER (38)
WI: Serena Williams, USA (44)
[youngest]
=2022=
AO: Coco Gauff, USA (17)
RG: Linda Noskova, CZE (17)
WI: Coco Gauff, USA (18)
US: Sara Bejlek, CZE (16)
=2023=
AO: Brenda Fruhvirtova, CZE (15)
RG: Mirra Andreeva, RUS (16)
WI: Mirra Andreeva, RUS (16)
US: Mirra Andreeva, RUS (16)
=2024=
AO: Alina Korneeva, RUS (16)
RG: Mirra Andreeva, RUS (17)
WI: Mirra Andreeva, RUS (17)
US: Iva Jovic, USA (16)
=2025=
AO: Emerson Jones, AUS (16)
RG: Iva Jovic, USA (17)
WI: Hannah Klugman, GBR (16)
US: Julieta Pareja, USA (16)
=2026=
AO: Emerson Jones, AUS (17)
RG: Ksenia Efremova, FRA (17)
WI: Hannah Klugman, GBR (17)
*WIMBLEDON DEFENDING CHAMP RESULTS - OPEN ERA*
1968 Billie Jean King (RU)
1969 Ann Jones (retired)
1970 Margaret Court (RU)
1971 Evonne Goolagong (RU)
1972 Billie Jean King (W)
1973 Billi Jean King (QF)
1974 Chris Evert (SF)
1975 Billie Jean King (DNP-retired)
1976 Chris Evert (SF)
1977 Virginia Wade (SF)
1978 Martina Navratilova (W)
1979 Martina Navratilova (SF)
1980 Evonne Goolagong Cawley (DNP-pregnant)
1981 Chris Evert-Lloyd (RU)
1982 Martina Navratilova (W)
1983 Martina Navratilova (W)
1984 Martina Navratilova (W)
1985 Martina Navratilova (W)
1986 Martina Navratilova (W)
1987 Martina Navratilova (RU)
1988 Steffi Graf (W)
1989 Steffi Graf (SF)
1990 Martina Navratilova (QF)
1991 Steffi Graf (W)
1992 Steffi Graf (W)
1993 Steffi Graf (1st Rd.)
1994 Conchita Martinez (SF)
1995 Steffi Graf (W)
1996 Steffi Graf (DNP-injured)
1997 Martina Hingis (SF)
1998 Jana Novotna (QF)
1999 Lindsay Davenport (RU)
2000 Venus Williams (W)
2001 Venus Williams (RU)
2002 Serena Williams (W)
2003 Serena Williams (RU)
2004 Maria Sharapova (SF)
2005 Venus Williams (3rd Rd.)
2006 Amelie Mauresmo (4th Rd.)
2007 Venus Williams (W)
2008 Venus Williams (RU)
2009 Serena Williams (W)
2010 Serena Williams (4th Rd.)
2011 Petra Kvitova (QF)
2012 Serena Williams (4th Rd.)
2013 Marion Bartoli (DNP-retired)
2014 Petra Kvitova (3rd Rd.)
2015 Serena Williams (W)
2016 Serena Williams (DNP-pregnant)
2017 Garbine Muguruza (2nd Rd.)
2018 Angelique Kerber (2nd Rd.)
2019 Simona Halep ('20 no event; '21 DNP; '22 SF)
2021 Ash Barty (DNP-retired)
2022 Elena Rybakina (QF)
2023 Marketa Vondrousova (1st Rd.)
2024 Barbora Krejcikova (3rd Rd.)
2025 Iga Swiatek
*RECENT FIRST-TIME SLAM CHAMPS AND RESULT AT NEXT MAJOR*
2010 Francesca Schiavone (RG): Wimbledon 1st
2011 Li Na (RG): Wimbledon 2nd
2011 Petra Kvitova (WI): U.S. 1st
2011 Samantha Stosur (US): Australian 1st
2012 Victoria Azarenka (AO): Roland Garros 4th
2013 Marion Bartoli (WI): DNP/retired
2015 Flavia Pennetta (US): DNP/retired
2016 Angelique Kerber (AO): Roland Garros 1st
2016 Garbine Muguruza (RG): Wimbledon 2nd
2017 Alona Ostapenko (RG): Wimbledon QF
2017 Sloane Stephens (US): Australian 1st
2018 Caroline Wozniacki (AO): Roland Garros 4th
2018 Simona Halep (RG): Wimbledon 3rd
2018 Naomi Osaka (US): Australian W
2019 Ash Barty (RG): Wimbledon 4th
2019 Bianca Andreescu (US): DNP 2020/2021 AO 2nd
2020 Sofia Kenin (AO): U.S. Open 5th
2020 Iga Swiatek (RG): Australian 4th
2021 Barbora Krejcikova (RG): Wimbledon 4th
2021 Emma Raducanu (US): Australian 2nd
2022 Elena Rybakina (WI): U.S. Open 1st
2023 Aryna Sabalenka (AO): Roland Garros SF
2023 Marketa Vondrousova (WI): U.S. Open QF
2023 Coco Gauff (US): Australian SF
2025 Madison Keys (AO): Roland Garros QF
2026 Mirra Andreeva (RG): ?
*WINNERS OF PRE-WIMB. GRASS EVENTS WIN WIMBLEDON THAT SEASON*
[since Novotna won both Eastbourne/Wimbledon in 1998]
1999 Halard-D./Zvereva/Brandi [Davenport]
2000 Raymond/Halard-D./Hingis [V.Williams]
2001 Tauziat/Davenport/Henin [V.Williams]
2002 Dokic/Rubin/Daniilidou [S.Williams]
2003 Mag.Maleeva/Rubin/Clijsters [S.Williams]
2004 Sharapova/Kuznetsova/Pierce [Sharapova] #
2005 Sharapova/Clijsters/Koukalova [V.Williams]
2006 Zvonareva/Henin-H./Krajicek [Mauresmo]
2007 Jankovic/Henin/Chakvetadze [V.Williams]
2008 K.Bondarenko/Radwanska/Tanasugarn [V.Williams]
2009 RybakikovaWozniacki/Tanasguarn [S.Williams]
2010 Li/Makarova/Henin [S.Williams]
2011 Lisicki/Bartoli/Vinci [Kvitova]
2012 Oudin/Paszek/Petrova [S.Williams]
2013 Hantuchova/Vesnina/Halep [Bartoli]
2014 Ivanovic/Keys/Vandeweghe [Kvitova]
2015 Konjuh/Giorgi/Kerber/Bencic [S.Williams]
2016 Pliskova/Vandeweghe/Keys/Garcia/Cibulova [S.Williams]
2017 Vekic/Konteveit/Kvitova/Sevastova/Pliskova [Muguruza]
2018 Barty/Krunic/Kvitova/Maria/Wozniacki [Kerber]
2019 Garcia/Riske/Barty/Kenin/Pliskova [Halep]
2021 Konta/Samsonova/Jabeur/Ostapenko/Kerber [Barty]
2022 Alexandrova/Haddad M./Jabeur/Haddad M./Kvitova/Garcia [Rybakina]
2023 Alexandrova/Boulter/Kvitova/Ostapenko/Keys/Siniakova [Vondrousova]
2024 Samsonova/Boulter/Pegula/Putintseva/Shnaider/Kasatkina [Krejcikova]
2025 Maria/Mertens/Vondrousova/Kessler/Pegula/Joint [Swiatek]
2026...Vekic/Montgomery/Noskova/Bouzkova/Muchova/Keys
--
# - Sharapova won Birmingham/Wimbledon in 2004
NOTE: 85 con. title winners didn't win Wimb. since Sharapova/Birm.'04
NOTE: Sharapova '04 is only to do it since Novotna/1998 (1 of 101 winners, through 2025)


Such weird priorities.
— BrooklynDad_Defiant! (@mmpadellan.bsky.social) June 27, 2026 at 5:14 AM
[image or embed]

Heaven Birthday, Dave Butz๐ฏ️#Redskins Legend and Two-Time Super Bowl Champion Defensive Tackle
— Kevin Gallagher (@KevG163) June 24, 2026
A 6'7", 300-pound Consensus All-American behemoth from Purdue, Dave was drafted fifth overall by the Cardinals in 1973.
After two years, he went to Washington, where he would spend… pic.twitter.com/rgUgul0R4P

Imagine if the WTA had someone who could put together clips packages like this... (yeah, we know they'd still screw it up).
For the last 46 years, it has been my privilege to work alongside countless talented artists and crews to create these characters, stories, and films for you all.
— Tom Cruise (@TomCruise) June 23, 2026
I'm looking forward to seeing you at the movies! DIGGER. Only in theaters this October. pic.twitter.com/pgQMYwhUci


