
The smile says it all. pic.twitter.com/CQjbCgTpSp
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 5, 2026
Jessica Pegula d. Iva Jovic 4-6 6-3 6-1 at Wimbledon
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 5, 2026
Pegula reaches her 1st Wimbledon quarterfinal since 2023.
Nice comeback against such a tough young talent.
✅10th Slam QF
✅35th win of 2026
Too solid. ๐บ๐ธ pic.twitter.com/QlGKqbGtZN
After going 0-6 in her first half dozen slam QF appearances, Pegula has gone 3-0 in last three attempts (at the 2024-25 U.S., and AO26). ...meanwhile, in a battle of Czechs, #10 Karolina Muchova was doing Karolina Muchova things.
Karolina Muchova hits an incredible one-handed backhand passing shot. pic.twitter.com/sWJVbe8ZyG
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 5, 2026
Muchova's Wimbledon career began with great promise, with QF finishes in her first two appearances in 2019 and '21. But since then, as has often been the case over the years, Muchova's continual stream of injuries, or comebacks from injuries, or limited ability to play at 100% due to lingering injuries (you know, all that) held her back at SW19 just like it has when it's come to her piling result upon result over the course of a long season and benefitting from such momentum and any resulting draw placement. Muchova played at SW19 the last four years, but rarely without something holding her back, choosing to throw her proverbial hat into the ring but coming up short in the 1st Round all four times. But 2026 has been different, as the Czech has been able to stay on tour all season long, producing between the lines and then coming back to do it again and again soon afterward, and right on schedule. In January, she reached her first AO second week since her 2021 SF, then soon after won her maiden 1000 title in Doha (her first tour title of any kind since '19), and played in her first Sunshine Double SF (at Miami). She's racked up five Top 10 wins (more than in 2024-25 combined) and returned to the Top 10 for the first time since 2024. As the season's third major rolled around, Muchova had already played in three finals (more than in any other season, doing it in just the first half of '26) on three different surfaces. Playing in the 4th Round today against countrywoman Barbora Krejcikova, the last remaining former Wimbledon champion in the women's draw, Muchova faced an opponent who employs many of the same point contructing tactics that she does, only with greater efficiency and far less of Muchova's unique (and sometimes magical) flair. The two found themselves in a stalemate late in the 1st, having combined to go 0-for-5 on BP opportunities while holding serve in the first eleven games. But Muchova finally cracked the code in game 12, breaking to claim a 7-5 set and then also getting the maiden break of serve in the 2nd set in game 6 (on BP #4) to take a 4-2 lead. She led 5-2, and served for the win at 5-3. But it was then when Muchova's game became a bit more tentative, if not shaky, while Krejcikova took advantage of her opponent's touch of nervous tension. Krejcikova rallied to make a match of things again, breaking Muchova in consecutive games to take a 6-5 lead. With Krejcikova serving for the set, Muchova staved off a pair SP with a scramble and winner off a drop shot, then a spectacular volley. But Krejickova got the hold to send things to a 3rd. But in the final stanza, Krejcikova's movement was hampered down the stretch, and Muchova again took control. This time she held her ground and finished off the 7-5/5-7/6-3 win to reach her third Wimbledon QF, and eighth of her slam career. She remains in the mix to become the third different Czech winner of this event in the last four years.
Muchova after beating Krejcikova to reach Wimbledon QF
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 5, 2026
Karolina: “You have to give it to her. She’s not a Wimbledon champion by luck. She knows how to play on this surface. She can get you to all the uncomfortable positions. I think I lost focus for 1, 2 balls and she started… pic.twitter.com/lHddzWWDls
Krejcikova's exit means that another first-time Wimbledon champion will claim the crown, with a tenth different winner in the ten years since Serena Williams' last title in 2016. Only Jasmine Paolini remains in the draw as a former SW19 *finalist* (so I guess I'm an Eala 4th Round win away from the "Prop Pick" of the champion being a "first-time Wimbledon finalist" getting the "W"). ...in what was sold as the marquee match-up of the day, #14 Naomi Osaka continued to play a pretty fine game of tennis on the grass.
Too strong ๐ฅ @naomiosaka showed some incredible tennis as she defeated Sabalenka in the Round of 16! #Wimbledon https://t.co/h4XQVPmEDg
— wta (@WTA) July 5, 2026
While #1 Aryna Sabalenka didn't collapse in any sort of awkwardly memorable way as she has in recent events, she surely didn't produce the level of play that will anywhere near suit her own assessment of things. Of course, a great deal of that had to do with the clean game of Osaka, who suddenly looks absolutely unbothered by the surface beneath her feet, with her shots flowing on grass just as the bottom of her walk-on kimono attire has elegantly brushed across the blades of grass at the start of each of her matches over the first seven days of play at this Wimbledon. Osaka took her initial lead with a break of Sabalenka's serve to lead 2-1 in the 1st. After saving a BP in the next game, she coasted to the finish. A double-break lead at 4-1, helped along by too many ill-timed Sabalenka errors, ultimately led to a 1st set win. In the 2nd, both women minded their own serve. Sabalenka saved a pair of BP at 2-2, but they would be the only BP faced by either woman in the set. For her part, Osaka only saw Sabalenka get to 30 once in any of her six service games as the set headed to a tie-break. Once there, Sabalenka's usual mastery of the format never showed up. Osaka jumped out to a 4-1 lead by taking back-to-back points on Sabalenka's serve, and never looked back en route to a 7-2 win that ended Sabalenka's Open era record of 21 consecutive tie-breaks won in grand slam play and brings to an end the Belarusian's streak of fourteen straight QF+ finishes in majors. Osaka took the 6-2/7-6(2) victory to reach her first Wimbledon QF, notching her third career #1 win (first since 2019) and first Top 10 victory on any surface other than hard court. Of her now sixteen career Top 10 wins, this is just Osaka's fourth collected this decade.
Naomi Osaka defeats the world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka to advance to the quarterfinals‼ pic.twitter.com/jsqaxvgheP
— ESPN (@espn) July 5, 2026
Osaka's QF is her first in slam play outside of the AO/US hard courts. In four of her five QF runs in those events, save for last year's U.S. SF, she went on to win the title. Could she be looked upon as the legitimate SW19 favorite now? Maybe not yet, but for the first time -- ever at this major, really -- you *can* see such a possibility from here. Meanwhile, the doors at the top of the women's rankings are swinging open *big time* right now. Sabalenka is in a bad mental patch, with her U.S. Open title defense coming up. #2 Rybakina has been "off" since the spring, while #3 Swiatek has been struggling for two years (save for a three-month span last summer which now seems like about five years ago). Meanwhile, #4 Pegula has been (largely) the most consistent player all season, the likes of Gauff finds ways to win when she's not at her best, the schedule's turn to Osaka's *best* surface is right around the corner, and Muchova is still holding together physically and sthreatening a "Peak Muchova" season campaign IN JULY. And I'm only now mentioning the reigning RG champ, Mirra Andreeva. Summer hard courts are gonna be inter-resting. ...in the final women's Round of 16 match of the day, it turned out to be a race against the clock. On Court 1, #7 Coco Gauff and #11 Belinda Bencic played a three-setter late into the Wimbledon village evening, with Bencic taking the opening set before Gauff rebounded to push things to a decider. Gauff took a 2-0 lead in the 3rd, saw Bencic knot the score at 2-2, then Coco went up 4-2. Gauff served at 4-2, with the tournament curfew quickly approaching at the top of the hour as Bencic threatened to break serve, which she did to close to 4-3 with about twelve minutes left before play would be called at the first break in the action at 11 p.m. Two games later, Gauff served for the match at 5-4, knowing that if she could hold she'd win and head home for the night with a date for her QF two days away. If Bencic broke to knot the set at 5-all, play would be suspended and they'd have to return on Monday to finish this one off. While Gauff seemed super determined in the game, Bencic seemed a tad flustered by the moment. Gauff played right through it, easily holding at 15 to complete the 4-6/6-3/6-4 win. As the clock stood at about two minutes before 11 p.m., Gauff tapped her wrist and the "invisible watch" there, signaling that she knew the score and the situation, and brought it home just under the wire.
Coco Gauff wins one of the matches of the tournament one minute before the curfew pic.twitter.com/OleJCdjTGl
— ๐ฆ (@RamoFootball) July 5, 2026
Gauff d. Belinda Bencic 4-6 6-3 6-4
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 5, 2026
COCO REACHES HER FIRST WIMBLEDON QUARTERFINAL.
She’s now reached the quarterfinals or better in all 4 Slams.
She’s won her last 3 matches in deciding sets.
✅11th Slam QF
✅30th win of 2026
Massive breakthrough for her on grass.
๐บ๐ธ❤️ pic.twitter.com/FU8QKMXqF1
The win sends Gauff into her first Wimbledon QF, finally completing her Career QF Slam in her 28th major draw. ....a round-up of the events outside of SW19: Junior play has already started at Wimbledon, but the tune-up winner at Roehampton was crowned a few days ago. The honor was claimed by Bannerette Janae Preston, as the 15-year old (girls' #26) claimed her fourth J300 win of the season on a third different surface with a win over China's Yu Jun Lin.
#Wimbledon Juniors start today!
— FranzyBl (@FranzyBl) July 4, 2026
Boys: Michael Antonius ๐บ๐ธ (7th seed) is a favourite after Roehampton win,but also runner-up Svit Suljic ๐ธ๐ฎwho upset several seeds
Girls: More open, but Roehampton winner Janae Preston (15 yo ๐บ๐ธ) & finalist Yu Jun Lin (16yo ๐จ๐ณ) look good on grass pic.twitter.com/8jsiRLRvgv
RG doubles champions Jana Kovackova & Katerina Zajickova took the Roehampton doubles, and the Czechs are now at the AELTC with Kovackova looking to potentially become the first player to ever complete a Career Junior Doubles Slam. If the duo were to take the title in London they'd also become the first team to win RG/WI back-to-back since another Czech twosome, Barbora Krejcikova & Katerina Siniakova in 2013. Kovackova is looking for her *fourth* straight girls' slam win, having won the US/AO with her sister Alena, and in Paris this spring with Zajickova. In the Roehampton wheelchair competition, Diede de Groot advanced to the singles final only to retire down 7-5/3-1 vs. Wang Ziying. She also withdrew from the doubles final (w/ Aniek Van Koot) against Wang & Li Xiaohui. Hopefully it's just a precautionary decision ahead of Wimbledon, as it's worth noting that she lost a set in two of her three pre-final matches (to Jiske Griffioen and Kgothatso Montjane, before def. Van Koot in two), so maybe it was a lingering issue she was playing with that eventually became something that it was smart to push no longer mid-way into the final. The Wimbledon wheelchair event takes place in week two, where de Groot is scheduled to be the #4 seed (though she's actually back up to #2 in the rankings).

#14 Naomi Osaka/JPN def. #1 Aryna Sabalenka/BLR
#10 Karolina Muchova/CZE def. Barbora Krejcikova/CZE
#4 Jessie Pegula/USA def. #16 Iva Jovic/USA
#7 Coco Gauff/USA def. #11 Belinda Bencic/SUI
(Q) Ashlyn Krueger/USA vs. #12 Marta Kostyuk/UKR
#13 Jasmine Paolini/ITA vs. #29 Alex Eala/PHI
#26 Madison Keys/USA vs. #9 Linda Noskova/CZE
#21 Marie Bouzkova/CZE vs. #25 Elise Mertens/BEL
#1 Siniakova/Townsend (CZE/USA) vs. #16 Muhammad/Stollar (USA/HUN)
#10 Guo/Mladenovic (CHN/FRA) vs. Detiuc/Khromacheva (CZE/RUS)
#3 Danilina/Krunic (KAZ/SRB) vs. (PR) Neel/Olmos (EST/MEX)
Jiang X./Xu Y. (CHN/CHN) vs. #7 Siegemund/Zvonareva (GER/RUS)
Kostyuk/Ruse (UKR/ROU) vs. #9 Perez/Schuurs (AUS/NED)
#13 Aoyama/Liang (JPN/TPE) vs. Hsieh/Wang Xin. (TPE/CHN)
Noskova/Sramkova (CZE/SVK) vs. Piter/Siskova (POL/CZE)
#14 Hunter/McNally (AUS/USA) vs. #2 Dabrowski/Stefani (CAN/BRA)
Hunter/Polmans (AUS/AUS) vs. Sutjiadi/Andreozzi (INA/ARG)
Stollar/Pavic (HUN/CRO) vs. #6 Krawczyk/Skupski (USA/GBR)
Fernandez/Salisbury (CAN/GBR) vs. #3 Zhang S./Harrison (CHN/USA)
Siegemund/Roger-Vasselin (GER/FRA) vs. #2 Ostapenko/Arevalo (LAT/ELS)
...YES, BUT ON THE OTHER HAND... ON DAY 7:
I was almost hoping that the all-Czech match would be on at a time when I couldn't watch it because I hated for one of them to lose, and I was suspicious that the Czech Curse would manifest. It did--Barbora Krejcikova, who has been quite ill lately, struggled with her breathing (also a Czech thing),
— Diane Elayne Dees (@womenwhoserve.bsky.social) July 5, 2026 at 11:35 AM
and was visibly hampered, but she just kept fighting. As for Karolina Muchova, she was her brilliant self, winning 7-5, 5-7, 6-3. Will we ever see Muchova and Krejcikova (and Vondrousova, but that's another matter) fully healthy at the same time? The Czech Curse needs to end. #Wimbledon #WTA
— Diane Elayne Dees (@womenwhoserve.bsky.social) July 5, 2026 at 11:35 AM
While I didn't wish to see either Krejcikova or Muchova lose, this was one of those cases where I was good with *whatever* the final result was, and just hoped that the winner would be left in good enough shape to have a better than average chance to continue with her success at least another round, and maybe a few after that. Muchova was *probably* the most likely there, considering her full season of work to date, so...
...ANOTHER ANGLE (w/ AN ACTUAL PHOTO, VIDEO AND ART COMPANION) OF THE SCREEN GRAB FROM YESTERDAY... ON DAY 7:
Whatever the Tagalog word for "Quit" is, it sure isn't in Alex' personal vocabulary ๐คฏ pic.twitter.com/5eJlqNwB95
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) July 4, 2026
That photo is so Iconic it made me make this Gif.
— Alfred Presents (@alfredpresents) July 4, 2026
Alexandra Eala : Funniest Sports Play In Tennis History : Alfred Memes Too #GIFS pic.twitter.com/qCw9ura5c0
Equality Before Death, by William-Adolphe Bouguereau, 1848, ๐ธ by Mathias Schulz pic.twitter.com/LuWo23AJqX
— ArtButMakeItSports (@ArtButSports) July 4, 2026
๐ถ๐ฅJailhouse Rock – Elvis (1957)
— ๐ง๐ถ๐บ๐ฒ๐น๐ฒ๐๐ ๐ ๐๐๐ถ๐ฐ ✨๐ต (@Hoang_HQ) November 9, 2025
Iconic dance, iconic sound—birth of the rock era. ๐ฅ#TimelessRebel pic.twitter.com/66ACZFRUG2


Naomi Osaka brings the kimono to Centre Court ๐ค pic.twitter.com/EXWcFELNy9
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 5, 2026

Aryna Sabalenka says she wants to get completely drunk, forget about tennis, and try harder next time after her loss to Naomi Osaka
— The Tennis Letter (@TheTennisLetter) July 5, 2026
“Do you feel like you’re the world #1 player at the moment? If not, what do you feel like you need to do to get back to that status?”
Aryna: “Ah,… pic.twitter.com/f5GW44KPfJ
We're living for this duo ๐ซถ @cocogauff#wimbledon pic.twitter.com/9gsHwnsidn
— Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) July 5, 2026
There's tennis, and then there's Karolina Muchova tennis.. pic.twitter.com/4TQ9Eh7el9
— Jimmie48 Photography (@JJlovesTennis) July 5, 2026

“A star!! ๐ฅน”
— K ๐ซ (@keifornal) July 4, 2026
— ๐ท๐บMaria Sharapova on ๐ต๐ญAlex Eala
her tennis idol. what a full circle moment for Alex! ๐ฅน๐ pic.twitter.com/Pixr4FGbQY

Australian Open F - #5 Rybakina d. Sabalenka (W)
Madrid QF - #32 Baptiste d. Sabalenka
Rome 3rd - #23 Cirstea d. Sabalenka
Roland Garros QF - #23 Shnaider d. Sabalenka
Berlin SF - #4 Pegula d. Sabalenka
Wimbledon 4th - #14 Osaka d. Sabalenka
*"CAREER SLAM" FEATS IN 2020s*
=QF=
2021 WI - Karolina Pliskova, CZE (36th slam MD)
2022 AO - Kaia Kanepi, EST (53rd)
2023 RG - Ons Jabeur, TUN (24th)
2023 RG - Aryna Sabalenka, BLR (21st)
2023 WI - Jessie Pegula, USA (19th)
2023 WI - Iga Swiatek, POL (18th)
2023 US - Karolina Muchova, CZE (19th)
2023 US - Alona Ostapenko, LAT (31st)
2024 WI - Barbora Krejcikova, CZE (18th)
2026 AO - Amanda Anisimova, USA (24th)
2026 WI - Coco Gauff, USA (28th)

This clip, from Larry David's new show "Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness" is one of his FUNNIEST ever.
— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) July 5, 2026
Awesome to have Rob Reiner as George Washington in possibly one of his final on-screen performances.
Cameo by Kimmel is chef's kiss.
RIP, Rob Reiner. pic.twitter.com/b7NSCB2P68

A mid-flight scratch, then an effortless roll to face the pursuing raven. Apex predator aura. pic.twitter.com/JtIHvjNbBE
— Interesting World (@_fluxfeeds) July 4, 2026

Today marks 10 Sundays until the first NFL Sunday of the season. ๐ pic.twitter.com/C6QkEls8ke
— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) July 5, 2026


TOP EARLY-ROUND (1r-2r): #1 Aryna Sabalenka/BLR (two straight sets wins; extends slam TB win streak to 21)
TOP MIDDLE-ROUND (3r-QF): x
TOP LATE-ROUND (SF-F): x
TOP QUALIFYING MATCH: Q1 - Anastasia Gasanova/RUS def. Varvara Lepchenko/USA 2-6/6-1/7-6(12-10) - Lepchenko led 5-3 in the 3rd, twice served for the match, led 5-1 in MTB and at 9-6 held four MP over a 5-point stretch. Gasanova wins 12-10.
TOP EARLY-RD. MATCH (1r-2r): 1st Rd. - Maya Joint/AUS def. Serena Williams/USA 6-3/6-7(6)/6-3 - 20-year old Aussie, 1-13 in her last 14 matches, defeats returning 44-year old Williams in her first singles match since 2022
TOP MIDDLE-RD. MATCH (3r-QF): x
TOP LATE-RD. MATCH (SF-F/Jr.-WC): x
=============================
FIRST VICTORY: #11 Belinda Bencic/SUI (def. Stojsavljevic/GBR)
FIRST SEED OUT: #20 Maja Chwalinska/POL (1st Rd. - hurt ankle/foot on MP up 6-2/5-2 vs. Sawangkaew/THA)
FIRST SLAM MD WINS: Anastasia Gasanova/RUS (2nd MD), Tyra Grant/ITA (1st MD), Mananchaya Sawangkaew/THA (2nd MD), Lanlada Tararudee/THA (2nd MD)
UPSET QUEENS: Czech Republic
REVELATION LADIES: Southeast Asians
NATION OF POOR SOULS: GBR (1-7 1st Rd., after 0/7 through qualfiying; Kartal DNP, Raducanu w/d and started 0-7 in MD play)
LAST QUALIFIER STANDING: Ashlyn Krueger/USA (in 4th Rd.)
LAST WILD CARD STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
PROTECTED RANKING WINS: Karolina Pliskova/CZE, Sara Sorribes Tormo/ESP (both 2nd Rd.)
LUCKY LOSERS: Darja Semenistaja/LAT(L)
LAST BRIT STANDING: Katie Swan/GBR (2nd Rd.)
Ms. OPPORTUNITY: xx
IT "Filipina": Alex Eala/PHI (first PHI to slam Round of 16)
COMEBACK PLAYER: x
CRASH & BURN: #2 Elena Rybakina/KAZ, #3 Iga Swiatek/POL and #6 Amanda Anisimova/USA ('22 champ and both '25 finalists lose in 3rd Round on middle Saturday)
ZOMBIE QUEEN OF LONDON: Nominees: Krueger (1r- trailed Vekic set and 5-3, twice served for match); Gauff (2r- Sierra at 5-4 in 3rd, 7-4 in MTB); Noskova (3r- saved MP vs. Cirstea)
DOUBLES STAR: x
VETERAN PLAYER (KIMIKO CUP): xx
LAWN COURT ROLLER: x
JUNIOR BREAKOUT: x
SPIRIT OF JANA (NOVOTNA) HONOREE: Maja Chwalinska/POL (devastating loss in 1st Rd. after having MP at 6-2/5-2 before fall injuries ankle); Additional nominees: Muchova, Noskova, Bouzkova






