Wimbledon recap Day 7: The point of the tournament on another day of drama

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Welcome to the Wimbledon briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories on each day of the tournament.

On Day 7, there was one of the points of the year, injury drama and a Wimbledon triumph for a star with a complicated record.

How did Félix Auger-Aliassime and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina play the point of the tournament?

Alejandro Davidovich Fokina lay flat on his back, his chest rising and falling. As he sat up, he lent Félix Auger-Aliassime a wry smile, almost in disbelief. At the back of the court, the Canadian, breathing equally as heavily, was also stunned.

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With No. 3 seed Auger-Aliassime two sets to one up, leading 3-1 and down 0-30 on No. 22 seed Davidovich Fokina’s serve in the fourth set, the duo played one of the best points of the year so far.

They sparred for 14 shots, stringing each other forward, backward and side to side as if controlled by a robot instructing them to cover every corner of the court with every shot possible on a tennis court.

The Spaniard raced forward, hitting an acute forehand crosscourt angle from a drop shot. He then lobbed Auger-Aliassime’s reply, covered good ground to the forehand side to gather a smash, and then slid to the net to retrieve another drop shot, before diving Superman-style to make a backhand volley.

For an instant, Davidovich Fokina thought about getting up, but instead sat on his backside, seemingly resigned to defeat. He just watched Auger-Aliassime, expecting him to put a mildly challenging backhand slice into the court.

But the ball fell just short, and as it hit the net, Davidovich Fokina hit the deck.

There was still time for much more drama. Fokina pulled up with an apparent acute injury in his left ankle while holding two break points on Auger-Aliassime’s serve in the first set, when the Canadian was serving to win the match. He received a medical timeout, broke Auger-Aliassime’s serve, and dragged the match into a fifth set, but Fokina could barely move after that. Auger-Aliassime ultimately triumphed 6-7(4), 7-6(6), 6-3, 6-7(2), 6-1, and they exchanged words over Fokina’s injury at the handshake.

At a news conference, Auger-Aliassime declined to discuss the interaction with Fokina and said the main problem is the rule that allows a receiving player to effectively pause an opponent’s service game.

“I think that it’s very simple: If you’re hurt bad, or whatever you’re hurt, while the game’s going on of your opponent, in the middle of the game, the opponent is serving, the shot clock is on? Basically, when you’re hurt bad, you’re forfeiting every point until you can call the physio.

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“If the physio helps you recover, you play your service game. If you’re hurt bad, then you retire, obviously.

“But to stop in the middle of an opponent’s service game and to be able to call the physio, I think that’s a disgrace of a rule. I don’t see any other sport where you can do that. I mark my words. It’s a disgrace of a rule.”

But Auger-Aliassime, who moves on to face Novak Djokovic in the quarterfinals, only really wanted to talk about the amazing point after that.

“It’s actually funny, I think if there’s a replay of my face, I’m actually laughing as I’m running to the ball. In my head, I was thinking, ‘this is too good.’”

“And then I missed the open shot.”

— Charlotte Harpur

Where does this Grand Slam defeat leave Aryna Sabalenka?

Once again, Aryna Sabalenka will head into the North American hard-court swing looking for her first Grand Slam title of the season.

Sabalenka has been a dominant world No. 1 at times, but not so much in the past couple of months. She has thrived on hard courts, but has been a lesser version of herself on clay and grass, except the Madrid Open clay, which plays a lot like a hard court.

In tennis, there are players who can roll with losses, or at least pretend in public that they are. Sabalenka is not one of them, and Sunday evening in London, after a 6-2, 7-6(2) Wimbledon defeat to Naomi Osaka, was no exception.

“I feel like my level was really low today, plus she was feeling her best,” Sabalenka said in a news conference.

“With every game we would play, I would feel worse, she would feel better. She would just go for her shots freely. I wouldn’t.”

Sabalenka has won four Grand Slam titles, two at the U.S. Open and two at the Australian Open — just like Osaka. Unlike Osaka, at least until recently, she is desperate to win one on clay or grass but has slipped this season in those efforts.

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She was a finalist at the French Open last year and lost in the quarterfinals this year. She was a semifinalist at Wimbledon last year but lost in the fourth round this year.

Still, she’s the world No. 1, even if she didn’t feel like it Sunday.

“I don’t even want to think about ranking at this point,” she said. “I just want to go, get completely drunk, forget about tennis, and try to get in better shape.”

— Matt Futterman

What is behind one master of variety’s grass renaissance — and did she ever need one?

On the face of it, Karolína Muchová’s poor Wimbledon record is a mystery.

How can it be that someone with such a varied game, who appears perfect for grass, has lost in the first round of her four previous visits to the All England Club?

In this spirit, Muchová’s win over 2024 champion Barbora Krejčíková on Sunday, to return to the quarterfinal stage she reached in 2019 and 2021, felt long overdue.

Dig a bit deeper, and those four straight first-round defeats are a bit more explicable. The first was in 2022, to the former champion and No. 16 seed Simona Halep, only a few weeks after an ankle injury had forced Muchová out of the French Open. The following year, Muchová had just reached the final at Roland Garros and suffered the all-too-familiar Wimbledon comedown, losing to solid grass-court player Jule Niemeier, who had reached the quarterfinals the previous year.

In 2024, Muchová had only just returned from nine months out following wrist surgery and lost to Paula Badosa, while her wrist was in such a bad way during last year’s defeat to Wang Xinyu that she couldn’t hit a topspin backhand.

This year, blessedly free of injury, Muchová has belatedly been able to play the kind of tennis that makes purists purr. The volleys, the angles, the improvisation — like the flicked lob that secured Sunday’s victory against her compatriot and former champion Krejčíková. Or this flicked one-handed backhand pass toward the end of the second set … A set that Muchová served for, before losing five straight games with the finishing line in sight:

Her reset in the third to claim a 7-5, 5-7, 6-3 win was very impressive.

Next up is a mouthwatering quarterfinal against Naomi Osaka, a Wimbledon occasion that will hopefully be worth the wait.

Charlie Eccleshare

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What happened to Hubert Hurkacz?

Most of the drama at Wimbledon on Sunday centered on match play, be it Auger-Aliassime’s five-setter against Davidovich Fokina or Osaka’s straight-set takedown of Sabalenka.

Then there was Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz, who retired due to injury, down 2-4 in the fifth set against Germany’s Jan-Lennard Struff, after a series of visits from the physio and more than one medical timeout.

Hurkacz, 29, had already been seen by a trainer, who appeared to be working on the right side of his torso, by the time the pair got to 5-5 in the fourth set with Hurkacz holding a 2-1 set lead.

But with Struff serving to close out the game, Hurkacz tossed his racket aside and told the chair umpire he needed a medical timeout. The 29-year-old had been clutching at a spot near his right oblique and even doubled over, clearly struggling, after forcing deuce.

Hurkacz left the court for treatment, returned, and was broken straight away in the next game, sending things to a fifth set.

At that point, Hurkacz told the chair umpire, Julie Kjendlie, it was too dark and he could not see, despite Wimbledon’s 9 p.m. darkness curfew for outer courts being more than an hour away. He then immediately said he needed to leave the court to change his clothes. When Kjendlie told him he’d already taken his two allotted bathroom breaks, he told her he needed to change his underwear, “and also, it’s too dark.”

The incident was reminiscent of Hurkacz’s bizarre turn at the French Open in 2024, when he asked opponent Grigor Dimitrov if he would not object to “changing the lady” — umpire Alison Hughes — midway through their match.

Clearly struggling to move, Hurkacz called the trainer twice more in the fifth set before finally retiring at 6-3, 7-6(5), 6-7(2), 5-7, 2-4 and sending 36-year-old Struff through to his first Grand Slam quarterfinal, where he will face world No. 1 Jannik Sinner.

— Ava Wallace

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Other notable results on Day 7:

Jessica Pegula (4) triumphed in an all-American clash with Iva Jović (16), staying steadier to win 4-6, 6-3, 6-1.

Sinner (1) got past Shintaro Mochizuki (Q) 6-3, 7-6(0), 6-3, while Novak Djokovic (7) defeated Roman Safiullin (Q) 7-6(6), 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

And Coco Gauff (7) beat Belinda Bencic (11) and the Wimbledon curfew to reach the quarterfinals for the first time with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 win, where she will meet Pegula.

Drop Shots

😱 A player in the girls’ singles was disqualified from her match after committing a cardinal Wimbledon sin.

☄️ How Djokovic’s aggressiveness and serving have defined his late career…

🌱 … And how Osaka is serving more than Grand Slam looks at this year’s tournament.

Up next: Fourth round continues

🎾 Women’s singles: Jasmine Paolini (13) vs. Alexandra Eala (29)

8:30 a.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Unlimited

A fizzing contest awaits between two formidable grass-court players who find themselves in a seriously open part of the bracket after the exits of 2022 champion Elena Rybakina and defending champion Iga Świątek. It was Eala, the 21-year-old new sports hero for the Philippines, who knocked out Świątek, while Paolini, the 2024 finalist from Italy, is looking comfortable with her tennis for the first time in a while after a challenging season to date.

🎾 Men’s singles: Grigor Dimitrov (WC) vs. Arthur Fery (WC)

10:30 a.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Unlimited

The battle of the wild cards. Dimitrov, 35, is surging through the field one year after heartache on Centre Court, while Fery, the British 23-year-old, has grabbed the opportunity afforded to him by the tournament with both hands. Creative players both, this could be an enthralling matchup — and Fery should get the Centre Court berth that British players dream about.

🎾 Women’s singles: Madison Keys (26) vs. Linda Nosková (9)

11 a.m. ET on ESPN Unlimited

Keys out-hit last year’s finalist, Amanda Anisimova, to earn the right to face Nosková, the 21-year-old Czech who is far more experienced than her age would suggest and has had a brilliant grass season to date. Nosková has a shade more variety than Keys, with a nifty drop shot and a good sense of when to attack the net, but the 31-year-old American has far more experience on big courts at Grand Slams, which may count for something when nerves kick in.

🎾 Men’s singles: Taylor Fritz (6) vs. Alexander Bublik (10)

1 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Unlimited

Fritz, last year a semifinalist, will be standing across the net from someone who exposes the holes and shows the importance of his game’s solidity. Kazakhstan’s Bublik, 29, has a serve to match Fritz’s, the groundstroke power to match Fritz’s, and more front-court nous and variety than the 28-year-old American. But Fritz is far less mercurial and far more reliable, which counts for more than fans assume when Grand Slams get tight.

Wimbledon 2026 women’s bracket

First Round

Second Round

Third Round

Fourth Round

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Finals

🇧🇾

1

A. Sabalenka

6 6

🇷🇸

T. Kostović (Q)

2 3

🇺🇦

O. Oliynykova

0 0

🇺🇸

M. Kessler

6 6

🇱🇻

J. Ostapenko

6 3 6

🇬🇧

H. Dart (WC)

3 6 4

🇭🇷

A. Ružić

6 3 6

🇬🇧

D. Semenistaja (LL)

3 6 3

🇨🇦

22

L. Fernandez

1 63

🇮🇩

J. Tjen

6 7

🇬🇧

M. Xu (WC)

2 6 2

🇦🇺

D. Kasatkina

6 3 6

🇷🇺

A. Gasanova (Q)

6 6

🇨🇴

E. Arango

3 1

🇫🇷

E. Jacquemot

1 5

🇯🇵

14

N. Osaka

6 7

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

6 6

🇷🇺

A. Zakharova

3 2

🇨🇦

B. Andreescu (Q)

63 66

🇨🇳

S. Zhang

7 7

🇺🇸

A. Parks

6 6

🇬🇧

A. Dudeney (WC)

3 3

🇹🇭

M. Sawangkaew (Q)

2 7 6

🇵🇱

20

M. Chwalińska (WC)

6 5 2

🇨🇿

32

K. Siniaková

6 6

🇨🇳

Q. Zheng

4 4

🇺🇸

P. Stearns

4 6 5

🇨🇿

N. Bartůňková

6 3 7

🇨🇿

B. Krejčíková

6 6

🇬🇧

H. Klugman (WC)

1 4

🇵🇱

M. Linette

5 4

🇷🇺

5

M. Andreeva

7 6

🇺🇸

4

J. Pegula

7 6

🇨🇿

D. Vidmanova

5 3

🇪🇸

S. Sorribes Tormo

6 6

🇦🇩

V. Jiménez Kasintseva

2 3

🇺🇦

D. Yastremska

7 4 7

🇯🇵

A. Ito

61 6 5

🇪🇸

J. Bouzas Maneiro

6 6

🇦🇹

27

A. Potapova

2 3

🇷🇺

18

E. Alexandrova

6 6

🇭🇺

P. Udvardy

4 2

🇹🇭

L. Tararudee

7 5 6

🇦🇹

L. Tagger

63 7 4

🇰🇿

Y. Putintseva

4 4

🇩🇪

T. Maria

6 6

🇷🇴

J. Cristian

61 0

🇺🇸

16

I. Jović

7 6

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

6 6

🇬🇧

M. Stojsavljevic (WC)

2 1

🇨🇳

X. Wang

6 2 6

🇮🇹

E. Cocciaretto

3 6 2

🇬🇧

F. Jones

4 4

🇫🇷

D. Parry

6 6

🇵🇱

M. Fręch

65 4

🇷🇺

19

A. Kalinskaya

7 6

🇺🇸

28

A. Li

5 6 4

🇹🇷

Z. Sönmez

7 1 6

🇺🇸

C. Liu (Q)

4 6 6

🇧🇪

H. Vandewinkel

6 3 4

🇦🇷

S. Sierra

6 5 7

🇭🇺

A. Bondár

3 7 5

🇩🇪

T. Korpatsch

2 1

🇺🇸

7

C. Gauff

6 6

🇺🇦

8

E. Svitolina

5 2

🇺🇦

D. Snigur

7 6

🇸🇮

V. Erjavec

4 6 66

🇫🇷

L. Jeanjean (Q)

6 4 7

🇦🇺

A. Tomljanović

2 6 4

🇬🇪

M. Bolkvadze (Q)

6 2 6

🇺🇸

A. Krueger (Q)

3 7 6

🇭🇷

31

D. Vekić

6 63 4

🇺🇸

23

E. Navarro

4 6 7

🇪🇸

P. Badosa

6 3 5

🇪🇸

O. Selekhmeteva

6 7

🇩🇪

S. Kraus

1 5

🇺🇦

Y. Starodubtseva

7 4 1

🇷🇺

A. Blinkova

63 6 6

🇦🇷

N. Podoroska

1 2

🇺🇦

12

M. Kostyuk

6 6

🇮🇹

13

J. Paolini

0 6 7

🇺🇸

R. Montgomery (Q)

6 4 5

🇷🇺

I. Shymanovich (Q)

2 6 1

🇨🇭

V. Golubic

6 2 6

🇺🇦

A. Kalinina

6 4 5

🇺🇿

K. Rakhimova

4 6 7

🇬🇷

M. Sakkari

6 6

🇩🇰

24

C. Tauson

3 3

🇵🇭

29

A. Eala

6 6

🇲🇽

R. Zarazúa

1 2

🇺🇸

S. Williams (WC)

3 7 3

🇦🇺

M. Joint

6 66 6

🇨🇿

T. Valentová

3 4

🇨🇿

K. Plíšková

6 6

🇺🇸

T. Townsend

1 6 3

🇵🇱

3

I. Świątek

6 2 6

🇺🇸

6

A. Anisimova

6 6

🇲🇰

L. Gjorcheska (Q)

3 2

🇭🇷

P. Marčinko

64 4

🇺🇸

S. Kenin

7 6

🇷🇴

I. Begu

4 4

🇬🇧

K. Swan (WC)

6 6

🇺🇸

K. Day (Q)

7 4 3

🇺🇸

26

M. Keys

65 6 6

🇷🇴

17

S. Cîrstea

6 7

🇨🇿

S. Bejlek

1 66

🇦🇺

K. Birrell

6 0 6

🇷🇺

A. Korneeva (Q)

3 6 2

🇨🇴

C. Osorio

6 6

🇨🇭

S. Waltert

2 1

🇩🇪

E. Seidel

4 3

🇨🇿

9

L. Nosková

6 6

🇷🇺

15

D. Shnaider

7 6

🇩🇪

E. Lys

5 1

🇺🇿

P. Kudermetova (Q)

3 3

🇷🇺

L. Samsonova

6 6

🇬🇧

K. Boulter

4 2

🇮🇹

T. Grant (Q)

6 6

🇦🇺

T. Gibson

1 6 2

🇨🇿

21

M. Bouzková

6 3 6

🇧🇪

25

E. Mertens

6 6

🇩🇪

L. Siegemund

2 4

🇧🇷

B. Haddad Maia

3 2

🇺🇿

M. Timofeeva (Q)

6 6

🇷🇴

E. Ruse

5 3

🇺🇸

C. McNally

7 6

🇫🇷

L. Boisson

4 6 3

🇰🇿

2

E. Rybakina

6 1 6

🇧🇾

1

A. Sabalenka

6 7

🇺🇸

M. Kessler

1 69

🇱🇻

J. Ostapenko

6 6

🇭🇷

A. Ružić

2 0

🇮🇩

J. Tjen

7 1 4

🇦🇺

D. Kasatkina

65 6 6

🇷🇺

A. Gasanova (Q)

3 2

🇯🇵

14

N. Osaka

6 6

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

6 6

🇨🇳

S. Zhang

3 2

🇺🇸

A. Parks

5 0

🇹🇭

M. Sawangkaew (Q)

7 6

🇨🇿

32

K. Siniaková

2 4

🇨🇿

N. Bartůňková

6 6

🇨🇿

B. Krejčíková

4 7 6

🇷🇺

5

M. Andreeva

6 5 4

🇺🇸

4

J. Pegula

7 6

🇪🇸

S. Sorribes Tormo

64 1

🇺🇦

D. Yastremska

3 7 2

🇪🇸

J. Bouzas Maneiro

6 61 6

🇷🇺

18

E. Alexandrova

7 7

🇹🇭

L. Tararudee

5 5

🇩🇪

T. Maria

1 2

🇺🇸

16

I. Jović

6 6

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

7 6

🇨🇳

X. Wang

5 0

🇫🇷

D. Parry

4 6 68

🇷🇺

19

A. Kalinskaya

6 7 710

🇹🇷

Z. Sönmez

5 3

🇺🇸

C. Liu (Q)

7 6

🇦🇷

S. Sierra

3 6 67

🇺🇸

7

C. Gauff

6 3 710

🇺🇦

D. Snigur

6 6

🇫🇷

L. Jeanjean (Q)

4 3

🇬🇪

M. Bolkvadze (Q)

1 0

🇺🇸

A. Krueger (Q)

6 6

🇺🇸

23

E. Navarro

3 6 6

🇪🇸

O. Selekhmeteva

6 4 1

🇷🇺

A. Blinkova

7 3 3

🇺🇦

12

M. Kostyuk

63 6 6

🇮🇹

13

J. Paolini

7 6

🇨🇭

V. Golubic

6 4

🇺🇿

K. Rakhimova

3 6 67

🇬🇷

M. Sakkari

6 0 710

🇵🇭

29

A. Eala

3 6 6

🇦🇺

M. Joint

6 2 0

🇨🇿

K. Plíšková

1 3

🇵🇱

3

I. Świątek

6 6

🇺🇸

6

A. Anisimova

6 4 7

🇺🇸

S. Kenin

2 6 63

🇬🇧

K. Swan (WC)

1 4

🇺🇸

26

M. Keys

6 6

🇷🇴

17

S. Cîrstea

6 6

🇦🇺

K. Birrell

3 4

🇨🇴

C. Osorio

3 6 2

🇨🇿

9

L. Nosková

6 4 6

🇷🇺

15

D. Shnaider

4 6 2

🇷🇺

L. Samsonova

6 4 6

🇮🇹

T. Grant (Q)

5 3

🇨🇿

21

M. Bouzková

7 6

🇧🇪

25

E. Mertens

2 6 6

🇺🇿

M. Timofeeva (Q)

6 3 0

🇺🇸

C. McNally

1 2

🇰🇿

2

E. Rybakina

6 6

🇧🇾

1

A. Sabalenka

6 6

🇱🇻

J. Ostapenko

4 4

🇦🇺

D. Kasatkina

1 3

🇯🇵

14

N. Osaka

6 6

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

6 7

🇹🇭

M. Sawangkaew (Q)

61

🇨🇿

N. Bartůňková

3 5

🇨🇿

B. Krejčíková

6 7

🇺🇸

4

J. Pegula

6 6

🇪🇸

J. Bouzas Maneiro

1 3

🇷🇺

18

E. Alexandrova

3 6 4

🇺🇸

16

I. Jović

6 3 6

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

6 4 710

🇷🇺

19

A. Kalinskaya

4 6 66

🇺🇸

C. Liu (Q)

3 7 2

🇺🇸

2

C. Gauff

6 65 6

🇺🇦

D. Snigur

3 2

🇺🇸

A. Krueger (Q)

6 6

🇺🇸

23

E. Navarro

2 6 1

🇺🇦

12

M. Kostyuk

6 4 6

🇮🇹

13

J. Paolini

6 6

🇬🇷

M. Sakkari

1 2

🇵🇭

29

A. Eala

7 6

🇵🇱

3

I. Świątek

69 2

🇺🇸

6

A. Anisimova

6 2 3

🇺🇸

26

M. Keys

3 6 6

🇷🇴

17

S. Cîrstea

6 3 69

🇨🇿

9

L. Nosková

2 6 7

🇷🇺

L. Samsonova

6 63 4

🇨🇿

22

M. Bouzková

4 7 6

🇧🇪

25

E. Mertens

7 6

🇰🇿

2

E. Rybakina

64 1

🇧🇾

1

A. Sabalenka

2 62

🇯🇵

14

N. Osaka

6 7

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

7 5 6

🇨🇿

B. Krejčíková

5 7 3

🇺🇸

4

J. Pegula

4 6 6

🇺🇸

16

I. Jović

6 3 1

🇨🇭

11

B. Bencic

6 3 4

🇺🇸

7

C. Gauff

4 6 6

🇺🇸

A. Krueger (Q)

🇺🇦

12

M. Kostyuk

🇮🇹

13

J. Paolini

🇵🇭

29

A. Eala

🇺🇸

26

M. Keys

🇨🇿

9

L. Nosková

🇨🇿

M. Bouzková

🇧🇪

25

E. Mertens

🇯🇵

14

N. Osaka

🇨🇿

10

K. Muchová

🇺🇸

4

J. Pegula

🇺🇸

7

C. Gauff

.

.

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.

.

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.

.

Wimbledon 2026 men’s bracket

First Round

Second Round

Third Round

Fourth Round

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Finals

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

4 6 68 6 6

🇷🇸

M. Kecmanović

6 3 7 2 3

🇵🇹

N. Borges

6 7 7

🇦🇺

T. Boyer (Q)

3 5 5

🇦🇺

A. Vukic

67 1 1

🇺🇸

J. Brooksby

7 6 6

🇺🇸

E. Nava

63 6 5 0

🇵🇪

31

I. Buse

7 3 7 6

🇪🇸

23

R. Jódar

6 6 7

🇬🇧

F. Gill (WC)

3 3 5

🇨🇦

D. Shapovalov (RET)

3 67

🇪🇸

P. Carreño Busta

6 7

🇯🇵

S. Mochizuki (Q)

6 6 6

🇬🇧

M. Basing (Q)

3 0 0

🇺🇸

E. Quinn

7 7 6

🇮🇹

14

L. Darderi

67 5 2

🇳🇴

11

C. Ruud

4 2 67

🇵🇱

H. Hurkacz

6 6 7

🇷🇸

H. Medjedovic

6 2 6 3 4

🇦🇹

S. Ofner

1 6 4 6 6

🇰🇷

S. Kwon (Q)

6 6 6

🇪🇸

M. Landaluce

4 3 3

🇫🇷

A. Muller

1 2 1

🇺🇸

21

T. Paul

6 6 6

🇺🇸

28

B. Nakashima

6 7 7

🇬🇧

J. Pinnington Jones (WC)

3 65 5

🇩🇪

J. Struff

6 7 4 2 7

🇦🇷

S. Báez

1 64 6 6 5

🇦🇷

C. Ugo Carabelli (RET)

6 6 2 0

🇪🇸

D. Mérida

4 3 6 3

🇭🇷

M. Čilič

1 2 4

🇷🇺

8

D. Medvedev

6 6 6

🇨🇦

3

F. Auger-Aliassime

6 6 6

🇰🇿

A. Shevchenko

3 1 4

🇦🇺

A. Walton

6 63 4 2

🇭🇷

D. Priżmić

4 7 6 6

🇵🇾

A. Vallejo

6 4 5 62

🇨🇴

N. Mejia (Q)

4 6 7 7

🇺🇸

M. Zheng (Q)

67 6 62 6 710

🇬🇧

26

C. Norrie

7 2 7 3 64

🇪🇸

22

A. Davidovich Fokina

6 6 7

🇦🇷

J. Cerúndolo

4 4 62

🇦🇷

T. Tirante

5 3 4

🇭🇺

F. Marozsán

7 6 6

🇫🇷

L. Van Assche (RET)

3 0

🇭🇺

M. Fucsovics

6 4

🇨🇿

D. Svrčina

1 4 7 3

🇺🇸

16

L. Tien

6 6 64 6

🇷🇺

12

A. Rublev

4 7 6 3 612

🇷🇺

R. (Q)

6 66 3 6 714

🇷🇸

A. Kovacevic

3 7 4 0

🇳🇱

B. van de Zandschulp

6 62 6 6

🇳🇱

J. de Jong

7 3 5 6 6

🇦🇺

R. Hijikata

64 6 7 4 3

🇪🇸

R. Bautista Agut

64 4 3

🇧🇷

24

J. Fonseca

7 6 6

🇫🇷

25

A. Rinderknech

7 7 4 7

🇬🇧

O. Tarvet (Q)

64 64 6 5

🇦🇷

M. Trungelliti

65 7 62 65

🇺🇸

M. Damm

7 65 7 7

🇫🇷

H. Gaston (Q)

1 4 2

🇬🇷

S. Tsitsipas

6 6 6

🇨🇳

Y. Wu

4 7 4 4

🇷🇸

7

N. Djokovic

6 5 6 6

🇦🇺

5

A. de Minaur

7 6 6

🇦🇷

R. Burruchaga

65 1 0

🇫🇷

A. Mannarino

6 6 6

🇫🇷

T. Droguet

2 4 1

🇪🇸

P. Llamas Ruiz (LL)

1 2 4

🇺🇸

Z. Svajda

6 6 6

🇵🇱

K. Majchrzak

6 7 7

🇨🇱

30

A. Tabilo

3 5 5

🇷🇺

19

K. Khachanov

6 5 6 6

🇬🇧

B. Harris (Q)

3 7 3 3

🇩🇪

Y. Hanfmann

66 7 6 6

🇫🇷

G. Mpetshi Perricard

7 69 2 3

🇳🇱

T. Griekspoor

4 6 5 4

🇦🇺

J. Duckworth

6 4 7 6

🇦🇷

M. Navone

6 65 3 68

🇮🇹

9

F. Cobolli

1 7 6 7

🇨🇿

15

J. Menšík

5 6 6 3 710

🇬🇧

T. Samuel (WC)

7 3 3 6 67

🇦🇺

D. Sweeny (Q)

64 3 5

🇧🇬

G. Dimitrov (WC)

7 6 7

🇨🇭

S. Wawrinka (WC)

7 616 67 65

🇮🇹

M. Berrettini

67 718 7 7

🇧🇪

R. Collignon

5 1 3

🇫🇷

20

A. Fils

7 6 6

🇫🇷

27

U. Humbert

2 5 6 6 3

🇧🇪

Z. Bergs

6 7 4 3 6

🇯🇵

S. Shimbakuro

66 3 7 3

🇵🇹

J. Faria (Q)

7 6 62 6

🇧🇦

D. Džumhur

6 2 2 1

🇬🇧

A. Fery (WC)

3 6 6 6

🇫🇮

O. Virtanen (Q)

6 3 68 6 711

🇺🇸

4

B. Shelton

4 6 7 2 69

🇺🇸

6

T. Fritz

6 6 6

🇷🇸

D. Lajović (LL)

3 4 3

🇺🇸

P. Kypson

3 6 6 6

🇺🇸

M. McDonald (Q)

6 1 4 4

🇫🇷

B. Bonzi (RET)

6 6 65 3 1

🇨🇦

G. Diallo

1 4 7 6 3

🇮🇹

L. Sonego

6 6 62 7

🇦🇷

29

T. Etcheverry

4 4 7 64

🇺🇸

17

F. Tiafoe

7 6 4 6

🇫🇷

T. Atmane

66 1 6 4

🇨🇿

V. Kopřiva

3 5 2

🇬🇧

J. Choinski

6 7 6

🇫🇷

K. Jacquet (Q)

6 6 7

🇱🇹

V. Gaubas (Q)

3 4 62

🇦🇺

T. Kokkinakis

6 3 7 3 4

🇰🇿

10

A. Bublik

4 6 610 6 6

🇨🇿

13

J. Lehečka

6 6 6

🇦🇺

A. Popyrin

4 2 4

🇸🇰

A. Molčan

6 3 7 6

🇩🇪

D. Altmaier

4 6 5 2

🇺🇸

A. Michelsen

6 6 2 3 2

🇬🇧

J. Fearnley (WC)

3 4 6 6 6

🇪🇸

J. Munar

6 6 6

🇦🇷

18

F. Cerúndolo

1 4 3

🇮🇹

32

M. Arnaldi

6 1 65 3

🇫🇷

Q. Halys

3 6 7 6

🇫🇷

C. Moutet

6 4 5 4

🇺🇸

M. Giron

4 6 7 6

🇫🇷

V. Royer

4 6 6 6

🇬🇧

H. Wendelken (WC)

6 3 3 3

🇧🇪

A. Blockx

4 7 65 6

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

6 68 7 7

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

7 7 6

🇵🇹

N. Borges

64 62 4

🇺🇸

J. Brooksby

6 6 6

🇵🇪

31

I. Buse

2 2 3

🇪🇸

23

R. Jódar

3 6 1 2

🇪🇸

P. Carreño Busta

6 3 6 1

🇯🇵

S. Mochizuki (Q)

6 7 7

🇺🇸

E. Quinn

2 66 5

🇵🇱

H. Hurkacz

7 6 6

🇦🇹

S. Ofner

68 4 4

🇰🇷

S. Kwon (Q)

3 64 2

🇺🇸

21

T. Paul

6 7 6

🇺🇸

28

B. Nakashima

6 66 65 7 67

🇩🇪

J. Struff

4 7 7 66 710

🇪🇸

D. Mérida

6 3 5 2

🇷🇺

8

D. Medvedev

3 6 7 6

🇨🇦

3

F. Auger-Aliassime

7 6 7

🇭🇷

D. Priżmić

62 3 5

🇨🇴

N. Mejia (Q)

7 68 1 4

🇺🇸

M. Zheng (Q)

64 7 6 6

🇪🇸

22

A. Davidovich Fokina

6 6 6

🇭🇺

F. Marozsán

3 0 3

🇭🇺

M. Fucsovics

66 6 7 6

🇺🇸

16

L. Tien

7 4 64 3

🇷🇺

R. (Q)

6 4 6 3 710

🇳🇱

B. van de Zandschulp

0 6 3 6 65

🇳🇱

J. de Jong

1 5 4

🇧🇷

24

J. Fonseca

6 7 6

🇫🇷

25

A. Rinderknech

6 7 6

🇺🇸

M. Damm

4 61 3

🇬🇷

S. Tsitsipas

3 4 2

🇷🇸

7

N. Djokovic

6 6 6

🇦🇺

5

A. de Minaur

6 6 6

🇫🇷

A. Mannarino

3 2 2

🇺🇸

Z. Svajda

2 6 65 6 6

🇵🇱

K. Majchrzak

6 2 7 4 3

🇷🇺

19

K. Khachanov

6 6 6

🇩🇪

Y. Hanfmann

3 4 4

🇦🇺

J. Duckworth

64 6 6 1

🇮🇹

9

F. Cobolli

7 3 7 6

🇨🇿

15

J. Menšík

65 6 5 3

🇧🇬

G. Dimitrov (WC)

7 4 7 6

🇮🇹

M. Berrettini

6 7 3 6

🇫🇷

20

A. Fils

4 5 6 3

🇧🇪

Z. Bergs

7 4 6 6

🇵🇹

J. Faria (Q)

66 6 2 3

🇬🇧

A. Fery (WC)

5 7 6 6

🇫🇮

O. Virtanen (Q)

7 65 3 3

🇺🇸

6

T. Fritz

6 6 7

🇺🇸

P. Kypson

2 2 5

🇨🇦

G. Diallo

64 6 64 7 2

🇮🇹

L. Sonego

7 4 7 66 6

🇺🇸

17

F. Tiafoe

4 6 7 6

🇬🇧

J. Choinski

6 2 5 2

🇫🇷

K. Jacquet (Q)

3 4 65

🇰🇿

10

A. Bublik

6 6 7

🇨🇿

13

J. Lehečka

6 6 6

🇸🇰

A. Molčan

3 2 4

🇬🇧

J. Fearnley (WC)

4 63 4

🇪🇸

J. Munar

6 7 6

🇫🇷

Q. Halys

65 3 4

🇺🇸

M. Giron

7 6 6

🇫🇷

V. Royer

1 3 63

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

6 6 7

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

6 6 6

🇺🇸

J. Brooksby

4 3 4

🇪🇸

23

R. Jódar

6 65 4 4

🇯🇵

S. Mochizuki (Q)

1 7 6 6

🇵🇱

H. Hurkacz

4 7 7 6

🇺🇸

21

T. Paul

6 65 5 2

🇩🇪

J. Struff

7 7 7

🇷🇺

8

D. Medvedev

64 65 5

🇨🇦

3

F. Auger-Aliassime

7 6 6

🇺🇸

M. Zheng (Q)

61 2 1

🇪🇸

22

A. Davidovich Fokina

7 6 6

🇭🇺

M. Fucsovics

63 2 3

🇷🇺

R. Safiullin (Q)

6 6 6

🇧🇷

24

J. Fonseca

3 3 3

🇫🇷

25

A. Rinderknech

5 4 6 64

🇷🇸

N. Djokovic

7 6 1 7

🇦🇺

5

A. de Minaur

6 5 6 6

🇺🇸

Z. Svajda

2 7 2 4

🇷🇺

19

K. Khachanov

6 64 7 2 2

🇮🇹

9

F. Cobolli

0 7 65 6 6

🇧🇬

G. Dimitrov (WC)

6 6 3 5 6

🇮🇹

M. Berrettini

3 4 6 7 3

🇧🇪

Z. Bergs

6 5 6 63 65

🇬🇧

A. Fery (WC)

2 7 2 7 7

🇺🇸

6

T. Fritz

4 6 6 7

🇮🇹

L. Sonego

6 3 4 65

🇺🇸

17

F. Tiafoe

6 65 611 6 3

🇰🇿

10

A. Bublik

4 7 7 4 6

🇨🇿

13

J. Lehečka

6 6 4 6

🇪🇸

J. Munar

4 4 6 4

🇺🇸

M. Giron

2 64 4

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

6 7 6

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

6 7 6

🇯🇵

S. Mochizuki (Q)

3 6 3

🇵🇱

H. Hurkacz (RET)

6 7 62 5 2

🇩🇪

J. Struff

3 65 7 7 4

🇨🇦

3

F. Auger-Aliassime

64 7 6 62 6

🇪🇸

22

A. Davidovich Fokina

7 66 3 7 1

🇷🇺

R. Safiullin (Q)

66 3 6 3

🇷🇸

7

N. Djokovic

7 6 3 6

🇦🇺

5

A. de Minaur

🇮🇹

9

F. Cobolli

🇧🇬

G. Dimitrov (WC)

🇬🇧

A. Fery (WC)

🇺🇸

6

T. Fritz

🇰🇿

10

A. Bublik

🇨🇿

13

J. Lehečka

🇩🇪

2

A. Zverev

🇮🇹

1

J. Sinner

🇩🇪

J. Struff

🇨🇦

3

F. Auger-Aliassime

🇷🇸

7

N. Djokovic

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