Jannik Sinner and Linda Noskova are your 2026 Wimbledon champions. Full report plus all the ATP beef that's fit to post BELOW.
In a civil war of Axis powers -- or was it an all-German affair? -- Jannik Sinner rallied from a set down to defeat Alexander Zverev 6-7(7), 7-6(2), 6-3, 6-4 to successfully defend his Wimbledon title. Although I'm no fan of the Slavic German, I must admit I was kind of hoping he would somehow pull off the upset. (Sinner is completely inoffensive, but I find no joy in seeing him win.) And while Zverev did a million times better than he has in his previous nine matchups against the World No. 1, it became clear by the second set that even after (sort of) winning a major, he still doesn't have the belief to challenge the Big Two, as Sinner looked vulnerable throughout the match only to be repeatedly rescued by Zverev's poor shot selection. Here's hoping Carlos is back at full force soon.
Top seeds Harri Heliovaara of Finland and Henry Patten of Britain defeated sixth seeds Marcelo Arévalo and Mate Pavić 7-6(4), 7-6(3) to win their second Wimbledon men's doubles title together.
Linda Noskova fulfilled my pre-tournament prediction by defeating fellow Czech Karolína Muchová 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 to win her first Grand Slam title and the Wimbledon crown. After blowing a 6-2, 5-2 lead and five championship points, I had to retire to the bedroom. But to the 21-year-old's credit, she quickly regrouped and was able to regain control of the match.
Czech mates: Navratilova and Kvitova
China's Guo Hanyu and France's Kristina Mladenovic captured their first Grand Slam title together by defeating second seeds Gabriela Dabrowski and Luisa Stefani 6-3, 7-5 in the Wimbledon women's doubles final.
Jelena Ostapenko and Marcelo Arevalo rallied from a set down to beat Storm Hunter and Marc Polmans 4-6, 7-5, 6-2, earning their first Wimbledon mixed doubles title and becoming the tournament's first champions of 2026.
Champions Ball
Elsewhere around the net ...
Borna Coric
Team Darderi
Lorenzo Musetti
Jacopo Vasami
Jacopo mucho
Ignacio Buse
Back to the '80s
Casper Ruud jumps on the modified mullet bandwagon
Jaime Pulgar heads to SMU
Camilo Ugo Carabelli
Woof
I watched in disbelief as Jacob Fearnley rallied from a set and two breaks down to defeat Adam Walton 5-7, 7-6(8), 6-4 at the Hall of Fame Open. The hunky Scotsman incredibly saved six match points during his dramatic comeback to secure the grass-court championship title, which is now a Challenger event that no longer coincides with the induction ceremonies.
In the doubles final, Finn Reynolds and James Watt defeated Fernando Romboli and John-Patrick Smith 6–1, 6–7(2), [10–6].
Arneodo Romain and the boys
Tom Hands and Matthew Summers were winners in Nottingham
Marcus Willis is hunky and has a sense of humo(u)r!
Matteo Vavassori
Fabien Rebeoul and Sadio Doumbia put the meat in a Vavassori brothers sandwich
Fabien
Andrea Pellegrino and Andres Herrera
Is Adam Jones Sinner's secret weapon?
Congratulations on winning the genetic lottery!
Ben Lock
Vítek Kopřiva
Fuck marry kill: Djokovic Edition
Elise Mertens can't stop winning
Mick Assaf was all in for Novak
Cam Norrie pin-up
Vasek Pospisil
Nicolas Moreno
Cristian Garin
Ryan Seggerman on the grass
Cheers
Filip Misolic
Jan Zielinski
Manuel Guinard
Jonesy and Fabio Fognini
Matteo Vavassori
Tracy Austin and Martina Navratilova reunion
Pitchman Pedro
Check out his song pick!
Andy Mies is getting thicc
Fede Gomez
Zlatan Dzumhur
Yes
Alexandre Aubriot gets excited
The Hitting Squad
Grass from the past: Dominic Thiem

























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