Wimbledon 2025 Quarter-Finals Recap: Big Names Deliver, New Stars Rise
Wimbledon 2025 brought the drama, and July 8th was the day it all came to life. On a sizzling Tuesday at the All England Club, the quarter-finals served up a feast of powerful comebacks, career milestones, and championship-calibre performances.
Here’s everything you need to know from the day that defined this year’s final four.
Alcaraz Is Inevitable: Norrie No Match for the Champ
Carlos Alcaraz def. Cameron Norrie
6–2, 6–3, 6–3
The reigning champ looks unstoppable. Carlos Alcaraz bulldozed his way past Britain’s own Cameron Norrie in front of a packed Centre Court. From the first serve, Alcaraz was in control, serving aces, landing 89% of first serves, and moving like a cat on the grass.
Norrie tried mixing things up, serve and volley, low slices, even moonballs, but Alcaraz had all the answers. With this win, the Spaniard extends his win streak to 23 matches and is now two wins away from a Wimbledon three-peat.
Alcaraz didn’t face a single break point in the first two sets. That’s dominance.
Fritz Makes History: Beats Khachanov to Reach First Wimbledon Semi
Taylor Fritz def. Karen Khachanov
6–3, 6–4, 1–6, 7–6(4)
In what may be the biggest win of his career, Taylor Fritz broke new ground, reaching the Wimbledon semi-finals for the first time. He came out firing, taking the first two sets with a near-flawless serving performance. Then... a stumble. Khachanov roared back in the third and nearly pushed it to a decider.
But Fritz, even with a minor blister scare and a controversial line call, held his nerve in the fourth-set tiebreak. He’s now the first American man to make the semis here since 2018.
What’s Next:
Alcaraz vs. Fritz is a clash of styles that promises fireworks. Can Fritz’s big serve shake the defending champ?
Sabalenka Survives a Scare
Aryna Sabalenka def. Laura Siegemund
4–6, 6–2, 6–4
For nearly three hours, Sabalenka fought for her Wimbledon life. She lost the first set and trailed in the decider, but champions find a way. And that’s exactly what the world No. 1 did.
Siegemund brought creativity, finesse, and relentless hustle, but Sabalenka powered through with thunderous groundstrokes and clutch serving. She now stands one win away from her first final at SW19.
“It’s not just about power, it’s about staying in the moment,” Sabalenka said after the match.
Anisimova’s Back and Better Than Ever
Amanda Anisimova def. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
6–1, 7–6(11–9)
Welcome back, Amanda.
The 23-year-old American is playing like a woman on a mission. She stormed through the first set in under 30 minutes, then held off a late surge from Pavlyuchenkova in a nerve-wracking second-set tiebreak.
This is Anisimova’s first Grand Slam semi-final since 2019, and she’s officially the first American woman in a Wimbledon semi since Serena Williams. She’s hitting clean, moving well, and brimming with confidence.
A Word for the Fans and Sponsors
Fans: You Make This Special
From Centre Court to Henman Hill, the energy has been electric. Whether cheering for the local hero Norrie, clapping for every Siegemund drop shot, or standing ovation-ing Fritz’s winner, this crowd gets it.
Tennis is a global sport, and the Wimbledon crowd proved why it's one of the best. You turned matches into moments.
Sponsors: The Unsung Champions
The elegance of Wimbledon is made possible by partners who believe in excellence. From immaculate court presentation to cutting-edge technology for line-calling and player analytics, your support ensures the highest standard in sport.
Thank you for keeping the tradition alive while moving the game forward.
Semi-Final Showdowns
Men’s Semi-final:
Carlos Alcaraz vs. Taylor Fritz
Women’s Semi-final:
Aryna Sabalenka vs. Amanda Anisimova
The stage is set. Two power-packed semis, four deserving contenders, and one iconic trophy up for grabs.
Stay tuned for match previews, predictions, and tactical breakdowns as we head into Wimbledon’s final act.
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