Carlos Alcaraz faces Fabio Fognini as Wimbledon treble bid starts, Aryna Sabalenka meets qualifier

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Tennis - Berlin Tennis Open - Steffi Graf Stadium, Berlin, Germany - June 21, 2025 Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka reacts during her semi final match against Czech Republic's Marketa Vondrousova REUTERS/Annegret Hilse

Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka is one key player to watch at Wimbledon.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Carlos Alcaraz will begin his quest for a third successive Wimbledon title against dangerous Italian Fabio Fognini, and women’s top seed Aryna Sabalenka will open her campaign versus Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine.

The draw on June 27 conducted at the All England Club produced its usual intrigue with some eye-catching first-round clashes.

Men’s top seed Jannik Sinner, beaten by Alcaraz in the French Open final on June 8, meets fellow Italian Luca Nardi, while sixth seed Novak Djokovic, seeking to tie Roger Federer’s record of eight Wimbledon singles titles, has a tricky opener against France’s world No. 40 Alexandre Muller.

Women’s defending champion Barbora Krejcikova, the 17th seed who pulled out of the Eastbourne tournament on Thursday with a thigh strain, faces Alexandra Eala of the Philippines.

Women’s second seed Coco Gauff’s first-round opponent is Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska, while third seed Jessica Pegula, Gauff’s likely semi-final opponent, plays Italian qualifier Elisabetta Cocciaretto.

Fourth seed Jasmine Paolini, runner-up in 2024, faces Anastasija Sevastova of Latvia. Belarusian Sabalenka is seeded to meet Italian Paolini in the semi-finals.

Britain has 23 players in the singles events, the most for the home nation since 1984, with men’s fourth seed Jack Draper carrying the weight of expectation on his shoulders after a rapid rise. Draper faces a tough path though if he is to emulate twice champion Andy Murray.

The 23-year-old has a tricky opener against Argentina’s 38th-ranked Sebastian Baez and could face former runner-up Marin Cilic of Croatia in round two and Kazakhstan’s Alexander Bublik, whom he lost to at Roland Garros, in the third round.

To win the title, Draper could have to beat Djokovic in the quarter-finals, Sinner in the semis and Alcaraz in the final.

Britain’s women’s No. 1 Emma Raducanu faces a potential first-round banana skin against compatriot Mingge (Mimi) Xu, one of three British teenage wild cards in the women’s draw. Should 2021 US Open champion Raducanu win, she could play 2023 Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova or 32nd seed McCartney Kessler in the second round.

Sabalenka, whose opponent Branstine beat former US Open winner Bianca Andreescu in qualifying, could face Raducanu or Vondrousova in the third round.

One potential standout second-round match could feature Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen, seeded fifth, against Japan’s four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka.

Spaniard Alcaraz, who warmed up for Wimbledon by winning the Queen’s Club title, will be wary of the threat posed by the enigmatic Fognini, although the 38-year-old Italian is not the force he was when he reached ninth in the rankings in 2019.

Alcaraz could then face British qualifier Oliver Tarvet, the world No. 719 whose reward for reaching the main draw is a first-round match against Swiss qualifier Leandro Riedi.

His potential semi-final opponent is Germany’s third seed Alexander Zverev, who plays France’s Arthur Rinderknech in his opening match.

As defending men’s champion, Alcaraz will open play on Centre Court on June 30, which will feature the bottom half of the men’s draw and the top half of the women’s draw.

Czech Krejcikova will begin play on Centre Court on July 1. REUTERS

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