Wimbledon is back as Novak Djokovic targets a 25th major singles trophy andAndy Murray attempts to play the Grand Slam event for likely the final time.
There were question marks over whether Djokovic would feature after a recent meniscus injury forced knee surgery but he hinted he would play on Tuesday after admitting he was âvery pleasedâ with his progress and the Serbian is now due to practise on Centre Court with Jannik Sinner in the latest indication he will enter.
Murrayâs participation is even more up in the air and he provided a huge update on Thursday, insisting that no final decision had been made after he required an operation on a spinal cyst in his back following a nasty injury at Queenâs Club. The veteran is nearing retirement and wants to play Wimbledon for the last time ever.
Carlos Alcaraz returns to defend his crown and attempt to land a Channel Slam after his triumph in Paris while Jannik Sinner is among the favourites too and British No.1 Jack Draper is targeting a deep run after his Queenâs Club heroics.
But thereâs way more than just the menâs singles â with British eyes on Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter in the womenâs singles â which is wide open given dominant world No.1 Iga Swiatek has historically struggled on grass courts.
Elsewhere, the Murray brothers hoping to team up in the menâs doubles and there could be some interesting pairs in the mixed doubles with British No.1 Boulter dating fellow tennis star Alex de Minaur â world No.9 in the ATP rankings.
Excited for all of the action? Ready to watch some gripping tennis? Well, settle in, as there are two weeks of play coming up⌠Here is everything you could possibly need to know about Wimbledon 2024.
When does Wimbledon start?
Wimbledon 2024 starts on Monday, July 1 and will last until Sunday, July 14.
Qualifying, which is used to determine the final places in the Main Draw for the Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles competitions, takes place from Monday, June 24 until Thursday, June 27 at the Community Sport Centre Roehampton.
Wimbledon 2024 schedule
Wimbledon 2023 schedule
Monday, July 1
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles First Round
Tuesday, July 2
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles First Round
Wednesday, July 3
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Second Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles First Round
Thursday, July 4
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Second Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles First Round
Friday, July 5
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Third Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Second Round
- Mixed Doubles First Round
Saturday, July 6
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Third Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Second Round
- Mixed Doubles First Round
- Boysâ and Girlsâ Singles First Round (18&U)
Sunday, July 7
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Fourth Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Third Round
- Mixed Doubles Second Round
- Boysâ and Girlsâ Singles First Round (18&U)
Monday, July 8
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Fourth Round
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Third Round
- Mixed Doubles Quarter-finals
- Girlsâ Singles Second Round (18&U)
- Boysâ Doubles First Round (18&U)
Tuesday, July 9
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Quarter-finals
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Quarter-finals
- Mixed Doubles Semi-finals
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Wheelchair Singles First Round
- Boysâ Singles Second Round (18&U)
- Girlsâ Doubles First Round (18&U)
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles,  Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
Wednesday, July 10
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Singles Quarter-finals
- Gentlemenâs & Ladiesâ Doubles Quarter-finals
- Quad Wheelchair Singles Quarter-finals
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Wheelchair Doubles Quarter-finals
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Singles Third Round (18&U)
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Doubles Second Round (18&U)
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles, Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
Thursday, July 11
- Ladiesâ Singles Semi-finals
- Gentlemenâs Doubles Semi-finals
- Mixed Doubles Final
- Gentlemenâs and Ladiesâ Wheelchair Singles Quarter-finals
- Gentlemenâs, Ladiesâ  & Quad Wheelchair Doubles Semi-finals
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Singles Quarter-finals (18&U)
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Doubles Quarter-finals (18&U)
- Boysâ and Girlsâ 14&U Singles
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles, Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
Friday, July 12
- Gentlemenâs Singles Semi-finals
- Ladiesâ Doubles Semi-finals
- Gentlemenâs, Ladiesâ & Quad Wheelchair Singles Semi-finals
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Singles Semi-finals (18&U)
- Boysâ & Girlsâ Doubles Semi-finals (18&U)
- Boysâ and Girlsâ 14&U Singles
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles, Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
Saturday, July 13
- Ladiesâ Singles Final
- Gentlemenâs Doubles Final
- Ladiesâ Wheelchair Singles Final
- Gentlemenâs & Quad Wheelchair Doubles Final
- Girlsâ Singles Final (18&U)
- Girlsâ Doubles Final (18&U)
- Boysâ Doubles Final (18&U)
- Boysâ and Girlsâ 14&U Singles Semi-finals
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles, Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
Sunday, July 14
- Gentlemenâs Singles Final
- Ladiesâ Doubles Final
- Gentlemenâs & Quad Wheelchair Singles Finals
- Ladiesâ Wheelchair Doubles Final
- Boysâ Singles Final (18&U)
- Boysâ & Girlsâ 14&U Singles Finals
- Invitation Doubles (Ladiesâ Doubles, Gentlemenâs Doubles, Mixed Doubles)
What are the Wimbledon seedings for 2024?
Seedings follow the rankings for the menâs and womenâs singles on the ATP and WTA Tours, having previously been based on a grass-court formula up until 2021.
There are 32 seeded players in the menâs singles and womenâs singles respectively, which gives them an advantage and easier run than unseeded players.
Iga Swiatek is the current world No.1 in the womenâs singles and will head in as the top seed but it should be noted that she usually struggles on grass courts.
Jannik Sinner recently became world No.1 in the menâs singles, taking the top spot from Novak Djokovic after the recent French Open.
Gentlemen’s Singles seedings for Wimbledon 2024
1. Jannik Sinner, Italy
2. Novak Djokovic, Serbia
3. Carlos Alcaraz, Spain
4. Alexander Zverev, Germany
5. Daniil Medvedev
6. Andrey Rublev
7. Hubert Hurkacz, Poland
8. Casper Ruud, Norway
9. Alex de Minaur, Australia
10. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria
11. Stefanos Tsitsipas, Greece
12. Tommy Paul, United States
13. Taylor Fritz, United States
14. Ben Shelton, United States
15. Holger Rune, Denmark
16. Ugo Humbert, France
17. Felix Auger-Aliassime, Canada
18. Sebastian Baez, Argentina
19. Nicolas Jarry, Chile
20. Sebastian Korda, United States
21. Karen Khachanov
22. Adrian Mannarino, France
23. Alexander Bublik, Kazakhstan
24. Alejandro Tabilo, Chile
25. Lorenzo Musetti, Italy
26. Francisco Cerundolo, Argentina
27. Tallon Griekspoor, Netherlands
28. Jack Draper, Great Britain
29. Frances Tiafoe, United States
30. Tomas Martin Etcheverry, Argentina
31. Mariano Navone, Argentina
32. Zhizhen Zhang, China
Ladiesâ Singles seedings for Wimbledon 2024
1. Iga Swiatek, Poland
2. Coco Gauff, United States
3. Aryna Sabalenka
4. Elena Rybakina, Kazakhstan
5. Jessica Pegula, United States
6. Marketa Vondrousova, Czech Republic
7. Jasmine Paolini, Italy
8. Zheng Qinwen, China
9. Maria Sakkari, Greece
10. Ons Jabeur, Tunisia
11. Danielle Collins, United States
12. Madison Keys, United States
13. Jelena Ostapenko, Latvia
14. Daria Kasatkina
15. Liudmila Samsonova
16. Victoria Azarenka
17. Anna Kalinskaya
18. Marta Kostyuk, Ukraine
19. Emma Navarro, United States
20.Beatriz Haddad Maia, Brazil
21. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine
22. Ekaterina Alexandrova
23. Caroline Garcia, France
24. Mirra Andreeva
25. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
26. Linda Noskova, Czech Republic
27. Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic
28. Dayana Yastremska, Ukraine
29. Sorana Cirstea, Romania
30. Leylah Fernandez, Canada
31. Barbora Krejcikova, Czech Republic
32. Katie Boulter, Great Britain
Who has been given a Wimbledon wildcard?
Emma Raducanu, Naomi Osaka, Caroline Wozniacki, Angelique Kerber, Francesca Jones, Heather Watson and Yuriko Miyazaki have all been awarded wildcards in the womenâs singles for Wimbledon 2024.
In the menâs singles, British teenage sensation Henry Searle has been handed a wildcard along with Billy Harris, Jacob Fearnley, Liam Broady, Arthur Fery, Paul Jubb and Jan Choinski.
What is the Wimbledon prize money?
The total prize fund for this yearâs Wimbledon is ÂŁ50 million and the winners of the menâs and womenâs singles titles will each walk away with ÂŁ2.7 million.
Players in the menâs singles and womenâs singles who lose in the first round will pocket ÂŁ60,000 each â which is ÂŁ5,000 more than in 2023.
The total prize money is up 11.9 per cent from last yearâs tournament. Money for the qualifying competition has also increased by 14.9 per cent.
How to watch Wimbledon this year
As per usual, Wimbledon will be shown live and exclusively across the BBC.
TV coverage will begin each day at 11am and will last until 9pm for the first week.
The traditional highlights show, Today at Wimbledon, will then follow daily at 9pm on BBC Two.
As well as the TV channels, fans will also be able to watch every minute of the action live on the BBC iPlayer.
Clare Balding is once again the lead presenter after succeeding the legendary Sue Barker.
How to get tickets to Wimbledon 2024
Tickets will be available on the day via The Queue, including up to 500 premium seats on each of the show courts.
Tickets will also be available each day via the ticket resale scheme.
Alternative means of securing seats includes purchasing Debentures tickets via secondary market resellers.
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