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July

Statisfaction: Wimbledon, 2026, By the Numbers

History was made, milestones were clocked. We look back at the Championships, 2026, by the numbers.

The dust has settled on the hallowed grass of Wimbledon for another year. Now’s the time to take stock of another incredible edition of the Championships, By the Numbers.

0 – Players born in the 1990’s to win the Wimbledon men’s singles title. 

Zverev, who had his 13-match Grand Slam winning streak snapped by Sinner in the final, was bidding to become the first. 

1 – Match point saved by Noskova 

Noskova saved match point during the third set of her third-round match vs. No.17 seed Sorana Cirstea of Romania and became the third woman in Open Era history to win the singles title after saving a match point in the tournament. Only Venus Williams (2005) and Serena Williams (2009) had achieved the feat previously. 

2 – Consecutive Wimbledon titles by Sinner 

Sinner stretches his winning streak at the All England Club to 14. He’s now 27-4 lifetime at Wimbledon. 

3 – Czech women’s singles champions in the last four years 

Noskova joins 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova and 2024 champion Barbora Krejcikova on this list. 

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4 – Woman to Win a Grand Slam title after turning 29 this century. 

Francesca Schiavone, Li Na, Flavia Pennetta and Madison Keys have achieved the feat – Muchova missed her chance to become the fifth. 

5 – Grand Slam titles won by Sinner  

The Italian is third on the active men’s singles list, behind Alcaraz (7) and Djokovic (24). 

6 – Titles won by Sinner in 2026 so far. 

Sinner adds Wimbledon to Indian Wells, Miami-1000, Monte Carlo, Madrid and Rome. That’s quite a haul in 2026. 

7 – Noskova’s new ranking 

The Czech rises to a career-high No.7 in the rankings, in both the rankings and the Race to the WTA Finals. 

8 – Active male players with 100 Grand Slam men’s singles wins. 

Sinner (100-22), joins the elite club at the age of 24. The Italian achieved his 100th match win at the majors with Sunday’s win over Alexander Zverev in the final. 

9 – Years since two women from the same country played in a major final

The last time it happened, Sloane Stephens defeated Madison Keys in the 2017 US Open final. 

10 – Years of First-Time Winners 

Since Serena Williams claimed her seventh title at SW19 in 2016 has there been only first-time champions on the women’s side. 

  • 2017 – Garbine Muguruza
  • 2018 – Angelique Kerber
  • 2019 – Simona Halep
  • 2021 – Ash Barty
  • 2022 – Elena Rybakina
  • 2023 – Marketa Vondrousova
  • 2024 – Barbora Krejcikova
  • 2025 – Iga Swiatek
  • 2026 – Linda Noskova

22 – Serena Williams made her 22nd appearance in Wimbledon singles, and dropped to 19-3 in first-round matches with her loss to Maya Joint. Those three first-round losses have come in her last three appearances. 

36 – Age of Jan-Lennard Struff, who became the oldest first-time Grand Slam men’s singles quarterfinalist at Wimbledon. 

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39 – Djokovic became the oldest Wimbledon men’s singles semifinalist since Ken Rosewall in 1974. 

44 – At 44, Serena Williams became the fourth-oldest player to appear in a Women’s Singles Grand Slam main draw in the Open Era and the second-oldest in Wimbledon (younger only than Martina Navratilova in 2004).  

82 – Serena Williams made her 82nd Grand Slam main draw appearance. 

107 – Djokovic passed Roger Federer (105) on the all-time Wimbledon’s men’s singles match wins list. 

114 – Ranking of Arthur Fery, the British wild card who became the first men’s singles wild card to reach the semifinals at Wimbledon since Goran Ivanesivic won his title in 2001. 

409 – Djokovic now has 50 more Grand Slam match wins than any other player, male or female, after this Wimbledon. 

Chris Oddo. Chris Oddo is a freelance sportswriter, podcaster, blogger and social media marker who is a lead contributor to Tennisnow.com. He also writes for USOpen.org, Rolandgarros.com, BNPParibasOpen.com, TennisTV.com, WTAtennis.com and the official US Open program.
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