Wimbledon, Taylor Fritz and Karen Khachanov
Digest more
Although his serve pales in comparison to Fritz’s, Khachanov still ranks inside the top 30, so it’s not like he’s an easy player to break. Khachanov’s real advantage in this match is his fitness.
Fritz’s third-set mini-crisis was closely followed by the latest failure of the electronic umpire. Swedish umpire Louise Azemar-Engzell called 'stop' in the opening game of the fourth set on Court One when 'fault' was incorrectly called after a Fritz forehand landed well inside the baseline.
Wimbledon started like it does every year, with 64 seeds across the men’s and women’s singles draw. As the third round begins, just 27 remain — 14 women and 13 men. It’s the fewest at a Grand Slam since the 32-seed format was first adopted in 2001.
3d
Yardbarker on MSN'Scary to let machine do what they want': Karen Khachanov blasts Wimbledon's faulty techAnother error in the electronic line call system caused controversy during the Wimbledon quarterfinal match between Karen Khachanov and Taylor Fritz. The Russian stated that it's "scary to let machines do what they want,
Karen Khachanov will take on Kamil Majchrzak of Poland at the All England Club on Sunday, 6 July 2025, for a Round of 16 men’s singles clash at Wimbledon 2025. The Russian star, seeded 17th in the tournament, will aim to continue his unbeaten run against the 29-year-old Pole and continue another deep Grand Slam run.