Nobody saw it coming. When the first balls struck the grass at the All England Club on Monday June 30, even seasoned observers expected the usual scattering of upsets that Wimbledon's capricious surface typically delivers. What they got was something altogether more seismic: thirteen men's seeds eliminated in the first round, an all-time Open Era record at Wimbledon that ties the mark set across all surfaces at the 2004 Australian Open. The 2025 Championships opened with an earthquake, and the aftershocks have continued throughout this remarkable first week.
The First Round Massacre
The casualty list is staggering. Alexander Zverev, the third seed and one of the most consistent players on tour for the past two years, fell to Arthur Rinderknech in five grueling sets (7-6, 6-7, 6-3, 6-7, 6-4) across four hours and forty minutes. The German, who had dominated the clay season and arrived at with legitimate ambitions, appeared unable to find his footing on the slippery grass of Court 1. Afterward, Zverev told reporters he had "never felt this empty" following a defeat.
Lorenzo Musetti, the seventh seed and last year's semi-finalist, never had a chance to defend his 2024 run. Nursing a left leg injury sustained at Roland Garros, the Italian had been unable to compete in any grass court warm-up events and arrived at SW19 in precarious physical condition. Nikoloz Basilashvili, ranked 126th and winless in Grand Slam main draws for three years, seized the opportunity to produce one of the tournament's most stunning results (6-2, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1).
Holger Rune, the eighth seed, watched Nicolas Jarry rally from two sets down to eliminate him in a five-set thriller (4-6, 4-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4). The Dane pointed to knee pain as a factor in his progressive collapse, but Jarry deserves full credit for a heroic comeback that represented his first ever five-set victory. , the ninth seed and a semi-finalist in each of the past two years, suffered his earliest exit in seven appearances, swept aside by Benjamin Bonzi (7-6, 3-6, 7-6, 6-2) in a match where the Frenchman showed remarkable composure on the big points.
Stefanos Tsitsipas provided the most painful image of the carnage. Visibly hampered by back problems, the Greek retired against qualifier Valentin Royer while trailing 3-6, 2-6, unable to serve properly and moving with alarming stiffness. His post-match words carried the weight of genuine despair: "I've run out of answers."
The list extends further: Ugo Humbert fell to Gael Monfils in an epic all-French five-setter, Alexei Popyrin lost to Arthur Fery, Francisco Cerundolo was beaten by Nuno Borges, Denis Shapovalov was dispatched by Mariano Navone, Alexander Bublik fell to Jaume Munar, and both Matteo Berrettini and Tallon Griekspoor were eliminated. Never has 's grass swallowed so many favorites in so short a time.
Alcaraz: The Champion Survives the Storm
Against this backdrop of widespread chaos, 's first-round survival takes on heightened significance. The two-time defending champion endured a harrowing evening against Fabio Fognini, the unpredictable Italian veteran whose natural talent expressed itself brilliantly on Centre Court's grass. Alcaraz needed five sets (7-5, 6-7, 7-5, 2-6, 6-1) and more than four hours to dispatch an opponent who pushed him to the absolute limit.
This opening match could have derailed the entire tournament. Trailing two sets to one after a disastrous fourth set, Alcaraz found the mental reserves to flip the match in the fifth, suddenly rediscovering the fluidity in his strokes and the aggression that makes him the most dangerous player on grass. The fifth set, won 6-1, was an almost intimidating display of force, as if the Spaniard wanted to remind the entire draw that the champion was still very much present.
Alcaraz's subsequent matches told a different story entirely. In the second round, he dispatched qualifier Oliver Tarvet in straight sets (6-1, 6-4, 6-4), striking thirty-seven winners and breaking serve six times in barely two hours. In the third round against Jan-Lennard Struff, the Spaniard dropped a set (6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4) but never appeared genuinely threatened, controlling rallies with increasing authority as the match progressed. His consecutive winning streak now stands at twenty-one matches, a figure that speaks to the extraordinary consistency of his level since the grass season began.
Sinner: The World No. 1's Quiet March
While Alcaraz battled through his opening match, has moved through the first three rounds with an ease that contrasts sharply with the turbulence around him. The world No. 1 opened with an authoritative victory over compatriot Luca Nardi (6-4, 6-3, 6-0), then produced an even more convincing display against Australia's Aleksandar Vukic (6-1, 6-1, 6-3) in just one hundred minutes.
In the third round, Pedro Martinez offered no greater resistance to the Italian's firepower (6-1, 6-3, 6-1), a scoreline that reflects Sinner's near-total domination of the early stages. The doubts generated by his early loss at Halle against Bublik appear to have evaporated as quickly as they materialized. His serve has rediscovered its precision, his flat backhand crosses the court with fearsome velocity, and most importantly, his movement on grass shows a fluidity that previous seasons had not suggested was possible.
Grigor Dimitrov awaits in the fourth round, a formidable opponent whose elegant ball-striking and grass court experience should not be underestimated. The nineteenth seed has navigated his own path through the early rounds without difficulty, dismissing Corentin Moutet and then Yoshihito Nishioka with the calm of a player in confident form.
Djokovic: The Hundredth Win and the Fire Within
celebrated a historic milestone during this first week by recording his hundredth victory at , a feat only Roger Federer had previously achieved at the Championships. The Serbian dismantled Dan Evans in the second round (6-3, 6-2, 6-0) before dispatching Miomir Kecmanovic in the third (6-3, 6-0, 6-4) with the efficiency of a champion who knows every blade of grass at SW19.
At thirty-eight, Djokovic continues to defy temporal logic with a consistency that commands admiration. His grass court footwork, frequently questioned in recent months, has answered emphatically through three rounds. His serve remains a frontline weapon, and his tactical reading of opponents has reached a level of sophistication that decades of elite competition have refined to near perfection. Alex de Minaur, the eleventh seed, awaits in the fourth round in a clash that will represent the first genuine examination of the Serbian's form.
Draper: Britain's Bitter Disappointment
One of the cruelest stories from the first week belongs to Jack Draper, the fourth seed who carried the hopes of an entire nation. The Briton, widely tipped as a legitimate semi-final contender on home courts, fell in the second round to Marin Cilic (6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4), the former US Open champion whose experience and devastating serve proved sufficient to neutralize the young left-hander.
Draper appeared paralyzed by the occasion in the opening two sets, committing uncharacteristic errors and struggling to find accuracy on his forehand. His third-set fightback, won 6-1, briefly revived hopes around SW19, but Cilic rediscovered his rhythm in the fourth to seal a victory that deprives the tournament of one of its most anticipated protagonists.
The Outsiders Shaking Up the Draw
In the wake of the seedings carnage, several unexpected players have carved impressive paths through the draw. Cameron Norrie, a semi-finalist in 2022, appears to be finding form at the perfect moment after an injury-plagued 2024. The Briton, who had slipped to 91st in the world, represents a compelling resilience narrative and could offer British fans consolation after Draper's premature exit.
Nicolas Jarry, Rune's first-round conqueror, has extended his adventure and brings welcome freshness to the draw. Arthur Rinderknech, who dispatched Zverev, confirms that French tennis possesses unexpected grass court depth. Ben Shelton, the tenth seed, notably eliminated Tommy Paul in the third round (6-4, 6-4, 6-2) in a one-sided American derby.
What Lies Ahead in Week Two
The fourth round promises compelling matchups across the board. The Sinner-Dimitrov clash offers a high-level tactical battle. Djokovic against de Minaur will reveal much about the Serbian's physical condition. Alcaraz, who faces Andrey Rublev in the bottom half, must confirm his escalating form against an opponent capable of brilliance on any surface.
The decimated draw has redistributed the cards in spectacular fashion. The absence of Zverev, Medvedev, Musetti, Rune and Draper opens unexpected highways to the quarter-finals for players who, in a normal draw, might not have survived the first week. This unpredictability, the very essence of on grass, promises a second week where every match could deliver its share of surprises.
But amid the chaos, two certainties have emerged. Alcaraz, despite his opening scare, has recaptured champion-level form and his winning streak commands respect. Sinner, quiet and methodical, advances with metronomic regularity and appears to have found the grass court adaptation key that eluded him in previous seasons. Their converging trajectories toward a potential final constitute the central thread of these 2025 Championships, and all signs point to the denouement being decided between these two men.
The first week of 2025 will be remembered as one of the most turbulent in the tournament's history. The grass of Church Road has reminded everyone, favorites and outsiders alike, that it shows mercy to no one.



