Wimbledon 2025 live: Djokovic injury update for Sinner semi-final as Alcaraz faces Fritz
- Wimbledon men’s semi-finals live
- Sinner discusses prospect of playing Djokovic
- Aryna Sabalenka irked by two moments in her Wimbledon semi-final defeat
- Iga Swiatek surprises herself by breaking through her grass ceiling at Wimbledon
- How strawberries and cream became ‘a true icon’ of Wimbledon
- How Jannik Sinner explained doping contamination to escape serious ban
- The 2025 Wimbledon men’s semi-finalists
- ‘Disneyland on steroids’: What it’s like to coach at Wimbledon
- Swiatek breezes past Bencic and into her first final at Wimbledon
- Sabalenka, fainting fans, and a fall at a familiar hurdle
- The key weapon Djokovic has which could beat Sinner
- Wimbledon 2025 live: Day 12 order of play
- Wimbledon 2025 live: Men’s semi-finals day arrives
LIVE – Updated at 11:29
The Wimbledon semi-finals continue on Friday, and it’s over to the men’s singles draw, as Novak Djokovic prepares to take on Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz is set to face Taylor Fritz.
But is Djokovic in the right condition to compete? The seven-time champion, 38, cancelled a practice session on Thursday after falling in the last game of his Wednesday-night win over Flavio Cobolli. Ironically, it was Sinner who cancelled practice on Tuesday, though there was no sign that his elbow injury affected the world No 1 as he eased past Ben Shelton on Wednesday.
On the other side of the draw, 2023 and 2024 champ Alcaraz maintains his hat-trick title bid, going up against American Fritz. In the quarters, Alcaraz blew away Britain’s Cam Norrie, while Fritz fought past Karen Khachanov.
The men’s semi-finals follow a hot Thursday, when three fans fainted on Centre Court during the women’s semi-finals. In those matches, Iga Siwatek thrashed Belinda Bencic and Amanda Anisimova upset world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka.
Follow live updates and results from Wimbledon day 12, below.
Wimbledon men’s semi-finals live
- Novak Djokovic is an injury doubt for his semi-final against Jannik Sinner
- Two-time reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz faces Taylor Fritz in the other men's singles semi-final
- Amanda Anisimova through to final after thrilling win against Aryna Sabalenka
- Iga Swiatek thrashes Belinda Bencic to reach her first Wimbledon final
- Three fans fainted on Centre Court yesterday – two during first women's singles semi-final, one in second
Sinner discusses prospect of playing Djokovic
11:24 , Luke BakerBefore this year’s tournament, Wimbledon’s social media accounts spoke to Jannik Sinner about what it’s like to play Novak Djokovic.
Now they meet at the semi-final stage
Aryna Sabalenka irked by two moments in her Wimbledon semi-final defeat
11:07 , Luke BakerIn the other women’s semi-final, No 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka crashed out in three sets to American 13th seed Amanda Anisimova.
Sabalenka’s post-match press conference wasn’t as fiery as the one that followed her French Open exit at the hands of Coco Gauff, but she did still pinpoint two actions from Anisimova during the match that irked her...
Iga Swiatek surprises herself by breaking through her grass ceiling at Wimbledon
10:48 , Luke BakerA bit more from yesterday’s women’s semi-finals now.
Iga Swiatek’s struggles on grass are well documented but maybe the slower, heavier surface at Wimbledon this year are helping the clay-court queen adapt to the green stuff.
She swept aside Belinda Bencic 6-2, 6-0 to reach the final at the All England Club for the first time and admitted she has surprised even herself with her form this fortnight
How strawberries and cream became ‘a true icon’ of Wimbledon
10:32 , Luke BakerWimbledon is all about strawberries and cream (and of course tennis). The club itself describes strawberries and cream as “a true icon of The Championships”.
While a meal at one of the club’s restaurants can set you back £130 or more, a bowl of the iconic dish is a modest £2.70 (up from £2.50 in 2024 – the first price rise in 15 years). In 2024, visitors munched their way through nearly 2 million berries.
Strawberries and cream has a long association with Wimbledon. Even before lawn tennis was added to its activities, the All England Croquet Club (now the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club) was serving strawberries and cream to visitors. They would have expected no less.
How Jannik Sinner explained doping contamination to escape serious ban
10:15 , Luke BakerJannik Sinner finally brought an end to his doping saga when he accepted a three-month ban offered by the World Anti-Doping Agency.
The 23-year-old was world No 1 when he won the Australian Open in January but he twice tested positive for a banned anabolic steroid last year.
It’s a case that no one knew about for months and one that drew all sorts of questions and criticism from other players who wondered whether there was a double standard at play because of Sinner’s success, were confused about why it was all kept under wraps, and wanted to know why Sinner was allowed to keep competing before there was a resolution.
Here’s the full story:
The 2025 Wimbledon men’s semi-finalists
10:00 , Alex Pattle
Jannik Sinner (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Novak Djokovic (AP)

Carlos Alcaraz (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Taylor Fritz (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Sinner’s elbow breaks Shelton’s heart in perfect response to injury fears
09:40 , Alex PattleDjokovic may be the one with an injury concern heading into his semi-final with Sinner, but Sinner was in the same position before his quarter-final against Ben Shelton.
And here’s how Sinner’s elbow broke Shelton’s heart:
‘Disneyland on steroids’: What it’s like to coach at Wimbledon
09:20 , Lawrence OstlereIt is considered by most players and fans the Mecca of tennis, a magical place of carefully curated perfection where every strawberry is the correct shade of red and every blade of grass comes with its own horticulturist. Wimbledon is one of the great sporting institutions and to be inside its walls is to feel like you have access to an exclusive, special place.
Each summer we get a window into what life is like as a player, the stresses and strains and joy and history that all come with a place at the Championships. But what is it like to be a coach? How is it to be in the background, a member of the entourage trying to make the dream come true?
How AI is transforming tennis, according to the coaches using it at Wimbledon
09:00 , Lawrence OstlereAndre Agassi lost his first three matches against Boris Becker in 1988 and 1989, but then won 10 of the last 11 they played. “I didn’t understand how he could read me like that,” Becker later said, perplexed by the grip Agassi held over his serve, somehow able to anticipate the direction of every ball. It was only after their careers had ended that Agassi revealed his secret: he had spotted a tell in Becker’s tongue, which would unconsciously point to where he was aiming as he tossed the ball.
It is the most famous example of tennis espionage, one perhaps never to be repeated. But there is a modern equivalent in the priceless insight tucked by the knees of every coach at Wimbledon this week: an iPad brimming with ATP Tour data about the opponent. Data on serve direction, data on landing spots, data on exactly which type of shot they most frequently miss, with AI deployed to make sense of it all.
Swiatek breezes past Bencic and into her first final at Wimbledon
08:40 , Alex PattleAnd in yesterday’s other semi-final in the women’s draw, Iga Swiatek was in imperious form, sweeping Belinda Bencic aside.
Sabalenka, fainting fans, and a fall at a familiar hurdle
08:20 , Alex PattleIt was a stop-start first set on Centre Court, but when it settled, Aryna Sabalenka will have been somewhat startled to be down 6-4. During two breaks in play, there she was to help two fans who had fainted, providing water and support. Perhaps she needed a bit of support in return.
The world No 1 is no stranger to the semi-finals of Wimbledon, and she is no stranger to Amanda Anisimova. This was Sabalenka’s third appearance at this stage in SW19, and her eighth clash with the American across the net.
Regardless of Wednesday’s result, she was always going to leave with losing records in both cases: she was already 0-2 in the All England Club semi-finals, and 3-5 against Anisimova. Yet neither of those losing records would have bothered her had they read 1-2 and 4-5, courtesy of a victory that never came on this day.
Yesterday’s report on Sabalenka’s loss to Anisimova:
The key weapon Djokovic has which could beat Sinner
08:00 , Kieran JacksonThe first time Novak Djokovic stood up and took notice of Jannik Sinner’s burgeoning talent was on the grass of the All England Club three years ago. The Italian, then just 20, stormed to a two-set lead in their quarter-final on Centre Court. Djokovic, aware of the severity of the situation, headed to the bathroom underneath the Royal Box.
“I had a refresh, a toilet break, and a little pep talk to myself in the mirror,” he would say afterwards. “That’s the truth.” Djokovic would go on to claim victory in five, with a spectacular backhand cross-court winner leaving him flat on his chest, the money-shot moment of the match.
Djokovic also defeated Sinner in the 2023 semi-finals in an impressive straight-sets victory. But this, indisputably, is a different scenario some two years on. And as the two square off once more – five weeks on from the same match-up, in the same slot, at the same round of the French Open – it is the world’s best player in Sinner who boasts a fearsome record against the Serb.
Preview:
Wimbledon 2025 live: Day 12 order of play
07:20 , Alex PattleCENTRE COURT - SHOW COURT - 13:30 START
Taylor Fritz (USA) [5] vs Carlos Alcaraz (ESP) [2]
Jannik Sinner (ITA) [1] vs Novak Djokovic (SRB) [6]
No. 1 COURT - SHOW COURT - 13:00 START
Women’s Doubles, semi-finals: Olivia Gadecki (AUS) / Desirae Krawczyk (USA) vs Veronika Kudermetova / Elise Mertens (BEL) [8]
Men’s Wheelchair Singles, semi-finals: Martin De la Puente (ESP) [3] vs Alfie Hewett (GBR) [2] (SM)
Women’s Doubles, semi-finals: Katerina Siniakova (CZE) / Taylor Townsend (USA) [1] vs Su-Wei Hsieh (TPE) / Jelena Ostapenko (LAT) [4]
Wimbledon 2025 live: Men’s semi-finals day arrives
07:00 , Alex PattleThe Wimbledon semi-finals continue on Friday, and it’s over to the men’s singles draw, as Novak Djokovic prepares to take on Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz is set to face Taylor Fritz.
But is Djokovic in the right condition to compete? The seven-time champion, 38, cancelled a practice session on Thursday after falling in the last game of his Wednesday-night win over Flavio Cobolli. Ironically, it was Sinner who cancelled practice on Tuesday, though there was no sign that his elbow injury affected the world No 1 as he eased past Ben Shelton on Wednesday.
On the other side of the draw, 2023 and 2024 champ Alcaraz maintains his hat-trick title bid, going up against American Fritz. In the quarters, Alcaraz blew away Britain’s Cam Norrie, while Fritz fought past Karen Khachanov.
The men’s semi-finals follow a hot Thursday, when three fans fainted on Centre Court during the women’s semi-finals. In those matches, Iga Siwatek thrashed Belinda Bencic and Amanda Anisimova upset world No 1 Aryna Sabalenka.
Follow live updates and results from Wimbledon day 12, right here.

Novak Djokovic is checked on by an umpire after falling against Flavio Cobolli (Getty Images)