Welcome Back Wimbledon!

A "spot" of rain kicked off the opening day; hopes remain that neither it, nor the late player withdrawals — or retirements — plague 2024

Jul 2, 2024

A couple shelter in place on Henman Hill as they wait for the rain delay holding up the Matteo Berrettini/Alexander Zverev in their 2023 third-round match on Centre Court.

Wimbledon, known in in technical terms as The Championships (of the All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC), is often over-described by the media as the ‘cathedral of tennis’ — the place pilgrims go to see the finest in the game on the game’s original surface: grass. But some may argue that really, the draw of Wimbledon is not necessarily the history, the club or that finely manicured green stuff. It’s the pageantry of the place — the choreography that happens during every single match — from the regular measuring of the net down to the coin toss, all of which signals to onlookers, ‘We take our tennis very, very seriously’.

But in order to put on the show, the weather — and then the players — have to co-operate. Hundreds of tennis fans set up tents outside the famous grounds in SW19, in eager hopes of watching the first day, but throughout Monday, the weather looked patchy with isolated showers on and off. But the roof stayed open on Centre Court — with a couple of avian guests fluttering in — as Raducanu dispatched Lucky Loser Renata Zarazua of Mexico, drafted in at the last moment to replace No. 22 Ekaterina Alexandrova. “It's amazing to play an opponent like Renata. It's not every day when in the morning you're not in the draw, and the afternoon you're playing on Centre Court, so props to her,” Raducanu said in her post-match victory interview.

Fans crowd the spaces between the outer courts to get a glimpse of play, as the skies decide how they will behave.

The other news came as the withdrawals rolled in. Arnya Sabalenka, the No. 3 seed, and fellow Belarusian, Victoria Azarenka, surprised AELTC management, fans and every “Bracket Battle” player when both pulled out this morning due to shoulder injuries. French Open fourth-rounders Elisabetta Cocciaretto and Corentin Moutet nullified their entries before play began, as did German Dominik Koepfer and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, another tour journeyman. Whether or not Andy Murray, who recently had a back procedure, or Novak Djokovic, who underwent a knee operation, will play tomorrow remains to be seen.

The court attendees pull the tarp over Centre Court before the roof closes during a 2023 match. Last year, bouts of rain plagued the tournament. In 2024, the trouble could amount to withdrawals and retirements.

But the show goes on. Fans can marvel at the incredible shot-making, but watch the ball boys and girls — practicing every week for the past five months — open a new can of balls, line them up and roll them out smoothly down the court and then be awestruck at their synchronicity as they move their adolescent arms up and down like just the soldiers of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet. Turn to the impeccably clad chair umpires, perched on their green thrones, overseeing the spectacle before them and think of the Queen each June during the Trooping the Colour. Even the green clad court attendants — usually the more lax of the crews — still jump to attention when a player needs an umbrella to shield him or her from the sun.

Wimbledon's “Always Like Never Before” campaign was so successful in 2023, that it returned for a second year. It features all the former champions of Wimbledon, supposedly, except for Coco Gauff, who has never made it past the Fourth Round of Wimbledon and Carlos Alcaraz, who only raised the championship cup in 2023. The AELTC as fortune-teller.

All of these gestures add up to a greater opportunity for the main attractions — the players — to showcase their own dances to an awestruck crowd, even when slippery grass will likely results in more than a few tumbles in the coming fortnight. Here are a few more photographs from the 2023 tournament to showcase the scene as tradition prevails during 2024.

The AELTC clubhouse on a warm July night as autograph seekers wait for the day’s matches to end and the players shuffle out. The clubhouse, covered in Ivy, is flanked by past British champions.

Fans watch the jumbo screen on Henman Hill as an annoyed Alexander Zverev waits for the roof to close and play to resume in his match against Matteo Berrettini in July 2023. To the right, a very untraditional snog was captured by a cameraman and also shown during the 30-minute delay of play.


A couple shelter in place on Henman Hill as they wait for the rain delay holding up the Matteo Berrettini/Alexander Zverev in their 2023 third-round match on Centre Court.

Wimbledon, known in in technical terms as The Championships (of the All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC), is often over-described by the media as the ‘cathedral of tennis’ — the place pilgrims go to see the finest in the game on the game’s original surface: grass. But some may argue that really, the draw of Wimbledon is not necessarily the history, the club or that finely manicured green stuff. It’s the pageantry of the place — the choreography that happens during every single match — from the regular measuring of the net down to the coin toss, all of which signals to onlookers, ‘We take our tennis very, very seriously’.

But in order to put on the show, the weather — and then the players — have to co-operate. Hundreds of tennis fans set up tents outside the famous grounds in SW19, in eager hopes of watching the first day, but throughout Monday, the weather looked patchy with isolated showers on and off. But the roof stayed open on Centre Court — with a couple of avian guests fluttering in — as Raducanu dispatched Lucky Loser Renata Zarazua of Mexico, drafted in at the last moment to replace No. 22 Ekaterina Alexandrova. “It's amazing to play an opponent like Renata. It's not every day when in the morning you're not in the draw, and the afternoon you're playing on Centre Court, so props to her,” Raducanu said in her post-match victory interview.

Fans crowd the spaces between the outer courts to get a glimpse of play, as the skies decide how they will behave.

The other news came as the withdrawals rolled in. Arnya Sabalenka, the No. 3 seed, and fellow Belarusian, Victoria Azarenka, surprised AELTC management, fans and every “Bracket Battle” player when both pulled out this morning due to shoulder injuries. French Open fourth-rounders Elisabetta Cocciaretto and Corentin Moutet nullified their entries before play began, as did German Dominik Koepfer and Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, another tour journeyman. Whether or not Andy Murray, who recently had a back procedure, or Novak Djokovic, who underwent a knee operation, will play tomorrow remains to be seen.

The court attendees pull the tarp over Centre Court before the roof closes during a 2023 match. Last year, bouts of rain plagued the tournament. In 2024, the trouble could amount to withdrawals and retirements.

But the show goes on. Fans can marvel at the incredible shot-making, but watch the ball boys and girls — practicing every week for the past five months — open a new can of balls, line them up and roll them out smoothly down the court and then be awestruck at their synchronicity as they move their adolescent arms up and down like just the soldiers of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet. Turn to the impeccably clad chair umpires, perched on their green thrones, overseeing the spectacle before them and think of the Queen each June during the Trooping the Colour. Even the green clad court attendants — usually the more lax of the crews — still jump to attention when a player needs an umbrella to shield him or her from the sun.

Wimbledon's “Always Like Never Before” campaign was so successful in 2023, that it returned for a second year. It features all the former champions of Wimbledon, supposedly, except for Coco Gauff, who has never made it past the Fourth Round of Wimbledon and Carlos Alcaraz, who only raised the championship cup in 2023. The AELTC as fortune-teller.

All of these gestures add up to a greater opportunity for the main attractions — the players — to showcase their own dances to an awestruck crowd, even when slippery grass will likely results in more than a few tumbles in the coming fortnight. Here are a few more photographs from the 2023 tournament to showcase the scene as tradition prevails during 2024.

The AELTC clubhouse on a warm July night as autograph seekers wait for the day’s matches to end and the players shuffle out. The clubhouse, covered in Ivy, is flanked by past British champions.

Fans watch the jumbo screen on Henman Hill as an annoyed Alexander Zverev waits for the roof to close and play to resume in his match against Matteo Berrettini in July 2023. To the right, a very untraditional snog was captured by a cameraman and also shown during the 30-minute delay of play.


Adrian Brune

Content

noah rubin

noah rubin

noah rubin

noah rubin

Founder & CPO of Rally App

Founder & CPO of Rally App

Founder & CPO of Rally App

Founder & CPO of Rally App

Former tennis player + podcaster, Noah Rubin, who launched his Behind the Racquet platform to share the true stories of life on tour in 2019.

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