Key events
Preamble
Wotcha and welcome to Wimbledon 2026 – day eight!
It’s Manic Monday no more but, absorbing into the schedule of matches here to embrace us over the next 10 or so hours, it’s not difficult to find some replacement alliteration.
Majestic Monday begins with Marta Kostyuk, by the looks of things establishing herself – finally – among the elite of the elite and, with Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina, Mirra Andreeva and Amanda Anisimova already out, the scent of possibility will be heady and tantalising. But Ashlyn Krueger has plans of her own, in terrific nick after qualifying and enjoying the best grand slam performance of her short career.
On No 1, meantime, Maarvellous Monday opens with a belter, Alex de Minaur making his latest bid to cheat his athletic ceiling against Flavio Cobolli, defeated French Open finalist and a player ranked lower but rated higher. Expect perhaps the two quickest players on tour to deliver extended rallies, ridiculous retrievals and a potential epic – with the potential for much anguish should the Australian lose to the younger man.
Magnificent Monday continues on Centre with Jasmine Paolini, who appeared suddenly out of nowhere to contest the closing stages of majors, meeting Alexandra Eala, the young Filipina phenom, who dismissed the defending champ in the last round. With Linda Noskova the highest-ranked seed remaining in the bottom half of the draw, the excitement at the opportunity of a lifetime will be matched only by the trepidation.
Nor is that it – or even remotely it. Marie Bouzkova, two seeded staples never expected to go on will be starting to wonder if this is their time, just as Maddy Keys, her career now gravy after last year’s unexpected Aussie Open triumph, will fancy her chances, pressure off and power on.
Second on Centre – yup, we’re only halfway through the day – Arthur Fery faces Griggzy Dimitrov, leader of the lost generation whose grand slams were entirely subsumed by the Big Three and the Slightly Less Sizeable Two. But now a fully matured all-round brute, he’s a a man on a mission having led Jannik Sinner by two sets to love at this stage last year, only for injury to intervene with the tournament suddenly looking available to him. This may well be his final shot at immortalising himself in the annals of the game.
The, closing out Monumental Monday, we’ve Taylor Fritz – another chasing the shot of a lifetime at the dream of a lifetime – and in fantastic form. Alexander Bublik, though, is a mercurial talent slowly starting to treat tennis like it matters to him, an improvisational talent with the imaginative touch his opponent will never quite enjoy.
Finally, on Centre, Alexander Zverev – like Keys spieling with house money after securing that elusive first major – will also feel ready to wade in and snatch a second while others fiddle. His new-found confidence, though, is still solidifying, and Jiri Lehecka has the big-serve and forehand combo-move to test him.
Here we go!
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