Wimbledon 2026: Draw Preview and Analysis
Nothing is a given as Jannik Sinner looks to defend his Wimbledon championship amid questions surrounding his health and fitness, and Aryna Sabalenka looks to find her light again in the Wimbledon 2026 draw preview and analysis.

Fresh out-the-box Grand Slam champions Alexander Zverev and Mirra Andreeva have challenging Wimbledon draws– life at the top doesn’t get any easier in pro tennis.
In a Union-Jack-style trumpet flourish, Serena Williams returns to singles play at the age of 44. She’s actively using GLP-1 medication to improve her health and weight. This is experimental territory for both science and sport.
If we learned anything from Roland Garros it’s that even the most favored favorites can run into blocks. Mental blocks (Sabalenka), physical blocks (Sinner), stumbling blocks (Sonmez) and even Alexander Blockx, who Zverev will face in Wimbledon Round 1.
Top line observations: Sabalenka and Andreeva land in the same quarter– the Wimbledon 2026 quarter of death. More on that in a bit. Sinner’s draw is well-trod for him. Known quantities. British star Jack Draper and American super-server Taylor Fritz caught the worst luck imaginable by drawing each other in Round 1. Absolutely nobody would have wanted that, so we can put to bed the idea that Grand Slam draws are fixed, ok conspiracy theorists?
And finally, Novak Djokovic who might at any moment tell us this is his last Grand Slam– or win the whole doggone tournament– gets potential rematches with Joao Fonseca and Sinner.
To the Wimbledon 2026 draw preview and analysis.
What Was Jannik Sinner’s Illness?
Sinner has been stricken with heat-related physical decline in two consecutive Grand Slams. In Australia 2026, he was losing to Eliot Spizzirri when organizers closed the roof, cooling him off. But at Roland Garros 2026, a game away from advancing in Round 2, he suffered in a blistering Paris heatwave and lost to Juan Manuel Cerundolo.
Sinner says tests were run at an Italian hospital, and he’s clear of any problems. The world #1 opted to rest and recharge heading into Wimbledon, as opposed to his treadmill-style sprint he undertook leading up to Roland Garros.
Jannik begins with Miomir Kecmanovic, whose best surface is not grass. Later I have Sinner facing the winner of Rafael Jodar and Ethan Quinn. I happened to catch Jodar and Quinn play earlier this year, and the Spaniard dominated the American on movement. That said, Jodar has been suffering from an abdominal injury, and Quinn has made it to the final of Majorca. Tough call, but I have Jodar based on a stellar grass record as a junior.
The bottom of this section features excellent Americans Tommy Paul and Brandon Nakashima as well as 2-time Wimbledon semifinalist Daniil Medvedev. I have Paul over Hubert Hurkacz and Medvedev over Nakashima based on a 3-0 H2H. I then have Sinner facing Paul in the quarterfinals, and Tommy’s record against Jannik is 1-4, though his only win was on grass. Strategy for Paul: Disrupt and run him.
Wimbledon Draw Preview and Analysis: Novak Djokovic, Felix Auger Aliassime
The 24-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic has a path that potential includes Stefanos Tsitsipas (not a problem these days), Arthur Rinderknech (never played!) and possibly Fonseca, who toppled the GOAT at Roland Garros.
We could look at a whole bunch of different metrics here, but there exists a bottom line here. Grass is such a different surface that requires so much local knowledge that I believe Novak would beat young Joao. I have Djokovic in the final four.
Felix Auger Aliassime left Roland Garros with a bad taste in his mouth having lost to an on-fire Flavio Cobolli in the quarterfinals. But grass is a better surface for Felix. A semifinal appearance is certainly possible. That said, I can envision a scenario where FAA is flummoxed by the lefty Learner Tien.
Wimbledon 2026: Ben Shelton Quarter
Coming off an excellent grass warm-up season that included a title, Shelton is poised for a strong Wimbledon showing. A quarterfinalist here last year, Shelton has a doable draw, and might get some help.
The next-highest seed is Alex De Minaur, whose results this season have been uneven. Demon has tougher characters around him in this Wimbledon 2026 draw. Kamil Majchrzak, Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard and Tallon Greikspoor are all quality grass court players.
Near Shelton, Jakub Mensik, Matteo Berrettini and Arthur Fils can accomplish anything– but have injury question marks. I have Ben and Alex meeting in the quarters where Demon pulls out the match in 5 sets. I think De Minaur knows how to bait Shelton into going for undisciplined shots.
Alexander Zverev: Wimbledon 2026 Preview
The top of this quarter is an absolute zoo. Fritz can’t catch a good draw at the All England Club to save his League of Legends life. But hey– even L of L gives you respawns, and I think Taylor can get through a rusty Draper.
A compelling middle of this quarter could potentially give us an entertaining battle between Frances Tiafoe and Alexander Bublik. I have Bublik in 5 sets and a bit fatigued such that Fritz could nab him in the Round of 16.
After that, I forecast Jiri Lehecka over Francisco Cerundolo based on a 2-0 H2H and Zverev over Lehecka. That would put Alex and Taylor in the quarters, and this is a fantastic rivalry. Fritz leads the H2H over Zverev 10-5, including the last 7 meetings. Some of these matches have been real humdingers. Will the lifted weight of winning a Grand Slam break the curse for Zverev over Fritz? I think Taylor’s cresting toward good form again. Fritz in 5 with breakers aplenty.
My players to watch coming through:
Rd. of 16: Sinner, Paul, Tien, Djokovic, De Minaur, Shelton, Fritz, Zverev
QF: Sinner, Djokovic, De Minaur, Fritz
SF: Sinner, Fritz
F: Sinner
Women’s Wimbledon 2024: Draw Preview and Analysis
The women’s draw features one of the toughest quarters of a Grand Slam I can remember. World #1 Aryna Sabalenka sits atop a cadre of champions including: Jelena Ostapenko, Emma Raducanu, Naomi Osaka, Bianca Andreescu (she qualified), Barbora Krejcikova and Mirra Andreeva. It’s stunning. Add to that other very fine players like Leylah Fernandez, Karolina Muchova, Maja Chwalinska, Katerina Siniakova and Qinwen Zheng– yes she’s starting to play well again.
I have Krejcikova and Andreeva in Round 2 popcorn. Because of Mirra’s lack of grass court prep and the major hullaballoo of winning Roland Garros, I really don’t see her getting through former Wimbledon champ Krejcikova, perhaps Siniakova, perhaps Muchova, perhaps Osaka or Sabalenka. You’re asking a bit much.
Upstream, Sabalenka could meet Osaka. They just met at RG, where Aryna won in straights. But Naomi has opted to play the week before Wimbledon, and for this particular player, I like the choice. She is currently in the final. Conversely, Sabalenka lost to Jessica Pegula in the Berlin final last week where she was bagelled in Set 3. Not ideal. Sabalenka says she’s been in a dark hole. I think the time might be right for Osaka on a serve-friendly surface.
Speaking of Pegula, Jessie famously won her maiden grass court title last year, then proceeded to crash out in Wimbledon Round 1. I highly doubt, given her work ethic, she’ll allow that again. In fact, I have Pegula going all the way to the Wimbledon 2026 final.
In the other half of this Wimbledon 2026 draw preview and analysis, we have many first-round must-see matches. Emma Navarro takes on Paula Badosa (I pick Navarro based on recent form). Defending champion Iga Swiatek faces Taylor Townsend in Round 1. Taylor is capable of disruption due to her ability to volley.
In what will likely be the most-watched match of the opening round Serena Williams takes on Maya Joint. This is complicated by several factors, not the least of which is Serena’s GOATedness and her age. Joint, ranked 53 in the world, won a grass title last year. She can play on the stuff. But she’s had a hellacious grass court campaign in 2026 and is likely battling injury. If Serena can win this match, I would deem the whole idea to come back a success. She would not deem that good enough, but I surely would.
Here’s what’s important to understand. Yes Serena Williams is the GOAT, and yes her serve is still potent, as we saw in her doubles re-debut. But it’s the movement– and the game itself. Like all sports, as time passes, the sport thrusts ahead. The level of play will be just a slight tick better than when she last played. And in pro sports, tiny margins tilt huge outcomes. That said, I do see Serena getting through Round 1. I cannot pick against the GOAT, but I believe it will be tougher than she expects against a player called “the Ginger Ninja.” I would not pick Williams against Alex Eala, who will very likely be there in Round 2.
Speaking of which– Eala might face Swiatek– and with a 1-1 H2H in their series, the previous match might factor in.
In the final women’s quarter, numerous power players and big servers reside. Former Wimbledon champ Elena Rybakina anchors this part of the draw. Her grass season has been sketchy, but she’s deleted social media and seems focused. Madison Keys and Linda Noskova might make deep runs, but I still back Rybakina’s serve and plus one backhand at Wimbledon.
My players to watch coming through:
Round of 16: Osaka, Muchova, Pegula, Gauff, Vekic, Swiatek, Noskova, Rybakina
QF: Osaka, Pegula, Swiatek, Rybakina
SF: Pegula, Rybakina
F: Rybakina























