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  1. The Championships in 1877. 1870s. The inaugural Championships are held at the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club, Worple Road, Wimbledon, with an entry of 22 men attracted by an announcement in The Field. A crowd of 200 watch Spencer Gore become the first Champion. READ MORE.

    • 1920S

      1920S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1960S

      1960S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1930S

      1930S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1980S

      1980S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1950S

      1950S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1870S

      1870S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1990S

      1990S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

    • 1880S

      1880S - History - The Championships, Wimbledon - Official...

  2. The inaugural 1877 Wimbledon Championship started on 9 July 1877 and the Gentlemen's Singles was the only event held. 22 men paid a guinea to enter the tournament, which was to be held over five days. The rain delayed it four more days and thus, on 19 July 1877, the final was played.

  3. The following is a list of Wimbledon champions in tennis : Champions. Senior. Wheelchair. Junior. ‡ = a player who won both the junior and senior title. † = a player who won the junior title and reached the senior final. Junior 14&U. See also. Lists of champions of specific events. List of Wimbledon gentlemen's singles champions.

    Year
    Singles(gentlemen)
    Singles(ladies)
    Doubles(gentlemen)
    Wesley Koolhof Neal Skupski
    Novak Djokovic (x2)
    Matthew Ebden Max Purcell
    Novak Djokovic (x2)
    Nikola Mektić Mate Pavić
    No tournament due to the COVID-19 ...
    No tournament due to the COVID-19 ...
    No tournament due to the COVID-19 ...
    • Overview
    • Wimbledon singles champions
    • Wimbledon doubles champions

    Wimbledon Championships, internationally known tennis championships played annually in London at Wimbledon.

    The tournament, held in late June and early July, is one of the four annual “Grand Slam” tennis events—along with the Australian, French, and U.S. Opens—and is the only one still played on natural grass. The first Wimbledon championship was held in 1877 on one of the croquet lawns of the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club (since 1899 the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club). In 1884 a women’s championship was introduced at Wimbledon, and the national men’s doubles was transferred there from Oxford. Mixed doubles and women’s doubles were inaugurated in 1913.

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    In 1920 Suzanne Lenglen of France became the first person to win three Wimbledon championships (in singles and doubles events) in a single year; in 1937 Don Budge of the United States became the first man to win three Wimbledon championships in a single year. (In 1938 he repeated that feat, and he also won the other three championships of the Grand Slam.) In 1980 Björn Borg of Sweden won the men’s singles for a fifth consecutive year; this was a feat not achieved since the winning streaks of William Renshaw (1880s) and Laurie Doherty (1900s), which were held under the old challenge-round system that gave an advantage to defending champions. Martina Navratilova of the United States won six consecutive women’s championships (1982–87), eclipsing the record of Lenglen (1919–23). In 1990 Navratilova captured her ninth single’s title to break the record set by Helen Wills. Later notable players at Wimbledon include Pete Sampras of the United States, who in 2000 won his seventh title to tie Renshaw, and Roger Federer of Switzerland, whose fifth consecutive title in 2007 equaled Borg’s streak; in 2012 Federer also captured a record-tying seventh Wimbledon title.

    The Wimbledon Championships, originally played by amateurs, were opened to professional players in 1968; Rod Laver of Australia and Billie Jean King of the United States won the singles events that year. The current championships, in addition to men’s and women’s singles and doubles and mixed doubles, include events for junior boys and girls. The Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum chronicles the history of the sport.

    A list of Wimbledon singles champions is provided in the table.

    A list of Wimbledon doubles champions is provided in the table.

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    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. History. The Wimbledon Championships are played in the first two weeks of July (as of July 2017; prior to this, they were played in the last week of June and first week of July) and have chronologically been the third of the four Grand Slam tournaments of the tennis season since 1987. [4] .

    Year
    Country
    Champion
    Country
    Spencer Gore (1/1)
    Frank Hadow (1/1) ‡
    John Hartley (1/2) ◊
    John Hartley (2/2) †
  5. Jul 10, 2020 · The rain, the tie-breaks (including the fifth set one played by Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic in 2019) and the record-setting moments have all passed into Wimbledon history. Now you can read about that history in the fully updated fifth edition of Wimbledon: The Official History by John Barrett.

  6. Champions shows the concluding matches that have decided the five Championships, six wheelchair Championships and four Junior Championships over the years. From 1878 to 1921 the holder of the Gentlemen's Singles title did not compete until the Challenge Round, when he met the winner of the All Comers' Singles to decide The Championship.