cheering and applause but for the champion, it was the stuff of dreams. well, wimbledon has seen some surprise winners over the years, but not many as surprising as this. marketa vondrousova has pulled off one of sport s most remarkable triumphs. there was also some british success to celebrate. neal skupski, who s twice won the mixed doubles here, won the men s doubles with his dutch partner wes koolhof. in the wheelchair doubles, delight for alfie hewett and gordon reid. their fifth wimbledon title together, hewett is also through to the singles final later on. but for she chopped value, at the table onto marketa vondrousova, the seventh women s champion here in a row, but even this unpredictable event has never seen an unlikelier winner. andy swiss, bbc news, wimbledon. the men s final starts at 2pm today.
the rain is coming down. i managed to watch some of the semifinals yesterday. the riffle definitely be on centre court today! rpm? yesterday. the riffle definitely be on centre court today! yesterday. the riffle definitely be on centre court today! why not en oy the british summers i on centre court today! why not en oy the british summers outdoors? i on centre court today! why not enjoy the british summers outdoors? the | the british summers outdoors? the umbrellas have been up nearly all championship. the men s singles semifinal day, so under that roof on centre court we will see novak djokovic in about 30 minutes will take onjannik sinner, the italian. novak djokovic is taking all sorts of history, as you would expect. he is going for his fifth wimbledon title in a row. eight would bring him level with roger federer. at 24th grand slam overall, bringing him in line with margaret court. he has been very at ease and relaxed in the press, talking about embracing that expectation. it i
there on centre court. the pendulum. roger federer had two championship points. he faulted. it was the nerve who saw it to take his fifth wimbledon title. afterwards, he said, this was the most draining match of his career. had time to serve. you know, those moments, you just try to stay there. try to stay present and find that strength and self-belief. in the end, managed to pull it out. great to see djokovic still standing. he faced two opponents, not just federer but the crowd, as well.
continues. brandon judd, national border patrol council. thank you. thank you. djokovic. bill: did you see it? it was a match for the ages. djokovic the longest men s final in tournament history almost five hours. 4:57. djokovic clinched it followed by a celebratory smack and grab. that match marks his fifth wimbledon title. a lot of people think this might have been the greatest wimbledon match ever. can we debate it? i remember the 1981/82. that was really one for the ages. but yesterday is right up there. sandra: if you tune in midway you couldn t walk away. it took awhile to get to the
unimaginable. the team lifted that elusive championship trophy for the first time sunday. who could believe it? certainly not new zealand. they beat new zealand in front of a very passionate home crowd. it s a big deal. it was a nail-biting final that saw the first super-over tiebreaker in world cup history. in the end, the english captured the title by scoring more boundaries over the course of the match. so it was interesting to watch, for sure. and who could forget what else was going on in london today? another major sporting event. the men s wimbledon final. and it was another win for tennis star novak djokovic. the world number one earned his fifth wimbledon title after beating roger federer in an epic match. he got the win by saving two set point i don t know if you had a chance to catch any of it. it was truly epic. great to watch. coming up, the hurricane