Devastated Dimitrov retires injured while leading Sinner

6 hours ago 13

Grigor Dimitrov looks upset as he waves to Centre Court crowd following retirement from his last-16 match against Jannik Sinner at WimbledonImage source, Reuters

Image caption,

Grigor Dimitrov has retired injured from the past five Grand Slams

Jess Anderson

BBC Sport journalist at Wimbledon

Wimbledon 2025

Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club

Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide.

A devastated Grigor Dimitrov left Wimbledon in tears after being forced to retire injured when two sets up on world number one Jannik Sinner.

Bulgaria's Dimitrov led an enthralling contest 6-3 7-5 2-2 before he fell to the floor holding his right pectoral after serving an ace.

He appeared to be in serious discomfort following the incident and Sinner immediately rushed over to help.

Dimitrov received medical treatment after returning to his chair and then briefly left court, before returning in tears to shake Sinner's hand.

He left Centre Court to a standing ovation but was barely able to lift his right arm to wave in appreciation, with Sinner accompanying him off court.

It is the latest in a string of injury struggles for the 34-year-old, who retired injured from his first-round matches at the Australian Open and French Open.

It means Italian top seed Sinner is into the quarter-finals at SW19 for a second time - but the three-time major winner said afterwards it was "not the way we wanted it to end".

In a cruel twist of irony, Sinner had also taken a medical timeout midway through the second set for an apparent elbow injury.

He had looked uncomfortable following a fall in the opening game but seemed to be rediscovering some sharpness when Dimitrov's injury occurred.

More injury heartbreak for Dimitrov

The latter stages of Dimitrov's career have been plagued by injury.

No other player has been forced to retire injured from ATP Tour matches more often than Dimitrov, who has now quit 12 matches.

Remarkably, he has retired injured on each of his past five Grand Slam appearances, including at this year's French and Australian Opens.

It is a unfortunate run for the man once nicknamed 'baby Fed' because of the similarity of his game to eight-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer, who watched on from the Royal Box on Monday.

Dimitrov was emotional from the moment he felt the injury and did not do a news conference afterwards as he had his injury assessed.

Grigor Dimitrov and Jannik SinnerImage source, PA Media

Image caption,

Sinner rushed over to check on his friend Dimitrov after the incident

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