
Wimbledon Women's Final 2025: All You Need to Know About Amanda Anisimova vs Iga Świątek
Amanda Anisimova meets Iga Świątek in the final match on Saturday (July 12) at 4:00 pm. Anisimova has never been in the finals of a major game in her career. She has three singles titles while Swiatek has four major titles -- one at the US Open and four at the French Open -- though she is only nine months older than the American player.
Here is everything about the Wimbledon Women's Final 2025, including date, time, and streaming details.
When and Where to Watch?
Wimbledon Women's final 2025 will begin at 4:00 pm BST on Saturday, July 12, at the Centre Court. People from anywhere in the world, including the US, Canada, Australia, the UK, Mexico, Denmark, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Greece, Greenland, Hong Kong, China, Japan, New Zealand, UAE, Singapore, Turkey, and South Africa, can watch the final match live online from the comfort of your homes.
Here is How to Watch the Wimbledon Women's Final 2025:
United States - ESPN, The Tennis Channel, ESPN+, and ABC.
Central and South America - ESPN Latin America.
Canada - TSN Canada and RDS
United Kingdom - TNT Sports, BBC, and discovery+.
Germany - Amazon Prime Video.
Ireland - Premier Sports
Italy - Sky Italia
Spain - Moviestar +.
Sweden - Eurosport
Switzerland - RSI, RTS, and SRF streaming.
Australia - Stan Sport and Nine Network Australia.
Middle East - beIN Sports MENA.
Japan - WOWOW and NHK G.
China - SMG, CCTV5, and Tencent Sports.
India - JioHotstar and Star Sports.
Singapore - SPOTV, Singapore – SingTel TV: Ch 114, 115 | StarHub: Ch 209, 210.
Korea - tvN SPORTS.
INFLIGHT and INSHIP - SPORT 24
Barbora Krejcikova from the Czech Republic won the trophy last year, defeating Jasmine Paolini from Italy. Although Martina Navratilova lifted the Venus Rosewater Dish a record nine times, the most successful player of the century is seven-time champion Serena Williams.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Towel thief Iga Swiatek gets personalised Wimbledon souvenir
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox After Iga Swiatek's Wimbledon victory, officials presented her with a personalised towel. LONDON - During the Wimbledon fortnight, a grinning Iga Swiatek was often caught on camera cramming dozens of official towels into her tennis bags, creating a running joke that 'Wimbledon's towel thief strikes again!' On July 12, Wimbledon marked her love of the towels by presenting the new champion with a personalised purple and green version - one that can never be taken away from her. After her 6-0 6-0 thrashing of Amanda Anisimova in the final, Swiatek completed her media duties and then posed for a picture holding up a towel that had the words "Property of Iga Swiatek, Wimbledon Champion" emblazoned on it. 'This one's for keeps,' Wimbledon posted on X, alongside a picture of a beaming Swiatek. Swiatek had said following her opening round victory that tennis players loved their towels. 'It's a topic no one ever talks about,' she said. 'Every time I come back from a Grand Slam, I have like 10 friends and 10 family members wanting towels. So, sorry guys. Sorry Wimbledon. I don't know if I'm supposed to do that.' REUTERS


CNA
3 hours ago
- CNA
Towel thief Swiatek gets personalised Wimbledon souvenir
LONDON :During the Wimbledon fortnight, a grinning Iga Swiatek was often caught on camera cramming dozens of official towels into her tennis bags, creating a running joke that 'Wimbledon's towel thief strikes again!' On Saturday, Wimbledon marked her love of the towels by presenting the new champion with a personalised purple and green version - one that can never be taken away from her. After her 6-0 6-0 thrashing of Amanda Anisimova in the final, Swiatek completed her media duties and then posed for a picture holding up a towel that had the words "Property of Iga Swiatek, Wimbledon Champion" emblazoned on it. "This one's for keeps," Wimbledon posted on X, alongside a picture of a beaming Swiatek. Swiatek had said following her opening round victory that tennis players loved their towels. "It's a topic no one ever talks about," she said.

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Iga Swiatek revels in special Wimbledon triumph after hitting Grand Slam six
Poland's Iga Swiatek showing the Wimbledon trophy to the crowd from the Centre Court balcony, after beating Amanda Anisimova of the US on July 12. LONDON - Iga Swiatek bulldozed her way to a maiden Wimbledon title on July 12 to take her Grand Slam tally to six and although the Pole preferred not to rank her wins, she said her latest one felt a little more special than the others. The 24-year-old has won four Suzanne Lenglen Cups in the last six editions of the French Open to establish herself as the 'Queen of Clay' and conquered the hardcourts of the US Open in 2022, but the grasscourts of Wimbledon have always proved slippery. Having crossed the quarter-final hurdle for the first time this year, she brutally dismantled Amanda Anisimova 6-0 6-0 in the final to confirm herself as a versatile virtuoso of the women's game. 'I don't know. I think the fact that it's on grass, it makes it more special, I would say, and more unexpected. It feels like the emotions are bigger, because in Roland Garros I know I can play well, and I know I can show it every year,' Swiatek said. 'Here, I wasn't sure of that. I needed to prove that to myself. I'm not going to rank them, because I just have so much respect for the other tournaments. I worked really hard to win all the other Grand Slams. 'So there's no point choosing between them. But this one and the US Open feel, I don't know, better because no one expected that. It wasn't a relief. It was more of good tennis and working to make it happen without baggage on your shoulders.' Swiatek reached her first grasscourt final in June at Bad Homburg before her triumphant fortnight at the All England Club and said she was a little surprised with her level on the sport's fastest surface after the French Open. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World US slaps 30% tariffs on EU and Mexico; EU warns of countermeasures Singapore S'pore shows what's possible when digital innovation is matched with purpose: UK foreign secretary Singapore Casual racism should be tackled by getting more people to understand it is not acceptable: David Neo Asia Fuel was cut off during take-off: Preliminary report on Air India crash Singapore Pulling back the curtain: A backstage look at the 2025 NDP show segment Singapore $3 cashback for hawker centre meals and shopping at heartland stores with DBS PayLah initiative Singapore Body of 62-year-old man recovered from waters off East Coast Park Asia Aerobridge hits Qantas plane at Sydney Airport, damaging engine, delaying flight 'Well, 'shocked' would be too big of a word. For sure I was surprised with the consistency,' Swiatek said. 'I knew I can do it before, but I don't think I ever served so well throughout the whole three weeks even. Bad Homburg was also a good tournament in terms of that. It was always more up and down. 'I was just using the good feelings I had on the court. It felt great. I know in my mind I can be focused. I'm not going to waste points and let them go for free. But my level of tennis helped me to keep that on a constant level.' While Anisimova appeared to have frozen under pressure, Swiatek said she relied on her experience to get through. 'Finals sometimes are a bit ugly because there's so much stress. I used the experience from before,' she added. 'Today I just wanted to enjoy the time that I had on Centre Court and enjoy the last hours of me playing well on grass. Who knows if it's going to happen again. I just focused on that and I really had fun,' she added with a smile. 'Obviously I was stressed, as anybody would be. But I wanted to just do my job, and that's it.' REUTERS