Grigor Dimitrov keeps Wimbledon hopes alive with standout grass run
Grigor Dimitrov kept Bulgarian tennis fans dreaming at Wimbledon on 13 July 2026, advancing to the third round with a commanding straight-sets win over a seeded opponent.
Grigor Dimitrov, the 34-year-old Bulgarian, booked his spot in the Wimbledon third round with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 victory on Centre Court. The win marked his best performance on grass this season, silencing critics who questioned his form ahead of the tournament. Dimitrov dropped just one serve in the match, firing 11 aces while converting four of six break chances. His next opponent will be either Jannik Sinner or another seeded player, depending on later results.
This run matters because Dimitrov’s grass-court pedigree has been inconsistent in 2026. After a slow start on the ATP Tour, he arrived at Wimbledon with a ranking just inside the top 40. A deep run here would push him back toward the top 30 and ease pressure on his title defense in Washington next month. The Bulgarian has long relied on his serve and inside-out forehand on grass, and his movement looked sharper than it has all year. Fans in Sofia will be watching closely-Dimitrov is the only Bulgarian man ever to reach the Wimbledon quarterfinals.
Dimitrov’s path gets tougher from here. His potential fourth-round clash with Jannik Sinner would be a brutal test of his grass-court skills. Sinner, the 2025 Wimbledon runner-up, has dropped only one set en route to the fourth round. If Dimitrov survives that, a quarterfinal against Carlos Alcaraz or Daniil Medvedev looms-two players who’ve beaten him indoors and on clay this season. The Bulgarian will need to keep his serve percentages high and avoid early rallies on the rise.
The Wimbledon crowd gave Dimitrov a warm reception, especially during his second-set surge. He saved two break points at 2-2 in the second set, then broke to go up 4-2. The All England Club’s Centre Court has long been a stage where Dimitrov shines when healthy, and his timing on Monday suggested he’s rediscovering that rhythm. The win drew cheers from the Bulgarian expat community in London, who waved flags and chanted his name between games.