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Anisimova Reaches Her First Wimbledon Semifinal

Jul 9th 2025

On a sunny and breezy afternoon on No. 1 Court, Amanda Anisimova and Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova met in a Wimbledon quarterfinal shaped by contrast—one player in the middle of her best season, the other drawing on years of experience at the top level. Anisimova, 23 and ranked a career-high No. 12, stayed steady through a dramatic second-set turnaround and closed out the match 61, 76(9) to reach her first semifinal at Wimbledon.

Anisimova entered the match with momentum: a WTA 1000 title in Doha, a runner-up finish at Queen’s, and a 102 grass court record in 2025. Pavlyuchenkova, 34, was appearing in her 65th Grand Slam main draw and hoping to reach her first major semifinal since Roland Garros in 2021. Anisimova had won all three of their previous meetings, but none had come on grass—until now.

The first set lasted just 26 minutes. Anisimova broke early, jumped out to a 4–love lead before Pavlyuchenkova managed a hold. There was little the Russian could do to disrupt Anisimova’s timing. The American was sharp from both wings, dictating points early. Of her 26 total winners, 11 came from the forehand and 8 from the backhand—clean, decisive shotmaking that left few openings.

After the match, Pavlyuchenkova spoke of the difficulty of adjusting to Anisimova’s pace on a new court:

I have to give her credit because I thought she was playing incredible. I couldn’t touch the ball at the beginning. It was coming very fast at me.

It was my first time playing on Court 1. I found it very, very fast… So it took me a while to get adjusted.”

The second set was more competitive. Anisimova broke for 32 and held for a 52 lead, appearing to have the match firmly in hand. But Pavlyuchenkova dug in. She held serve in a long game for 35, then broke Anisimova on her third break point. When she saved two match points in a tense hold to reach 55, the mood on No. 1 Court shifted. The match was suddenly alive.

Anisimova steadied herself with a composed hold for 65. Pavlyuchenkova held, and they were tied 6-all.

In the breaker, Pavlyuchenkova jumped out to a 63 lead, earning three set points. Anisimova fought back to level at 66, and they traded points to 99, when Anisimova found space with a backhand crosscourt winner to reach her fourth match point. A 109 mph serve down the middle sealed it—Pavlyuchenkova’s backhand return hit the net.

Photo by: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

Afterward, Pavlyuchenkova reflected on the match:

I just fought till the end. I gave everything I had.”

Anisimova, meanwhile, admitted the pressure had built in the final stretch:

Yeah, it was just pretty stressful there,” she said. “I was definitely getting a bit nervous, but trying not to really show any emotion and just to keep fighting and doing the best that I could really.”

She added that she made a conscious shift in the tiebreak:

I told myself to really go for it, to just lock in. I feel like I was able to bring my level up after that.”

After the final point, she wasn’t alone in celebrating. Anisimova brought her young nephew onto the court.

They flew in this morning,” she said. “My nephew has never seen a match of mine in my life, so it was super special—especially for the first time to be here at Wimbledon.”

The visit had been a last-minute decision, arranged just the night before.

To get the win on top of that is just an incredible experience. I’m just super happy they were able to make it out today.”

Asked about facing Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinal, Anisimova said:

I’m going to be playing against a No. 1 in a semifinal of Wimbledon, so it’s going to be really special.”