Wimbledon 2010 in numbersWho served the most aces, how many strawberries were eaten, how many towels were sold in the Wimbledon shop and many more numbers and statistics from the 2010 Championships.
Triumph for Navratilova Martina Navratilova’s triumph in the Ladies Invitation Doubles this afternoon with partner Jana Novotna was perhaps made all the more remarkable considering that, only two weeks ago, she was undergoing her last course of radiation therapy for breast cancer.
Rafa ready for some partyingRafael Nadal celebrated his straight sets victory over Tomas Berdych with a spontaneous forward roll on the Centre Court and then thanked ''probably the best crowd in the world'' for all their support, even when he was playing against Britain's Andy Murray
Day 13: Nadal's golden momentRafael Nadal won his second Wimbledon title with a straight-sets demolition of Tomas Berdych. Other champions crowned on the last day included Leander Paes and Cara Black in the mixed doubles, Marton Fucsovics in the boys' singles and Timea Babos and Sloane Stephens in the girls' doubles.
Review of Wimbledon 2010The 124th Championships, a Royal tournament thanks to the first visit to the All England Club by Her Majesty the Queen for 33 years, was also a record-breaking occasion in many ways, most notably for the longest ever match between John Isner of the United States and France’s Nicolas Mahut
I didn't take my chances, says BerdychBeaten men’s finalist Tomas Berdych paid tribute to newly-crowned Wimbledon champion Rafael Nadal by admitting the world No.1 simply did a much better job of taking his chances at key moments of their singles final
Nadal overjoyed at winning title he loves the mostMissing last year's Championships was the most difficult moment of Rafael Nadal's career, so winning his second Wimbledon title meant everything to the Spaniard. He showed it in his celebrations at the end of a final that he had dominated from start to finish.
Men's final: match analysisRafael Nadal is all about percentages and makes very few unforced errors, which puts pressure on opponents. For Berdych to have stood any chance at all, experts were united in their belief that he had to win the first set