×

Tennis-From Centre Court to Central Park, Agassi and Wozniacki serve up Wimbledon in NYC

By Thomson Reuters Jun 26, 2026 | 8:17 PM

By Janis Laizans and Kurt Hall

NEW YORK, June 26 (Reuters) – The manicured lawns of Wimbledon came to the heart of Manhattan on Friday when former Grand Slam champions and fan favourites including ​Andre Agassi and Caroline Wozniacki took to a temporary pop-up grasscourt ‌erected in New York’s Central Park.

Agassi and Wozniacki were joined by former U.S. player James Blake and Canadian former world number five Eugenie Bouchard for a series of exhibition matches designed to bring a taste of southwest London to New York ahead of ‌the ​Grand Slam’s start on Monday.

The quartet played singles ⁠exhibitions before teaming up for ⁠mixed doubles on a Wimbledon-style court installed at Wollman Rink at the southern end of Central Park, against a backdrop of trees and Manhattan skyscrapers.

“It was an amazing experience,” Wozniacki said. “Playing on a grasscourt in ​the middle of Central Park doesn’t happen every day. To be part of this amazing event was something that I won’t forget.”

The head ⁠agronomist at the All England Lawn Tennis ⁠Club, Mark Ferguson, oversaw the court, and the grass was ​specially grown in neighbouring New Jersey for the pop-up installation.

“I think it’s a ​fantastic kind of juxtaposition of Wimbledon and New York together,” ‌Ferguson said.

The exhibition also provided an opportunity for the former players to discuss the return of 23-time Grand Slam singles champion Serena Williams, who is set to make a surprise comeback at Wimbledon after four years away from ⁠singles competition.

“I’m very excited to see her back,” Wozniacki said.

“It’s always great to see some of the best players ever come back and play. I’ll be ⁠watching, I’ll be supporting ‌and it will be great.”

Asked whether she might consider ⁠another comeback of her own, Wozniacki smiled and replied: “I ​don’t ‌know. That’s a good question.”

Bouchard said Williams faced a ​daunting challenge ⁠by returning directly at Wimbledon without a warm-up event.

“I think it’s bonkers – in a good way,” Bouchard said.

“The fact that she hasn’t played a singles match in four years is pretty crazy to play the first one at Wimbledon.

“But if there’s anyone that can handle it, it’s Serena.”

(Writing by Ossian Shine; Editing ​by William Mallard)