His victory continued America’s recent surge in men’s tennis. After a decade-plus without a viable grand slam contender, the U.S. has several players with the potential to snap the country’s 25-year major championship drought at Wimbledon (and 22-year grand slam drought overall).
It might only be a matter of time before one pulls it off.
Fritz, No. 5 in the ATP Tour rankings, isn’t the only American left in the Wimbledon field.
No. 10 Ben Shelton defeated Lorenzo Sonego on Monday in four sets, 3-6, 6-1, 7-6, 7-5, advancing to the quarterfinals. Next, he’ll play world No. 1 Jannik Sinner, who was on the ropes in Round 4, dropping the first two sets to No. 19 seed Grigor Dimitrov before the Bulgarian was forced to retire due to a pectoral injury.
With a win, Shelton would give the U.S. two Wimbledon semifinalists for the first time since 2000 (Pete Sampras, Andre Agassi). That was also last time an American won the men’s singles title, with Sampras earning his seventh Gentleman’s Singles Trophy.
Andy Roddick was the last American to reach a Wimbledon final (2009). He’s also the most recent U.S.-born player to win a grand slam, taking the 2003 U.S. Open final in straight sets.
Fritz will play the winner of Tuesday’s second quarterfinal match between No. 2 Carlos Alcaraz and Cameron Norrie, ranked 61st on the ATP Tour. Alcaraz (-1700) is an overwhelming favorite, according to ESPN BET.
Fritz, who has two tour wins in 2025, is 0-2 all-time against Alcaraz. They most recently met at the 2024 Laver Cup, with their first match coming at the quarterfinals of the 2023 Miami Open.
He is 8-6 against Norrie.
The American is coming off two grass court tournament titles, winning the Stuttgart Open on June 15 and his second consecutive Eastbourne Open on June 28.
During his quarterfinal win on Tuesday, Fritz recorded 16 aces and won 81 percent of his first serves. Per Tennis Abstract, entering Wimbledon, he was No. 1 on tour in first serve in percentage (78.5 percent) and No. 3 in aces (650).
Last year, he reached his first grand slam final, losing to Sinner at the 2024 U.S. Open.
American men’s tennis is arguably at its strongest since the Sampras/Agassi heydays. Fritz and Shelton could potentially end the major title drought at Wimbledon, but they aren’t alone in shaping the resurgence of American men’s tennis.
World No. 12 Frances Tiafoe has reached two U.S. Open semifinals (2022, 2024), while No. 13 Tommy Paul has three quarterfinal appearances in his last five grand slams (2024 Wimbledon, 2025 Australian Open, 2025 French Open).
With Sinner and Alcaraz, winners of the past six grand slams, entrenched as the sport’s top two players, the band of Americans trying to break through might have easier access to Fort Knox than a major championship.
But they at least have a chance, which is more than American men’s tennis has had for most of the 21st century.