American Frances Tiafoe, the No. 12 seed, joined the parade of seeded players exiting Wimbledon, as he was eliminated by 2022 semifinalist Cameron Norrie 4-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-5 in the second round Wednesday.
In seven majors since the start of 2024, Tiafoe has now been eliminated in the second round four times. Wimbledon is the only major he has not made at least the quarterfinals, losing in the third or fourth round each of the past four years.
The last time he exited the All England Club before the third round was in 2019, when he lost his opening match.
Avoiding the upset bug Wednesday was No. 5 Taylor Fritz, who got past Canada’s Gabriel Diallo 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (0), 4-6, 6-3 for his second consecutive five-set win to conclude the day’s play on Centre Court.
“That’s an incredibly hard match,” Fritz said in his on-court interview, adding there wasn’t much he thought he did wrong in the fourth set. “Had to play near perfect when I got my opportunities.”
Fritz is the seventh top-five seed in the Open era to reach the third round with back-to-back five-set wins to start a major, and third to do so at Wimbledon. He’ll try to repeat what Boris Becker did in the 1996 Australian Open, go on to win the title after starting with back-to-back five-setters.
Fritz has now played two matches — 109 total games — through three days; asked about his plans for Thursday, he replied, “Tomorrow’s going to be a very light hit — I think I’ve played plenty of tennis.”
“I’m due a nice relaxing day,” he added with a laugh.
Earlier, on Court 1, Tiafoe got off to a good start, taking the opening set with a single break of serve. But everything changed starting at the end of the second, as Norrie — who had never previously beaten a top-20 player at Wimbledon — bristled with energy and dictated points as Tiafoe began to fade.
Tiafoe left the court for seven minutes for a bathroom break before the start of the fourth set, but Norrie was not put off his stride and broke serve for a 4-3 lead.
Again Tiafoe managed to respond, but Norrie was relentless as he again pounced on the American’s serve and closed out the match.
Another American, Jenson Brooksby, lost his second-round match 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4 to Brazilian 18-year-old Joao Fonseca, the youngest man in the field at the All England Club this week.
Fonseca became the youngest man to reach the third round of Wimbledon since Bernard Tomic in 2011, and the second Brazilian man to advance that far in the past 20 years (the other was Thomaz Bellucci in 2010).
“It’s something to be proud of, for sure,” said Fonseca, who is playing in only his fourth tour-level event on grass. “I’m very happy the way that I’ve developed on this surface, I’m evolving. So I’m happy with it.”
Also Wednesday, Chilean qualifier Nicolas Jarry ousted American Learner Tien 6-2, 6-2, 6-3. It marks the fifth straight year a Chilean man has reached the third round at Wimbledon, after happening once from 2010 to ’19.
Fonseca and Jarry are set to face each other next; in the Open era, there have been only two previous occasions when two South American men played each other in the third round or later. Both of them happened in 2002.
“I know Chile fans, they’re loud. Yeah, the Brazilians are loud too. It’s going to be nice,” Fonseca said.
Ethan Quinn became the fourth American man to fall Wednesday, handed a straight-sets defeat by Poland’s Kamil Majchrzak.
American Brandon Nakashima, the 29th seed, wrapped up a 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (1), 6-4 win over Yunchaokete Bu to officially complete the first round, after their match was suspended Tuesday due to darkness.
There are five American men playing in the top half of the draw Thursday, including a head-to-head matchup between Nakashima and Reilly Opelka.
ESPN Research, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.