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Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper land huge Wimbledon payday despite pulling out

Express Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper will each receive £40,000 from Wimbledon despite withdrawing before the first round, under the Grand Slam Injury Protection Programme.
40000 GBP · Emma Raducanu40000 GBP · Jack Draper
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Citation-ready fact
The prize money for opening match losers at Wimbledon is £80,000.
80000 GBP · opening match losers
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Citation-ready fact
The prize money for reaching the second round at Wimbledon is £126,000.
126000 GBP · second round
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The total prize fund at Wimbledon 2026 is £64.2 million, a 20% increase compared to 2025.
64200000 GBP · total prize fund20 % · increase in total prize fund
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Emma Raducanu and Jack Draper will bank a huge amount of money from Wimbledon despite pulling out of the tournament before the first round. Neither player will feature at SW19 this year due to injuries, with Raducanu announcing her withdrawal on Sunday night. She had been managing a stress fracture in the build-up to the Grand Slam but was unable to recover in time to play.

Raducanu was due to face Antonia Ruzic in her opening match, but has since been replaced in the draw by lucky loser Darja Semenistaja. Draper, meanwhile, pulled out on Monday afternoon just 24 hours before his blockbuster first-round clash with Taylor Fritz. He explained that he had suffered a recurrence of the arm injury that ruled him out for the majority of last season.

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Even though neither player will grace Wimbledon this year, they will still receive half of their first-round prize money under the tournament's Grand Slam Injury Protection Programme.

Opening match losers are paid £80,000, meaning Raducanu and Draper will each take home £40,000 without hitting a single ball.

However, that is still less than a third of the amount they would have received by reaching the second round, where the prize money jumps to £126,000.

A total fund of £64.2million is available at Wimbledon this year, a 20 per cent increase compared to 2025, with £3.6m going to each of the singles champions.

Announcing her withdrawal on Sunday night, Raducanu said: "I can't believe I'm saying this but sadly I've had to withdraw from this year's Wimbledon.

"I've done everything possible to try to get to the start line tomorrow but after a final scan tonight, the niggle I've been managing has developed into a stress fracture and I've been medically advised to stop pushing through."

Draper followed up with a statement of his own on Monday, which read: "Devastated to share that I have had to withdraw from my first round match due to a recurrence of my arm injury.

"There have been a lot of painful moments in the last 12 months but this one is definitely the absolute worst as there is no greater honour for a British player than playing at Wimbledon. I will continue to persevere through this. Thank you for the support."

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