WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — If it seems as if there are more empty green seats in the stands
at Wimbledon than usual this fortnight, that's because there have been fewer spectators than usual so far.
Through the first six days of main-draw competition at the
All England Club, official attendance was listed as 237,927. That is a decrease of 7% from the Week 1 total at the last pre-pandemic edition of the tournament in 2019, which was 256,808.
Removing the last two years from consideration —
crowd sizes and ticket sales were limited during Wimbledon in 2021 because of concerns about
COVID-19, and the whole event was canceled entirely in 2020 — the 2022 figure is the second-lowest since 2007 (when it was 221,521).
Those numbers are all through the first Saturday of the fortnight. This is the first time
the All England Club expanded the planned schedule to a full 14 days by including the middle Sunday, which traditionally has been a day of rest. In the past, organizers decided to add competition on that Sunday on just four occasions — in 1991, 1997, 2004 and 2016 — after there was so much rain in the first week that they needed to scramble to ease a backlog of matches.
On Monday, when asked about prospects for attendance, All England Club CEO Sally Bolton said: "First year of permanent middle Sunday, so we are expecting a record crowd because of that. We've got that additional capacity for that day."