Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner advanced on Day 5 at Wimbledon, Naomi Osaka beat Daria Kasatkina for her first fourth-round run at the All England Club, and Roman Safiullin upset Joao Fonseca.

Wimbledon Day 5 delivered a clean run for several top names and one notable upset, with Novak Djokovic, Jannik Sinner and Naomi Osaka all advancing through the third round while Roman Safiullin knocked out Joao Fonseca.

The day's action centered on the singles draw as players tried to secure places in the last 16 and move deeper into the second week at the All England Club. The results also sharpened the shape of both draws, with Osaka reaching a Wimbledon milestone and Safiullin removing one of the younger breakout names from the men's bracket.

Djokovic and Sinner move on

Djokovic advanced in his match against Arthur Rinderknech, keeping alive his bid to reach the last 16. Sinner also moved through, beating Jenson Brooksby to stay on course in the tournament.

The two results were part of a packed third-round slate that was still developing through the day, but both players did what they needed to do to remain in contention for the later rounds.

Osaka reaches a Wimbledon milestone

Naomi Osaka beat Daria Kasatkina 6-1, 6-3 in one of the most one-sided results of the day.

The win sent Osaka into the Wimbledon fourth round for the first time, marking her best run at the tournament to date and adding another strong result to her 2026 campaign.

Safiullin produces the upset

The standout surprise came from Roman Safiullin, who defeated Joao Fonseca in straight sets.

Fonseca's exit removed one of the tournament's younger breakout names and changed the look of the men's draw, while Safiullin's win gave the day its biggest upset value.

What comes next

With Day 5 still unfolding across the rest of the schedule, the main watchpoints are the confirmed fourth-round matchups and the wider draw implications for the players who moved through.

Djokovic, Sinner and Osaka all remained on track to continue their runs into the second week, while Safiullin's result added another layer of volatility to the men's side of the tournament.

Revision note

Initial automated publication.