2025 Wimbledon Ladies' Odds, Favorites, & Sleepers: Sabalenka Eyes All England Glory

Aryna Sabalenka begins her quest for a first-ever Wimbledon title on Monday, but as detailed below, plenty of contenders are ready to challenge the Women’s No. 1 in London.

Kenny Ducey - Contributor at Covers
Kenny Ducey • Betting Analyst
Jun 28, 2025 • 18:44 ET • 4 min read
Aryna Sabalenka Wimbledon
Photo By - Imagn Images. Aryna Sabalenka returns a shot against Coco Gauff.

We’re set for a thrilling Wimbledon on the women’s side in 2025, with plenty of top players set to compete in this year's tournament.

Can a young upstart or a well-traveled veteran capture their first title at the All England Club, or will we see a familiar face prevail in the Wimbledon odds?

Let’s break down the women’s draw below and tell you everything you need to know about the contenders... and the pretenders.

Wimbledon ladies' odds

Player DraftKings
Aryna Sabalenka +260
Elena Rybakina +600
Coco Gauff +800
Iga Swiatek +800
Mirra Andreeva +1600
Marketa Vondrousova +1600
Madison Keys +1800
Jessica Pegula +2500
Jasmine Paolini +3000
Qinweng Zheng +3000

Odds as of 6-28.

Wimbledon ladies' favorites

Who's hot

Aryna Sabalenka (+260 at DraftKings)

Sabalenka is now a strong 43-8 on the year across all competitions, with recent wins over the likes of Iga Swiatek and Elena Rybakina.

She also carries a 20-9 record on grass across the last five seasons, including back-to-back showings in the semifinals at the All England Club.

Iga Swiatek (+800 at DraftKings)

Grass has long been the nemesis of Swiatek, who’s yet to capture a title at Wimbledon with just one appearance in the quarterfinals, but this season has been a bit different.

She reached the final at Bad Homburg, but up to that point had looked like a different player on this surface, with three quality wins against Victoria Azarenka, Ekaterina Alexandrova, and Jasmine Paolini.

Swiatek did so without dropping a set, and her serve looks much improved.

Marketa Vondrousova (+1600 at DraftKings)

The lefty won Wimbledon back in 2023, and she’s proving there may not be too much in her way of capturing a second Grand Slam title on grass.

Like many of the top names in the draw, Vondrousova played just one tournament in the lead-up to Wimbledon, but she won it, taking home the title in a stacked Berlin draw with some impressive wins over Sabalenka and Madison Keys.

Jessica Pegula (+2500 at DraftKings)

Pegula is a master of hitting flat shots to push her opponents well behind the baseline, and her swashbuckling game works out brilliantly on grass.

She boasts a 16-6 record on the surface since the start of 2023, and she aided her numbers with a victory over Swiatek in the final of Bad Homburg this week — a tournament where she had to face some tough competitors like fellow American Emma Navarro.

Who's not

Coco Gauff (+800 at DraftKings)

After winning the French Open in a dramatic three-set comeback against Sabalenka, Gauff bowed out in her first match on grass in Berlin to Xinyu Wang.

Before that loss, she held a 24-10 record on grass and had reached the fourth round here three times in five appearances, but she certainly can’t be considered a trendy pick.

Mirra Andreeva (+1600 at DraftKings)

The budding star finished 6-1 on grass in 2023 when she came through qualifying to make the fourth round of Wimbledon. However, since then, Andreeva is just 1-4, with a pair of losses coming this season in the two grass-court tournaments she entered.

We know she's been able to turn it on when needed at this level, but after a disappointing clay season, Andreeva's got a lot to prove.

Wimbledon ladies' sleepers

Ons Jabeur (+6000 at DraftKings)

Jabeur is now 30 years old, and injuries have derailed what looked to be a promising career.

Regardless, she’s been one of the best players in the world on grass for most of the last five years, going 21-3 on the surface between 2021 and 2022 before hitting some turbulence.

If Jabeur can make the third or fourth round, the confidence should return, and this once-great grass player could be primed for a long-awaited Wimbledon trophy.

Diana Shnaider (+10000 at DraftKings)

I drop a line about Shnaider before pretty much every Grand Slam these days, and Wimbledon will certainly be no different. The big, powerful lefty packs a huge punch with her serve and forehand, and when she can get into rhythm, she’s an incredibly hard player to slow down.

Shnaider went 9-3 on the surface last year, winning a title in Bad Homburg and collecting a couple of wins at Wimbledon. The best is yet to come for the 21-year-old, and the sky is the limit going forward. 

Long shots to avoid

Naomi Osaka (+6500 at DraftKings)

Sadly, Osaka looks to be hurt again — and it couldn’t come at a worse time.

She looked like a serious threat to take out some big names at the French Open before losing a grueling match against Paula Badosa, and Osaka has come out flat on grass with two losses in three tries entering Wimbledon.

While the talent is still there, Osaka's body hasn’t cooperated in the past year, and that makes her a tough bet.

Emma Raducanu (+10000 at DraftKings)

Much of the focus surrounding Raducanu is on her mixed-doubles pairing with Carlos Alcaraz, and for good reason.

She’s just 16-13 across all competitions this season, and we haven’t seen anything close to the level that brought Raducanu into the public eye five years ago. 

Judging by her recent matches, this should be a quick exit, as Raducanu has looked overmatched against anyone remotely competitive.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Kenny Ducey - Covers
Betting Analyst

Kenny Ducey has worked in sports media for more than 10 years and began his journey as a credentialed reporter with Fordham University's WFUV Sports before moving on to Sports Illustrated. There, he wrote about baseball, basketball, and tennis - twice covering the NBA Finals.

He's been in the betting space for seven years, and has established himself as a top expert in MLB and tennis handicapping with brands like Tennis Channel, NBC Sports, and DraftKings. He's also been a frequent guest on betting shows such as MLB's Bettor's Eye and Tennis Bets Live.

Kenny has a knack for identifying underappreciated pitchers and tennis players as moneyline underdogs and credits his unique data analysis and hours of watching sports as the biggest reasons for success through the years. His best advice to bettors? Watch the games, trust your eye, and always question the public narrative.

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