Democrats try to spoil Trump's victory party by slamming his greatest domestic win

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  • Democrats try to spoil Trump's victory party by slamming his greatest domestic win</p>

<p>Analysis by Stephen Collinson, CNNJuly 7, 2025 at 12:00 AM</p>

<p>President Donald Trump presents the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" after signing it at the White House in Washington, DC, on July 4. - Leah Millis/Reuters</p>

<p>Is it the start of something bigger? Or the beginning of the end of the GOP House majority?</p>

<p>President Donald Trump's triumph in forcing his massive agenda bill into law before his July Fourth deadline was the most significant domestic triumph of his two terms in office.</p>

<p>And his show of dominance in forcing Republican holdouts to back down has left GOP leaders wanting more at a time when his presidency is gathering momentum at home and abroad.</p>

<p>It was a holiday weekend of celebration for the Republican Party, though shock over the unspeakable tragedy in Texas — where flash floods claimed many lives and swept away young girls at summer camp — kept some of the heat out of partisan clashes on Sunday talk shows.</p>

<p>The GOP victory lap imposed huge pressure on Democrats to finally step up with an effective political strategy to take on an increasingly dominant president — and to turn his achievement into an anvil.</p>

<p>Party leaders will now anchor their midterm election strategy for next year on their warning that Trump's law further enriched his billionaire friends and stuck working Americans with the bill.</p>

<p>"I cannot believe Congress was willing to pass this. I mean, it's awful," Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear told CNN's Dana Bash on "State of the Union" on Sunday.</p>

<p>Beshear, who said he was considering a run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2028, warned the bill could end Medicaid for 200,000 people in his commonwealth alone and would buckle state budgets.</p>

<p>Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks during the Semafor World Economy Summit 2025 on April 23 in Washington, DC. - Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images</p>

<p>Rep. Ro Khanna pressed home the new Democratic offensive against the new law. "I just don't think that taking away the health care with the Medicaid cuts and food assistance to give the tax breaks for the very wealthy is going to be good for working- and middle-class Americans," the California Democrat said on "Fox News Sunday."</p>

<p>But House Speaker Mike Johnson doubled down Sunday on a plan to pass two more bills packed with Trump priorities using reconciliation — the budgetary trick the GOP used to ram through the president's tax cuts along with huge boosts in spending on border enforcement, carbon energy and defense.</p>

<p>And he predicted Democrats would fail to make Trump's bill a political loser for the president. "Everyone will have more take-home pay, they'll have more jobs and opportunity, the economy will be doing better and we'll be able to point to that as the obvious result of what we did," Johnson said on Fox.</p>

<p>Republicans deny the Democrats' claims about the effect of cuts to Medicaid, potentially the most emotive and politically sensitive aspect of the bill. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on "State of the Union" that new work requirements for access to the program would preserve its viability and do nothing to hurt the most vulnerable Americans.</p>

<p>And despite multiple independent assessments that the new law is a gift to the rich, Bessent highlighted its move to cut taxes on tips for some service workers for several years as proof that Trump had reoriented the economy toward workers. Bessent called his boss the "most economically sophisticated president we have had in 100 years, maybe ever."</p>

<p>But legislation of this size and complexity, which has left many Americans unsure of what is actually included, always triggers a messaging war. Republicans, for instance, falsely presented the Affordable Care Act as a massive far-left takeover of government health care on the way to winning back the House in 2010. Democrats hope to inflict similar punishment on Trump.</p>

<p>When Americans were suffering from rising grocery prices and inflation, Republicans were successful in blaming former President Joe Biden's billions of dollars in Covid-19 recovery legislation for making the situation worse.</p>

<p>Multiple polls show Democrats may have an opening. Trump's new law is massively unpopular with Americans already — so a skillful public campaign by Democrats could play on voter discontent by blaming every future adverse economic event on the new law.</p>

<p>But the administration carefully drew up the bill to ensure that tax cuts come into force quickly while some of the most controversial cuts in spending on programs such as Medicaid do not take effect until after the midterm elections, or even until 2028. The strategy seemed designed to spare GOP candidates political heat — but it also ensures the new law will be at the centerpiece of midterm elections next year and the 2028 presidential race, when Trump is term-limited.</p>

<p>Republican members of Congress reach to shake hands with House Speaker Mike Johnson after he signed President Donald Trump's signature bill of tax breaks and spending cuts on July 3 in Washington, DC. - Julia Demaree Nikhinson/APTrump's power may open new legislative paths</p>

<p>The swift passage of the bill — despite the GOP's tiny House majority and internal suspicion between Republicans in the House and Senate — was possible only because of Trump's crushing control over his party. It was not until nearly Christmas of his first term that his first tax-cutting legislation passed. This time, budget hawks in the House Freedom Caucus talked a good game, but ended up folding to the president's power when a vastly changed bill returned from the Senate. It was the latest occasion when the president's experience during his first White House spell helped make him more effective in his second.</p>

<p>Johnson, meanwhile, led the fractious GOP House conference with skill that has not always been obvious since he rose from the back benches to succeed former Speaker Kevin McCarthy.</p>

<p>But many of Trump's top priorities — on border funding, tax cuts and defense — were packed into one big bill for a good reason. Logic suggested that a majority in which the speaker can lose only a handful of votes could not bear multiple tests of fire.</p>

<p>The upside of such an approach is that the bill was so vital to Trump's authority and prestige that it was harder for significant numbers of Republicans to oppose.</p>

<p>Johnson is now testing the waters on pulling off the same trick again.</p>

<p>"We had always planned to do the first big reconciliation bill," Johnson said on "Fox News Sunday," adding he was eyeing two more such efforts in the fall and next spring. "Three more reconciliation bills before this Congress is over."</p>

<p>If the Louisiana Republican can deliver that, he'd repay the faith in millions of Republican base voters.</p>

<p>But will divides in the GOP conference Trump papered over last week be as easily suppressed next time? Will budget hawks who swallowed their antipathy to widening the deficit fold for Trump again in the future?</p>

<p>It's hard to believe that vulnerable swing-state Republicans will be more open to politically painful spending cuts even closer to the next election.</p>

<p>Why Trump's trade crackdown might decide the fate of the Republicans' gamble</p>

<p>Trump's wider economic political fortunes will therefore play a huge role in how the new law settles in the public's mind.</p>

<p>If the economy proves resilient and his predictions of soaring growth materialize, it will be harder for Democrats to highlight the negative aspects of his leadership. But if inflation is rekindled and jobs and economic growth slow, they'll have an easier target.</p>

<p>This is one reason why the coming days will be vital to the president. The deadline comes Wednesday for foreign nations to conclude trade deals with the US or face massive tariff hikes, which were pulled back amid global market panics in April.</p>

<p>Across-the-board tariff increases could hammer the economy and raise prices for Americans who sent a message in the presidential election last year that they were angry about the cost of living. But Trump is betting that a three-legged strategy of huge cuts in government spending, increased revenue in tariffs and huge tax cuts will be an unorthodox growth plan.</p>

<p>And Bessent appeared to indicate on "State of the Union" that Trump's latest trade deadline this week is yet another bluff that might spare the economy the most adverse impacts.</p>

<p>"President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of our trading partners, saying that 'If you don't move things along, then, on August 1, you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level.' So I think we're going to see a lot of deals very quickly."</p>

<p>That sounds a lot like another extension to another deadline for trade deals that administration officials once predicted would arrive in huge numbers. Aside from a few framework agreements with nations including Britain and Vietnam, there have been no major breakthroughs.</p>

<p>Unlike the mirages and contradictions of Trump's constantly shifting trade policy, however, the new agenda bill represents a big concrete bet. If rural hospitals are shuttered because of Medicaid cuts, if major immigration spending feeds a police state that alienates moderate Americans or if regular workers struggle in Trump's new age of oligarchy, the GOP risks paying the price in coming elections.</p>

<p>But the president has a record of convincing millions of people of his own version of reality — and Democrats have rarely found a way to counter him.</p>

<p>They have yet another chance with the "One Big Beautiful Bill."</p>

<p>For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com</p>

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Democrats try to spoil Trump’s victory party by slamming his greatest domestic win

<p>- Democrats try to spoil Trump's victory party by slamming his greatest domestic win</p> <p...

Turkey's pro-Kurdish party will meet with President Erdogan

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  • Turkey's pro-Kurdish party will meet with President Erdogan</p>

<p>July 7, 2025 at 12:48 AM</p>

<p>ISTANBUL (Reuters) -Turkey's pro-Kurdish DEM party will meet President Tayyip Erdogan on Monday, seeking to move along a peace process between the Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militant group.</p>

<p>DEM, the country's third-biggest party and which has played a key role facilitating the PKK's disarmament decision in May, said it met PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in prison on Sunday.</p>

<p>"(Ocalan) he said he attaches great importance to our delegation's meeting with the president described it as historic," the party said in a statement.</p>

<p>The PKK, which has been locked in a bloody conflict with the Turkish state for more than four decades, decided in May to disband and end its armed struggle. The PKK could start handing over its weapons in the coming days, officials and sources said.</p>

<p>President Erdogan will receive DEM Party leaders and delegation in Ankara at 1200 GMT. They are expected to discuss the recent developments in the PKK disarmament process.</p>

<p>Since Ocalan's public call to his PKK in February, DEM has held talks with Erdogan and other government officials seeking to propel the potential peace process.</p>

<p>Since the PKK launched its insurgency against Turkey in 1984 - originally with the aim of creating an independent Kurdish state - the conflict has killed more than 40,000 people, imposed a huge economic burden and fuelled social tensions.</p>

<p>(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Zeynep Berkem; Editing by Michael Perry)</p>

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Turkey's pro-Kurdish party will meet with President Erdogan

<p>- Turkey's pro-Kurdish party will meet with President Erdogan</p> <p>July 7, 2025 at 12:48 ...

Facing battlefield setbacks, Ukraine withdraws from mine ban treaty

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  • Facing battlefield setbacks, Ukraine withdraws from mine ban treaty</p>

<p>Max Hunder and Ivan Lyubysh-KirdeyJuly 7, 2025 at 1:02 AM</p>

<p>By Max Hunder and Ivan Lyubysh-Kirdey</p>

<p>KYIV (Reuters) -Oleksiy, a 26-year-old Ukrainian soldier, is six months into a difficult recovery after losing most of his left leg to an anti-personnel mine. Despite his injuries, he says Ukraine is right to withdraw from a treaty banning such weapons.</p>

<p>Facing challenges in securing new U.S. supplies of artillery and munitions, or to recruit enough new soldiers to hold frontline positions, Kyiv announced its withdrawal from the Ottawa Convention on June 29.</p>

<p>Military analysts and a Ukrainian unit commander said that doing so could help slow the Russian advances Kyiv is struggling to contain over three years after Moscow's full-scale invasion.</p>

<p>"Russia does not adhere to any conventions - so why should we?" Oleksiy, who gave only his first name in line with Ukrainian military requirements, said at a rehabilitation centre for wounded service personnel in Kyiv.</p>

<p>"We need to do this, because if we mine (our land) then there is then a chance that we won't give it up."</p>

<p>Russia is not a party to the treaty, and military analysts, rights groups and Ukrainian soldiers say it has been using anti-personnel mines widely.</p>

<p>Russia's Defence Ministry did not respond to a request for comment. Moscow has not confirmed it uses anti-personnel mines in Ukraine. Russian officials say Ukraine has already used such devices in the war.</p>

<p>The United States approved the provision of anti-personnel mines to Ukraine in November, Reuters has previously reported.</p>

<p>At the time, U.S. officials said Ukraine was expected to use the U.S. mines on its own territory although it committed to not using them in areas populated with civilians. Russia holds about a fifth of Ukraine including Crimea, which it seized in 2014.</p>

<p>Ukraine's defence ministry did not respond to a request for comment on whether it already deploys such munitions, their battlefield usefulness and criticism of the move. Ukraine widely uses anti-vehicle mines not covered by the treaty.</p>

<p>About a quarter of Ukraine is contaminated by mines or unexploded ordnance, the Defence Ministry's demining unit says.</p>

<p>Frontline areas and pockets of the Kursk region just inside Russia are thickly contaminated with the small devices which explode when triggered by contact, vibration or tripwires.</p>

<p>Three military analysts said anti-personnel mines were a useful tool to counter Russia's emerging tactic of sending small assault squads, some riding on motorbikes, that are not stopped by other frontline fortifications.</p>

<p>"When our side does not have much infantry on the front lines, creating a system of obstacles with these types of mines strengthens the defence - so that we do not rely solely on UAVs or artillery," said Mykola Bielieskov, a research fellow at Ukraine's National Institute for Strategic Studies, referring to unmanned aerial vehicles, better known as drones.</p>

<p>A bomb squad company commander from Ukraine's 59th brigade operating near the eastern city of Pokrovsk said a large rotary drone could be used to deploy up to 70 anti-personnel mines at a time.</p>

<p>"They can effectively mine distant areas. And the enemy will take significant losses without even reaching our positions," said the commander, who uses the call-sign Voron. He did not say whether Ukraine was already deploying anti-personnel mines.</p>

<p>"COPYING RUSSIA"</p>

<p>Anti-mine campaigners condemned Ukraine's decision to leave the Ottawa Convention, following the example of five other European nations bordering Russia.</p>

<p>The move opens the way to Ukraine increasing the deployment of a munition that can maim civilians, including children, long after conflict subsides.</p>

<p>Ukraine said in July 2024 that nearly 300 Ukrainian civilians had been killed and over 1,000 others wounded by Russian mines. Neither country releases casualty figures for its own soldiers.</p>

<p>Tamar Gabelnick, director of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, told Reuters that Kyiv's decision would put civilians at risk for years.</p>

<p>"Why would Ukraine want to copy the abusive, horrible military tactics of their enemy? Why would they want to stoop down to that level?", she said.</p>

<p>About 85% of mine deaths worldwide are civilian, she said.</p>

<p>After signing a decree to quit the treaty, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that often the function performed by anti-personnel mines could not be performed by any other weapon.</p>

<p>The decision to exit the treaty, which prohibits anti-personnel mines but not other types such as anti-vehicle mines, needs parliament's approval but is likely to be waved through.</p>

<p>Lawmaker Fedir Venislavskiy said the armed forces would use the munitions responsibly and that Ukraine has regulations on use of anti-vehicle mines, including mapping their locations.</p>

<p>"The maps of these minefields will allow them to be cleared quite quickly after hostilities end," he said.</p>

<p>Ukraine has not said whether it plans to quickly deploy more mines. Venislavskiy said it would now be able to establish its own production.</p>

<p>Ukraine destroyed some of its Soviet-era anti-personnel mine stocks after ratifying the convention in 2005 but Venislavskiy said it still has enough to cause Russia problems.</p>

<p>Oleksiy set off a mine while defending a patch of forest in territory Ukraine held in Russia's Kursk region at the time. He did not say who set the mine.</p>

<p>"I fell and saw that my leg was still there but twisted... it became so painful, I started to shout for help," he said.</p>

<p>Oleksiy dragged himself to his comrades, he said, possibly saving their lives. His leg was later amputated but he said the potential reward of mines stopping Russian advances was worth the risks involved in deploying them.</p>

<p>"We can demine it later - it's a long process, it can drag on for many years, but it's not giving up your land," he said.</p>

<p>(Reporting by Max Hunder and Ivan Lyubysh-Kirdey; Additional reporting by Taras Garanich and Alina Smutko, Editing by Frank Jack Daniel and Timothy Heritage)</p>

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Facing battlefield setbacks, Ukraine withdraws from mine ban treaty

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16 Vintage Photos That Perfectly Capture the 4th of July (1920s-1970s)

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  • 16 Vintage Photos That Perfectly Capture the 4th of July (1920s-1970s)</p>

<p>Matt Staff July 4, 2025 at 11:42 AM</p>

<p>Children ride decorated bicycles in a neighborhood parade, many wearing red, white, and blue outfits. Trees and houses with parked cars line the street on a sunny day.</p>

<p>Last on July 4, 2025 by Matt Staff</p>

<p>Long before there were modern fireworks shows as well as sprawling BBQs, the Fourth of July was widely celebrated with parades, picnics, and plenty of old-school charm. From the decade of the 1920s to the 1970s, families would gather around in small towns and big cities alike to collectively honor America's independence in style. Enjoy this nostalgic collection of vintage Fourth of July photos that will take you right back.</p>

<p>1. America's Bicentennial Celebration, July 4th, 1976</p>

<p>diosmioman/via reddit.com2. Bicentennial Parade, July 4th, 1976</p>

<p>insidiousinsidder/via reddit.com3. July 4th, tourists, 1970s</p>

<p>axlcobainvedder/via reddit.co4. Small town 4th of July Parade</p>

<p>mistermajik2000/via reddit.com5. A Fourth of July Parade out in Kentucky, 1970s</p>

<p>Screenshot6. Just a couple of grandparents trying to be patriotic, 1970s</p>

<p>yooojay/via reddit.com7. 4th of July Parade, Oklahoma, 1956</p>

<p>dhorlin/via reddit.co8. Coney Island, July 4th, 1970s</p>

<p>anonymous8919/via reddit.com9. Some lads hanging out on the 4th of July in Pennsylvania, 1970s</p>

<p>deleted8991/via reddit.co10. Nothing like a cold dip in the water on the fourth of July</p>

<p>deleted919/via reddit.com11. People gathered in Vale, Oregon on the fourth of July, 1940s</p>

<p>deleted8181/via reddit.com12. Kids joining a neighborhood 4th of July bike parade</p>

<p>anonymous8911/via reddit.com13. Celebrating the Fourth of July in Chicago</p>

<p>deleted8189/via reddit.com14. A Bicentennial Celebration in D.C. in the 1970s</p>

<p>Screenshot15. A Fourth of July celebration in South Carolina in 1939</p>

<p>gagator43/via reddit.com16. A happy Fourth of July moment from NYC in 1976</p>

<p>deleted919/via reddit.comExplore more vintage content:</p>

<p>These vintage photos remind us how timeless the spirit of Independence Day truly is. From parades to backyard cookouts, the 4th of July has always been a celebration of community, tradition, and freedom. If you enjoyed this glimpse into America's past, check out our other nostalgic collections like 35 Vintage Photos That Perfectly Capture 1975 or 17 Vintage Photos of Summer Neighborhood Block Parties (1940s-1990s).</p>

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16 Vintage Photos That Perfectly Capture the 4th of July (1920s-1970s)

<p>- 16 Vintage Photos That Perfectly Capture the 4th of July (1920s-1970s)</p> <p>Matt Staff July...

Mom-to-Be Prepares for Upcoming Visit to Mother-in-Law's by Asking for 'Stock Responses' to Unsolicited Comments

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  • Mom-to-Be Prepares for Upcoming Visit to Mother-in-Law's by Asking for 'Stock Responses' to Unsolicited Comments</p>

<p>Virginia ChamleeJuly 5, 2025 at 11:00 AM</p>

<p>Getty</p>

<p>woman arguing with mother-in-law</p>

<p>A woman is seeking phrases she can use to respond to her mother-in-law's invasive questions</p>

<p>In a post on Reddit, she writes that she anticipates plenty of "unsolicited pregnancy/baby advice/stories/demands" on an upcoming visit — and she wants to be ready</p>

<p>"What are some firm yet inoffensive phrases I can have ready to respond to her comments, guilt trips and questions and give to husband to use as well?" she asks Reddit in her post</p>

<p>A woman is seeking "firm yet inoffensive phrases" she can have at the ready to respond to her mother-in-law's invasive comments, questions and guilt trips.</p>

<p>In a post shared to Reddit, the anonymous 30-year-old woman writes that she and her husband are planning a trip to visit her in-laws, and she is "anticipating unsolicited pregnancy/baby advice/stories/demands when we visit."</p>

<p>As she is now six months pregnant, she writes that she wants to "have some stock responses ready, where we can make boundaries clear and not be ambushed into agreeing to something (like, Christmas or visitations) without discussing it, and save myself from reacting over-emotionally (I know I am more irritable than usual now I'm pregnant!)."</p>

<p>— sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.</p>

<p>Since she's gotten pregnant, the woman writes that her mother-in-law has "made suggestions about 'multigenerational living' (ie: she wants to move in when the baby comes) which husband shut down instantly, made some peculiar judgements on the fact that I don't want to repaint a nursery while pregnant ... and there was a bizarrely manipulative attempt to find out what the baby's surname will be (I did not take husband's name when we got married) which involved some weird lies about 'needing to put it in her will.' "</p>

<p>"In short, she will certainly have lots of opinions about how I should act, how we should raise baby, when can she expect to see us and how much access she will expect to baby, etc.," the woman writes in the post.</p>

<p>She ends her post with a plea to Reddit: "What are some firm yet inoffensive phrases I can have ready to respond to her comments, guilt trips and questions and give to [my] husband to use as well?"</p>

<p>Hundreds of other Reddit users have weighed in, with many offering suggestions on how to respond to the woman's mother-in-law.</p>

<p>" 'Thanks for thinking of us, but we don't know what X will look like for us yet' and 'we've already decided Y on the advice of our midwife, thanks though,' " suggests one.</p>

<p>Offers another: "We use a lot of 'we'll let you know,' 'thanks for the offer,' 'we don't need that right now,' 'I need to check with [significant other] and get back to you,' and even just smiling without saying anything. I find that the more I lower my expectations the easier it is to handle. I definitely got way more emotional about it in the beginning and time and practice have helped me to respond calmly."</p>

<p>on People</p>

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Mom-to-Be Prepares for Upcoming Visit to Mother-in-Law's by Asking for 'Stock Responses' to Unsolicited Comments

<p>- Mom-to-Be Prepares for Upcoming Visit to Mother-in-Law's by Asking for 'Stock Responses' to Unsolic...

Wimbledon 2025: Carlos Alcaraz withstands early onslaught from Andrey Rublev to win in 4 sets

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  • Wimbledon 2025: Carlos Alcaraz withstands early onslaught from Andrey Rublev to win in 4 sets</p>

<p>Ian CasselberryJuly 6, 2025 at 10:14 PM</p>

<p>Andrey Rublev started aggressively in his first set against Carlos Alcaraz, which forced the defending Wimbledon champion to play catch-up. (Photo by KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP via Getty Images) (KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV via Getty Images)</p>

<p>No. 2 men's seed Carlos Alcaraz withstood an early scare from No. 14 Andrey Rublev to continue his pursuit of a third consecutive Wimbledon title, winning in four sets Sunday 7-6 (5), 6-3, 6-4, 6-4.</p>

<p>Rublev challenged Alcaraz from the start, running out to a 4-1 lead in the first set as the defending Wimbledon champion struggled to get into a rhythm. He had difficulty winning his serve while also committing several unforced errors.</p>

<p>Alcaraz finally held serve to close within 4-2 and showed some emotion as he tried to fire himself up. Rublev then made an error at the net on an Alcaraz drop shot, giving him an opening to gain two points in the set. Alcaraz went on to win 11 of the next 12 points.</p>

<p>Rublev appeared as if he might be running low on energy after a frenetic start, and that allowed Alcaraz to get back into the set. Alcaraz took a hard fall and lost his racket while reaching to return a serve, but wasn't injured. That almost seemed to be an answer to Rublev's early aggressiveness, doing everything he could to get back into the match and force a tiebreaker.</p>

<p>Carlos Alcaraz slipped and fell to the grass during the first set of his fourth-round match at Wimbledon with Andrey Rublev on Sunday in London. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images) (Clive Brunskill via Getty Images)</p>

<p>Despite his own fall in the same corner after the two switched sides, Rublev was undeterred and went ahead 3-2 in the tiebreaker. Alcaraz showed his range by going deep in the corner to return two shots, but hit his next one into the net to fall behind 6-5.</p>

<p>And at that point, the crowd came to life, sensing Rublev was about to win the first set. That feeling was affirmed when Alcaraz again went deep behind the baseline for a return, but hit it into the net to lose the tiebreaker, 7-5. Rublev won four of his six tiebreaking sets during this Wimbledon tournament.</p>

<p>RUBLEV IS PUMPED!He takes the opening set 7-6(5) against Alcaraz 😮‍💨#Wimbledonpic.twitter.com/vJRAUvNoRf</p>

<p>— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 6, 2025</p>

<p>Yet anyone who thought Alcaraz might be shaken by losing that first set was quickly corrected. He took control with his serve in the second set and a forehand return seemed to surprise Rublev.</p>

<p>After Rublev held serve to tie the set at 2-2, Alcaraz mixed in different tactics with his rocket serves and forehands, slicing balls down the line and feathering drop shots at the net. That had Rublev moving all over the court and curbed what was a successful aggressive approach.</p>

<p>Tied at 3-3, Rublev double-faulted to allow Alcaraz to break serve. The Russian couldn't recover from there, frustrated he couldn't win his serve as Alcaraz held to get the final two points and win the second set.</p>

<p>CARLOS ALCARAZ IS UNREAL 😱 📺: ABC pic.twitter.com/qc0FxkBt4E</p>

<p>— ESPN (@espn) July 6, 2025</p>

<p>The two began the third set going back and forth, but Alcaraz arguably won the point of the match by sliding on the grass toward the corner to return a cross-court shot that darted just out of Rublev's reach for a 4-3 lead.</p>

<p>The crowd erupted at the amazing play from the two-time Wimbledon champion, and Alcaraz held his finger to his ear, asking for more. From there, Rublev played like he knew the set was lost and ready to start fresh.</p>

<p>Perhaps the difference in the match was Rublev couldn't raise his play to another level when he had Alcaraz playing catch-up. Contrarily, Alcaraz seemed to get better as the match wore on, reaching to find an extra boost when he needed it.</p>

<p>Rublev kept attempting to win his serve, aiming toward the lines to get Alcaraz chasing. But Alcaraz either got to the shots he wasn't able to get to earlier in the match, or Rublev wasn't quite as precise as when he started.</p>

<p>The fourth set began with Alcaraz getting two aces, but Rublev didn't move further back to try to adjust to the serve. That may have been another difference as Alcaraz changed his approach and mixed up his shots as the match progressed. Those adjustments helped him recover from Rublev's early onslaught.</p>

<p>Rublev came back to save three break points to stay alive. But Alcaraz broke his serve to go up 3-2. If there was one adjustment Rublev appeared to make, it was with his mental and emotional approach. During breaks in play, he looked like he was trying to calm down and not lose his composure as Alcaraz took control. Under those circumstances, Rublev wasn't just battling his opponent but himself as well.</p>

<p>"It's just about belief" Carlos Alcaraz reflects on coming back from one set down against Andrey Rublev. #Wimbledonpic.twitter.com/1X8fW54TTC</p>

<p>— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 6, 2025</p>

<p>Three consecutive errors demonstrated Rublev lost that battle, despite the crowd trying to give him a lift. After eventually losing the fourth set, he quickly left the court like someone who knew he let an opportunity for a career-making win get away.</p>

<p>Alcaraz praised Rublev's power in his on-court interview after the match. But he credited his own mental approach, saying, "It was just about belief," and not getting down after losing that first set.</p>

<p>"Andrey is one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful player, that we have on tour," Alcaraz said. "Aggressive with that forehand, it's difficult to face him. He's pushing you to a limit, running side to side. But I was happy with the way I moved. I think I played intelligently, smart today."</p>

<p>Alcaraz will face Cameron Norrie in the Wimbledon quarterfinals. The Brit could have the crowd on his side, especially after winning a thrilling five-set match over Chile's Nicolas Jarry 6-3, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (7), 6-7 (5), 6-3.</p>

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Wimbledon 2025: Carlos Alcaraz withstands early onslaught from Andrey Rublev to win in 4 sets

<p>- Wimbledon 2025: Carlos Alcaraz withstands early onslaught from Andrey Rublev to win in 4 sets</p> ...

 

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