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Tag: Tennis

  • Serena Williams brings athlete discipline to business leadership in ‘The CEO Club’ series

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    LOS ANGELES — LOS ANGELES (AP) — Serena Williams may have traded match points for meetings, but the hustle doesn’t stop — even during interviews.

    When Williams logged onto Zoom for an interview with The Associated Press, she was already mid-glam, toggling between touch-ups and business talk. It was a snapshot of the multitasking life she now leads beyond tennis after stepping away from professional competition in four years. The 23-time Grand Slam champion, business investor and producer is among the featured leaders in the new Prime Video docuseries “The CEO Club,” which premieres Monday.

    Williams has not competed since the 2022 U.S. Open, when she said she was “evolving” away from tennis. Earlier this month, she became eligible to return to competition after reentering the sport’s drug-testing pool, although it remains unclear whether she plans to play again.

    For Williams, the transition from elite athlete to entrepreneur draws on the same competitive principles that defined her tennis career.

    “I think the biggest lesson is just never give up, and you have to keep trying,” said Williams, who stars in the series alongside Latin singer Thalia; former model and fashion designer Dee Ocleppo Hilfiger; Market America and Shop.com CEO Loren Ridinger; supermodel Winnie Harlow; wellness entrepreneur Hannah Bronfman; and Isabela Rangel Grutman, founder of ISA Grutman jewelry. The eight episode season follows the prominent executives navigating high-stakes decisions, family responsibilities and personal challenges while building global brands.

    “As a CEO, you don’t win everything. You have to make really hard decisions,” Williams continued. “Just like in sport and in tennis, you have to show up every day. You might lose, but you just have to show up again the very next day.”

    Beyond appearing in the series, Williams also served as an executive producer through her company Nine Two Six Productions, a role she said felt natural after years in the public eye.

    “Being in the public eye for so long, you really want to control the narrative and make sure the truth gets out there,” she said. “Not only for me, but for these amazing women that are in the show as well, it’s super important that the right story is told.”

    Ridinger said the series highlights the realities behind leadership that audiences often don’t see.

    “Everybody thinks you’re just like an overnight success. They don’t realize it took 34 years to get where you’re at,” she said. “Leadership is not that easy. You have to make tough decisions, tough calls. You’re not always a fan favorite of people who you’re working with.”

    Ridinger said building a business while balancing personal responsibilities requires prioritization and discipline, particularly for leaders managing both professional demands and family life. She said maintaining focus often means making intentional decisions about how time and energy are spent each day.

    “You cannot become a slave to emergencies,” Ridinger said. “You have to learn how to prioritize. And the way I do that is very simple. I do the hardest things first every day.”

    Both women emphasized the importance of surrounding themselves with trusted supports systems. They said that’s a common theme that runs throughout the series.

    “The curation of a positive circle is just part of life that we need to have,” Ridinger said. “You’re not going to associate with somebody that doesn’t believe in what you do.”

    Williams said the mental resilience required in sports has also prepared her for the pressures of leadership.

    “When you’re the best, most people want you to not do so well,” she said. “You just have to lean into making those decisions anyway.”

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  • More Sports (Sky Sports)

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    Great Britain have claimed a second gold medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics after Huw Nightingale and Charlotte Bankes won the mixed team snowboard cross event.

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  • Andre Agassi and wife Steffi Graf are ‘couple goals’ as he shares heartfelt note and photos to celebrate the ‘love of his life’

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    Andre Agassi shared a sweet note dedicated to his wife Steffi Graf to celebrate the “love of his life” on Valentine’s Day.

    The tennis legend took to social media to share a carousel of pictures of the duo, including one of himself romantically kissing a huge hallway picture of Steffi, as she happily held up her Grand Slam trophy.

    The other featured pictures showed the pair playing tennis together when they were younger and more recently.

    © Instagram
    Andre shared a sweet post online

    He captained the shot: “Happy Valentine’s Day to the love of my life, my unicorn,” with a heart emoji.

    Fans loved the thoughtful gesture and flocked to the comments to show their support. One follower wrote: “Couple goals,” while another wrote: “My 13-year-old self prayed SO hard for this union. My 48-year-old self still cannot believe it really happened!”

    A third fan commented: “Two champions, one GIGANTIC love story,” while another added: “Absolutely love Seeing two legends fall in love.”

    He shared a throwback picture of the duo© Instagram
    He shared a throwback picture of the duo

    This isn’t the first time that Andre has romantically gushed about his wife online. For their anniversary back in October 2025, he captioned a moving carousel of the duo enjoying a night out and a throwback to them holding up their trophies together.

    He captioned it: “24 years with this wonderful woman. Happy Anniversary Steffi, you are my unicorn!”

    Andre had a crush on Steffi way before they were together. He revealed in his memoir titled Open: “I’ve had a crush on Steffi since I first saw her doing an interview on French TV. I was thunderstruck, dazzled by her understated grace, her effortless beauty.”

    This isn't the first time that he's gushed about his wife© Instagram
    This isn’t the first time that he’s gushed about his wife

    He sent her a message in 1991, however “she didn’t respond.” The following year after he won Wimbledon, he looked forward to meeting her at the Wimbledon Ball but it was canceled. 

    He recalled: “I don’t get to dance with Steffi, but there will be a kind of consolation match: a formal introduction. I look forward to it all night. Then it happens.”

    He previously shared another throwback of the pair© Instagram
    He previously shared another throwback of the pair

    Andre continued: “Shaking her hand, I tell Steffi that I tried to reach her at last year’s French Open and I hope she didn’t misunderstand my intentions. I say, ‘I’d really love to talk with you some time.’”

    Their coaches set up a tennis practice for them in 1999, however, she had a boyfriend at the time and he was going through a divorce from Brooke Shields.

    It all worked out in the end, and the two got married in 2001, and then days after tying the knot, she gave birth to their first child Jaden Gil Agassi in 2001, and then Jaz Elle Agassi two years later.

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    Nova M Bajamonti

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  • Tennis legend John McEnroe raises alarm over affordability in youth sports

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    John McEnroe is talking about tennis, but he could as well be speaking about baseball, basketball, football, track, field or any other sport that requires a stick, bat, ball or puck.

    The retired tennis legend was in Frisco recently to promote the 2026 Nexo Dallas Open, and there are few current — or former — athletes who are any more fearless in front of a mic. Charles Barkley, Martina Navratilova, Pat McAfee, Johnny Mac … there are precious few.

    I asked McEnroe what single element of tennis he would like to change.

    “In a nutshell, because this has been an issue forever, since I was growing up. My father was a lawyer, became a partner in the law firm, and he needed some help in the early days for the cost of (tennis),” McEnroe said.

    John McEnroe’s dad was an attorney, and he needed to find the extra money to help pay for his son to play tennis.

    “So I recognize, and I think we all did, everyone did, that it’s too expensive,” McEnroe said. “Generally, there’s not enough people that have the chance to do something that I believe is a tremendous sport.”

    America’s youth sports revenue potential

    To play almost anything these days is to pay a wallet-crushing amount. The Winter Olympics is always fun to watch, and it features a menu of sports that can only be played by those with the financial resources.

    A study in 2024 by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) said that “70 percent of kids drop out of organized sports by age 13.”

    One of the primary reasons behind the surge in dropouts is the price. Tennis and golf have long been called “country club sports,” and carried a higher price tag. Now, way too many sports have moved into the same country club.

    “The parents seeing dollar signs. That’s a very troubling thing,” McEnroe said. “It’s gotten worse, than not better.”

    It’s gotten worse because America’s youth sports scene has become so profitable that private equity firms are reportedly showing an interest to join what previously had been a space for recreation, fun and life lessons for young people. A 14-year-old playing a baseball game in front of eight people is now a part of a billion-dollar industry.

    A parent’s ambition to provide an opportunity for their kid, and or vicariously live out their own athletic fantasy through their child, has proven to be a can’t-miss marketing march to the heart. It’s also a delicious profit margin for sports that hold virtually no commercial appeal.

    Why charge $10 when you can bill $100? Why do something to just cover the costs when you can make a real profit, and or potentially have a career and thriving business? The idealism of youth sports has been replaced by America’s preference for capitalism.

    Moms and dads are paying for all of this, up to and including the price of a ticket to attend a tournament that they are the ones funding through a series of fees that never ends.

    “(I’m) always trying to raise money to give more kids that can’t afford it, which unfortunately is like 99% of the population,” McEnroe said. “So maybe it’s slightly less, I hope, but I’m not sure it is. If anything, it has become more unaffordable since the ‘70s. So that would be the biggest thing.”

    How to play without taking out a second mortgage is hard

    Play rec. There are still recreational and school leagues for most sports where a kid can play without assaulting their parents’ bank accounts. The challenges associated with this path are everywhere; at a bigger school, there may be so many kids who try out for the team there are often not enough spots. At a smaller school, the team may not even exist.

    The drop in competition between rec league and the club team can be so noticeable that it’s discouraging to the player, or parent. It all contributes to the kid ending their playing career at a time when they should still be playing.

    Kevin Harvey was raised by a single mom, and was a three-sport athlete at Mineral Wells High School in the late ‘90s. He played on an AAU basketball team in middle school and high school.

    “To this day I still don’t know who paid for me to be on that team because I know my mom could not afford it,” said Harvey, who is the girls basketball coach at Nolan Catholic High School. He also coaches four to six AAU teams.

    If the player is talented, they can find a team that will cover the costs. In almost anything. Harvey, who played basketball in college, was one of those guys.

    The price can be depressing. For basketball, it can be $3,000 to $4,500 a season. That doesn’t include tournaments, and the costs associated with travel. For hockey, $1,200 a month. Not including equipment. One season of cheerleading can run $10,000.

    The startup cost to cover a kid’s first season of T-ball is around $600. A season of baseball can be as low as $2,000, to as much as $30,000. Soccer is in that same neighborhood.

    The ROI of youth sports is that it can be a life-improving opportunity for a kid, a bounty of lessons dressed as fun, complete with a final score.

    “I cannot imagine my life if I did not have sports,” Harvey said. “Basketball saved my life, and every day I thank God for basketball.”

    Whether it’s tennis, basketball or golf, those life-altering opportunities in America still exist, but they just cost a lot.

    This story was originally published February 13, 2026 at 6:00 AM.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Mac Engel

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  • England v Nepal scorecard

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    Scorecard: England vs Nepal, T20 World Cup, Mumbai

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  • Sri Lanka v England scorecard

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    Scorecard: Sri Lanka vs England, third T20

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  • Novak Djokovic May Be About to Do the Unthinkable

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    Photo: Mark Avellino/Anadolu/Getty Images

    Until Friday, this year’s Australian Open was highly predictable and spiritually dull. So anticlimactic and upset free were the first 12 days that the story of the tournament had been the peaceful manner in which Coco Gauff, reeling from her quarterfinals loss, sought out a private area in the bowels of Rod Laver Arena to dismantle her racquet (she was caught on-camera, prompting 48 hours of discourse about surveillance and privacy or the lack thereof). On the men’s side, fans, pundits, and bookies agreed the whole tournament was sort of a mandatory preamble to yet another face-off between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, who have met in the finals of the past three majors and strengthened their choke hold over the rest of the tour.

    But the greatest player in men’s tennis history had other ideas.

    Over the past two seasons, 24-time major champion Novak Djokovic, accustomed to being on top for so long, had emerged as a consistent third wheel to the Sinner-Alcaraz duopoly, reaching four major semifinals and losing to one of them at each. At 38 — an unthinkable age to be going this deep into majors — the Serb was an 8-1 underdog against Sinner going into their Friday semifinal, having lost his previous five matches against the world No 2. And the prospect that Djokovic could win a men and women’s record 25th major title — the distinction, one assumes, that has been preventing him from retiring altogether — seemed unlikely.

    That’s why his five-set win over Sinner, concluding just before 2 a.m. on Saturday in Melbourne, is up there with the most impressive feats in what was already the sport’s winningest résumé. Since Sinner’s emergence in 2022, the Italian had often been compared to Djokovic, with analysts somewhat lazily equating their suffocating consistency and ruthless ground strokes. But Sinner has always been the more natural aggressor, with Djokovic favoring an approach rooted in power absorption and counterpunching.

    On Friday night, however, Djokovic took the bigger cuts. Nowhere was his desire to shorten the points against his much younger and generally fresher opponent more evident than in the match’s third-to-last game, with Sinner threatening one final momentum shift. Serving at 4-3, the Serb fended off three break points. But this wasn’t exactly the Djokovic of years past, machinelike and steely-eyed, simply refusing to miss. This was Djokovic playing offensive, first-strike tennis, uncorking down-the-line forehands while airborne, drilling his backhand to the corners, firing off an ace, then keeling over in the sort of pain familiar to most 38-year-olds who push themselves to the limit. That he could impose his will on Sinner, 14 years his junior, seemed shocking at first and then fated, since it called to mind the physical and mental fortitude that has enabled Djokovic to win this tournament ten times.

    On several occasions, Djokovic crossed himself and looked up at the midnight sky as though being guided by a deity. And surely, Djokovic has had luck on his side these past two weeks, having been the beneficiary of Jakub Menšík’s withdrawal in the fourth round and, most fortuitously, Lorenzo Musetti’s mid-match retirement when Djokovic was down two sets and, as he put it later, “on my way home.”

    Djokovic may need another turn of good fortune in Sunday’s final against Alcaraz, whose own warriorlike resolve was on display in his gutsy, five-and-a-half-hour victory over Alexander Zverev in the other semifinal. History will be on the line: that record-setting 25th slam for Djokovic and a first Australian Open for Alcaraz, which would make him the youngest man to win all four majors. In the U.S. Open semifinals last September, Alcaraz appeared to have put a bit of distance between them, earning a mostly routine straight-set win. But only one year earlier, Djokovic had stunned the Spaniard at the Paris Olympics to add the elusive gold medal to his immense trophy case. If the idea that he would beat Sinner and Alcaraz back-to-back seemed far-fetched two weeks ago, consider the fact that nothing motivates Djokovic quite like his pursuit of the sport’s mountaintop.

    For most of us watching Stateside, the 3:30 a.m. wake-ups required to watch Australian Open tennis haven’t been especially rewarding this year. But Sunday’s match is worth setting an alarm for.

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    Jake Nevins

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  • How to Watch Aryna Sabalenka vs Iva Jovic: Live Stream Australian Open Quarterfinal, TV Channel

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    Number one-ranked Aryna Sabalenka faces Iva Jovic in the Australian Open women’s singles quarterfinals on Monday.

    How to Watch Sabalenka vs Jovic: Australian Open Quarterfinal

    • When: Monday, January 26, 2026
    • Time: 7:30 PM ET
    • TV Channel: ESPN+, ESPN, ESPN2
    • Live Stream: Fubo (try for free)

    Tonight’s matchup at Rod Laver Arena sees World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, a two-time Grand Slam champion and one of the favorites to contend for the title, facing 18-year-old Iva Jovic in the quarterfinals of the 2026 Australian Open. Sabalenka advanced with a powerful straight-sets win over Victoria Mboko, showcasing her trademark aggressive baseline game and depth of shotmaking, while Jovic impressed with a dominant 6-0, 6-1 victory over Yulia Putintseva to reach her first Grand Slam quarterfinal. This clash of experience versus rising talent sets the stage for a compelling contrast: Sabalenka’s relentless power and consistency against Jovic’s fearless shotmaking and confidence at this breakout stage.

    In the United States, the Sabalenka versus Jovic quarterfinal begins at approximately 7:30 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ESPN2, with full match streams available on ESPN+ for subscribers.

    With no previous head-to-head between these two, tonight’s meeting promises intriguing dynamics, and viewers tuning in will get to see whether Jovic’s stunning run continues or Sabalenka’s Grand Slam experience prevails.

    This is a great tennis matchup that you will not want to miss; make sure to tune in and catch all the action.

    Coverage of the 2026 Australian Open is exclusively broadcast on ESPN, ESPN2, & ESPN+, all of which you can live stream with FuboTV.

    Live stream 2026 Australian Open coverage for free with Fubo: Start your free trial now!

    With Fubo, you can watch live television without cable on your phone, TV, or tablet. Fubo carries a wide array of sports and entertainment channels, including local sports packages and top national channels like ABC, FOX, CBS, ESPN, ESPN+, FS1, MTV, Comedy Central, and much more. The best part is you can try it out today for free.

    Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.

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  • Heat is off: Sinner advances to Australian Open quarterfinals

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    MELBOURNE, Australia — Jannik Sinner may have felt lucky to survive the Australian Open third round but he rebounded quickly in a 6-1, 6-3, 7-6 (2) win Monday over fellow Italian Luciano Darderi to reach the quarterfinals for a ninth consecutive Grand Slam event.

    The two-time defending champion struggled with the extreme heat and cramping in his Saturday afternoon win over No. 85-ranked Eliot Spizzirri, and only took control after the roof was closed in the third set.

    Sinner later admitted he got a bit lucky with the timing of the extreme heat policy being invoked, leading to an eight-minute break to close the roof. He was also able to refresh in a 10-minute extra cooling break between the third and fourth sets.

    In an evening match in cooler conditions Monday, he was cruising until Darderi lifted his tempo in the third set. Second-ranked Sinner missed match points in the 10th game on Darderi’s serve but then took it up a notch in the tiebreaker.

    “I felt quite good out there physically. Everything was okay today,” said Sinner, who had limited practice on his off day between his third- and fourth-round matches. “Let’s see what’s coming in the next round.”

    Toward the end of the match Darderi, in his first official head-to-head with Sinner, increased the speed of his forehand as he went for everything, and also added intensity to his serve.

    Darderi took the first two points of the tiebreaker but then had to pause for a few moments before serving because of a baby crying in the crowd at Margaret Court Arena.

    He didn’t win another point. Sinner reeled off the next seven to triumph in 2 hours and nine minutes.

    It extended Sinner’s unbeaten streak to 18 against other Italians on tour and earned a quarterfinal against No. 8 Ben Shelton or No. 12 Casper Ruud.

    “It was very, very difficult. We’re good friends off the court,” Sinner said. “Third set I had some break chances, I couldn’t use them. I got tight, so very happy I closed it in three sets.”

    Sinner had 19 aces — a personal record — and no double-faults and said he was satisfied with the work he put into his serve over the offseason.

    He also wanted to emphasize some minor changes to his game, including going to the net and trying to mix up his game.

    In a tough hold in the third set, Sinner saved a breakpoint by changing the direction of the rally with a forehand drop shot, bending his knees low, and winning a crucial point. With a serve-and-volley, he held the game.

    “Still room to improve, but very happy with how I’ve come back,” he said. “Now for sure, it (the serve) is a bit more stable. I try to go more to the net and being more unpredictable.”

    ___

    More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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  • Defending Champion Madison Keys Knocked Out of Australian Open by Fellow American Jessica Pegula

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    MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Defending champion Madison Keys has been knocked out of the Australian Open by fellow American, and podcast pal, Jessica Pegula.

    Pegula, seeded sixth, defeated the ninth-seeded Keys 6-3, 6-4 on Monday at Rod Laver Arena to reach the quarterfinals. Pegula, who has never claimed a Grand Slam, won the first set in only 32 minutes.

    Pegula raced to a 4-1 lead in the first set, and Pegula also broke to open the second set and again surged to a 4-1 lead as Keys struggled with her serve. The match ended when Keys hit a forehand into the net.

    Pegula was excellent with her serve accuracy and kept the ball in the play with few unforced errors.

    Pegula and Keys had played three times previously, and Keys had won the last two.

    Pegula reached the U.S. Open final in 2024 but lost to Aryna Sabalenka. It will be her fourth appearance in the quarterfinals in Australia.

    Pegula and Keys are good friends and have been doing a podcast together. Keys had said earlier it would be the “first match in Grand Slam history between two podcast co-hosts.”

    In a later match Monday at Rod Laver Arena, fifth-seeded man Lorenzo Musetti faced American Taylor Fritz, who is seeded No. 9.

    In night matches, second-ranked Iga Swiatek was up against Australian Maddison Inglis, and the eighth-seeded man Ben Shelton faced Casper Ruud.

    Novak Djokovic was due to be the feature night match at Rod Laver Arena on Monday but has had a walkover into the quarterfinals after his opponent Jakub Mensik withdrew from their scheduled fourth-round match with an abdominal injury.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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    Associated Press

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  • Djokovic secures 400th Grand Slam match win to extend record, ties Federer’s Australian Open mark

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    MELBOURNE, Australia — An even 400 in Grand Slams and 102 in Australia. Novak Djokovic just keeps setting tennis records.

    The 24-time major winner became the first player to reach 400 wins in Grand Slam singles when he beat Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) on Saturday night in the third round of the Australian Open.

    It improved his win-loss record to 102-10 at the Australian Open, too, equaling Roger Federer’s career haul for the most-ever match wins at the season’s first major.

    Djokovic has won the Australian Open 10 times, more than anyone else. At 38, he’s in Australia aiming for a 25th career major that would make him the most decorated tennis player of all time.

    He was in control from the start against van de Zandschulp and was untroubled except for a few moments in the third set — when he tripped and tumbled to the court in the third game, and later when he faced two set points in the 12th.

    A medical timeout at the changeover after the third, when the trainer taped the ball of his right foot, and a forehand winner down the line diffused the first two of those issues.

    As Djokovic faced his second set point, chair umpire John Blom had to urge the crowd — repeatedly — not to make noise between the first and second serves.

    An animated Djokovic saved the next one, too, pretending to head the ball like a soccer player as the Dutchman’s shot sailed over the baseline.

    The crowd chanted “Nole, Nole, Nole” in support before he produced a winning serve to force a tiebreaker, which he won.

    Djokovic was happy to be playing a night match on a day when the tournament’s extreme heat policy had to be invoked and two-time defending champion Jannik Sinner struggled before advancing in the afternoon conditions.

    “I managed to have a ‘good’ fall if you can say so, I could protect myself,” Djokovic said of the tumble. “Things could have been pretty ugly.”

    He said his body is feeling good for this stage of the tournament, but he’s not getting too far ahead of himself after semifinals at all four majors last year.

    “I must say, it’s been a great start of the tournament,” he said. “Last year I learned a lesson. I got too excited too early in some of the Grand Slams … getting injured three out of four.”

    Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz split the four majors between them and, while Djokovic concedes “they’re playing on a different level right now,” he added: “I’m still trying to give these young guys a push for their money.”

    With his first-round win over Pedro Martinez, Djokovic equaled two all-time tennis records by starting his 21st Australian Open and his 81st Grand Slam event, and he added another milestone with his 100th win at Melbourne Park.

    That made him the first man to win 100 or more matches on three surfaces at the Grand Slams, with his 102 on grass at Wimbledon and 101 on clay at Roland Garros.

    ___

    More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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  • Cheers! Stan Wawrinka Bids Farewell at Australian Open With Beers and Gratitude

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    MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Stan Wawrinka said goodbye after his loss to Taylor Fritz and then grabbed two beers from a courtside ice box, cracked the cans with the Australian Open tournament director and saluted the crowd.

    “Cheers everybody!” the 40-year-old Wawrinka said after Saturday’s 7-6 (5), 2-6, 6-4, 6-4 third-round loss to No. 9 Fritz. “And thank you so much.”

    Wawrinka won the first of his three Grand Slam titles in Australia in 2014.

    With a 4 1/2-hour, five-set win over 21-year-old French qualifier Arthur Gea in the second round, Wawrinka became the first man 40 or older to reach the third round of a Grand Slam since Ken Rosewall at the 1978 Australian Open. His 49th five-set match at a major was also a record.

    “I’m not sure it’s the best statistic to have,” he said of 40-plus milestone, “but I will take it.”

    Wawrinka said before the start of the 2026 season that this would be his last on the professional circuit, but he added that it wasn’t just a farewell tour. He’s still putting on the work and still getting results.

    After Wawrinka’s last match at Melbourne Park, Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley joined him on court for a ceremony and a small tribute on the stadium screen at John Cain Arena.

    After the formalities, Wawrinka wanted a few final words.

    “Normally we talk on court after a final. Today is not a final, so I won’t make it too long,” he said. “Thank you for the wildcard invitation … to have one last chance to say goodbye to the people in Melbourne.

    “It was my last time as a tennis player here, unfortunately. I had so many emotions here the last 20 years. I’m sad to leave, but it’s been an amazing journey.”

    Then he added, more ab-lib, “Now I can enjoy. If you don’t mind, I’d like to share a beer with Craig.”

    Fritz advanced to a round of 16 match against No. 5 Lorenzo Musetti, who held off Tomas Machac 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2 in a 4 1/2-hour marathon earlier Saturday on John Cain Arena. That match was stopped for about 10 minutes in the fifth set to close the roof when the stadium’s extreme heat policy was invoked.

    Fritz, the 2024 U.S. Open runner-up, enjoyed the indoor conditions, firing 30 aces and just one double-fault in four sets against Wawrinka.

    “It’s a really, really tough match obviously, the environment as well,” Fritz said of Wawrinka’s Australian finale. “I can’t blame anyone in the crowd for cheering for Stan here. It’s amazing what he’s out here doing.

    “I have so much respect for the passion and the drive that it takes to be doing what he’s doing this week.”

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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    Associated Press

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  • Coco Gauff advances to second round at Australian Open despite serving struggles

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    MELBOURNE, Australia — Third-seeded Coco Gauff had some familiar struggles on serve but had still enough class and power to defeat Kamilla Rakhimova 6-2, 6-3 on Monday in a first-round match at the Australian Open.

    Gauff has won two Grand Slam titles but has never gone past the semifinals at Melbourne Park. She was knocked out in the quarterfinals last year.

    Gauff had six double faults in the first set against Rakhimova, and only one in the second set as she eventually found her range on serve. The American has struggled with double-faults and had 431 on the WTA Tour last year, by far the most of any player. No one else had more than 300.

    “I mean, it was just the first set,” Gauff said. “Only had one double in the second. I think both of us were struggling on the far side. The sun is right there, which I know for every time I play first on day here, that’s just how it is.

    “But once I got through kind of the first game, I had like three doubles in the first game, and once I got through that game, I mean, it was pretty much smooth sailing from there. Maybe I would have liked to put more first serves in the court, for sure.”

    The 21-year-old Gauff has been reworking her serve for the last several months and practiced some more during a comfort break in the match on Rod Laver Arena.

    Gauff faces left-handed Olga Danilovic in the second round. Danilovic defeated 45-year-old Venus Williams on Sunday in a first-round match, which erased the possibility of the two Americans facing off.

    “There’s not many (left-handed players) on Tour, but Olga’s a great player, she’s beat some top players so it’s going to be a tough match,” Gauff said.

    No. 4 Amanda Anisimova, runner-up at the last two majors, advanced 6-3, 6-2 over Simona Waltert, No. 6 Jessica Pegula beat Anastasia Zakharova 6-2, 6-1 and No. 14 Clara Tauson had a 6-3, 6-3 win over Dalma Galfi.

    Sofia Kenin’s poor recent run at the Australian Open continued as she lost 6-3, 6-2 to fellow-American Peyton Stearns.

    Kenin won the 2020 Australian title but has since struggled at Melbourne Park since, losing in the first round for the fifth consecutive time.

    No. 15 Emma Navarro lost in three sets to Magda Linette of Poland.

    Priscilla Hon secured her first trip to the second round of her home major in six years and also helped her opponent Marina Stakusic leave the court in a wheelchair after the Canadian qualifier collapsed with severe leg cramps.

    Another Canadian player ended early with cramping, with No. 7 Felix Auger-Aliassime retiring from his match with Nuno Borges of Portugal. Borges led 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 when Auger-Aliassime walked to the net to shake hands.

    “I can’t recall ever in my life (cramping) this early in a tournament, this early in a match,” he said.

    Stan Wawrinka kicked off his farewell season at the Slams with a 5-7, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) win over Laslo Djere. The 2014 champion announced last month that 2026 will be his last year on the elite tour.

    “It is my last year. It’s been too long that I’m coming back!” he said. “The passion is still intact. Today was amazing. I’m so happy that I won — I have a chance to play one more here.”

    Three-time Australian Open runner-up Daniil Medvedev beat Jesper de Jong 7-5, 6-2, 7-6 (2) to continue a streak Down Under that included a title run in Brisbane. No. 19 seed Tommy Paul defeated Aleksandar Kovacevic 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 in an all-American match to advance along with Reilly Opelka and No. 13 Andrey Rublev.

    Local hope Alex de Minaur, the No. 6 seed, beat Mackenzie McDonald — a lucky loser from qualifying who replaced the injured former Wimbledon runner-up Matteo Berrettini — 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 in an afternoon match on Rod Laver Arena.

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  • Zeynep Sönmez Rushes to Aid Ballkid During Australian Open Upset Win

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    MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Zeynep Sönmez rushed to the aid of an ailing ballkid in an interruption to play during her first-round upset win over No. 11 Ekaterina Alexandrova on Sunday at the Australian Open.

    The Turkish qualifier was receiving serve in the ninth game of the second set when a ballkid wobbled, lost balance and fell backward near the umpire’s chair in sunny conditions at 1573 Arena.

    The ballkid stood up quickly but started wobbling again, and Sönmez immediately held up her hand to suspend play. She went to the courtside and put an arm around the ballkid’s waist and helped her toward some shade.

    Tournament officials moved quickly to help, but Sönmez had to lift the ballkid into a chair near the side of the arena. Medical staff took over to assess and treat the ballkid in the shade.

    The players waited until the ballkid and the medical staff had left the arena and, after a delay of about seven minutes, continued the match.

    Sönmez broke serve in that game but lost the set before rallying to clinch it 7-5, 4-6, 6-4. to advance to the second round in Australia for the first time.

    Her best performance in five previous Grand Slam events was a run to the third round at Wimbledon last year.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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  • Play Begins at the Australian Open With the Season’s First Grand Slam

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    MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Play has begun on the show courts at the Australian Open — the first Grand Slam of the season — with No. 7 seed Jasmine Paolini facing Aliaksandra Sasnovich at the Rod Laver Arena.

    On the men’s side at Melbourne Park later Sunday, No. 3 seed Alexander Zverev faces Gabriel Diallo.

    The No. 1 seeds for men and women headline Sunday’s night session at the Rod Laver Arena. Aryna Sabalenka faces Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah, and Carlos Alcaraz goes against Adam Walton.

    Sabalenka is after her third Australia Open title and was the runner-up to Madison Keys a year ago. She has reached the last three finals and won two.

    Alcaraz is trying to become the youngest man to win a career Grand Slam. The 22-year-old Spaniard has won twice in the other three Grand Slams but has not been past the quarterfinals at the Australia Open.

    No. 2 seed Jannik Sinner, the two-time defending Australian Open champion, has combined with Alcaraz to win the last eight Grand Slam trophies.

    The highlight of the day might feature a player ranked No. 576 by the WTA.

    That would be, of course, 45-year-old Venus Williams. She will be the oldest player to compete in singles at the Australian Open. Williams received a wild card to enter the tournament and has won seven Grand Slam titles — the last in 2008 at Wimbledon.

    Williams faces Olga Danilović of Serbia in the evening session.

    Williams was married in December to Italian Andrea Preti. She was 17 when she first played the Australian Open in 1998, reaching the quarterfinals in just her fourth Grand Slam event.

    She’s never won the Australian Open. She made the finals in 2003 and 2017 and lost both times to her sister, Serena. She won five Wimbledon titles and two at the U.S. Open.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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  • Czech Machac claims Adelaide International title

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    Czech Machac claims Adelaide International title

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  • Roger Federer celebrates career with exhibition matches at Australian Open kick-off

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    The Australian Open’s first formal opening ceremony became the Roger Federer show on the eve of the season-opening major.

    The band Crowded House played a hit-filled setlist to a capacity crowd in the 15,000-seat Rod Laver Arena. Laver himself, 87, sat courtside. Record-setting champion Novak Djokovic watched from the stands. 

    Federer, a six-time Australian Open winner and 20-time Grand Slam champion, partnered with past champions Andre Agassi and then Ash Barty in an exhibition doubles match against Pat Rafter and Lleyton Hewitt as the main feature of the program.

    It went to script, with Federer winning the first point despite framing a forehand and then emphatically finishing off the victory with a leaping overhead winner.

    Rod Laver, centre, waves ahead of a doubles match between Roger Federer of Switzerland and Andre Agassi of the United States, left, and Lleyton Hewitt, right, and Pat Rafter of Australia during the Opening Ceremony for the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2026.

    Dita Alangkara / AP


    Federer was back in Australia for the first time since 2021, making the trip now because he retired from competitive tennis before he could do a farewell season tour. He said, “It’s super important to be grateful” to earlier generations of stars. 

    “It really truly means so much to me when people like Rocket (Laver) show up,” Federer said.  

    This year, the Australian Open is a three-week festival of tennis. Over 217,000 fans have attended exhibitions and qualifying events in the past six days. The main draw singles competition will begin on Sunday. Djokovic will play his opening match on Monday. Seven-time Grand Slam singles champion Venus Williams is set to play, becoming the oldest woman ever to compete in the Australian Open’s main draw. 

    Australian Open organizers turned the 2026 event into a three-week festival of tennis, with 217,999 fans attending across six days to watch exhibitions, qualifying and the 1 Point Slam before the main draw started.

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  • Madison Keys pictures herself as a champion again at the Australian Open

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    MELBOURNE, Australia — Madison Keys planned to walk into the player tunnel at Rod Laver Arena in a quiet moment when nobody was watching, and take a photo of her name listed with the other champions at the Australian Open.

    After beating top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka in last year’s final at Melbourne Park to win her first Grand Slam title, Keys pictured the moment she’d return to the stadium for the first time as defending champion.

    “I’ve always kind of remembered walking through that tunnel and seeing all the names,” she said Friday, two days before the first major of the year starts. “It was a little bit of a pinch-me moment where I was like, ‘Wow, I’m going to be up there.’

    “I have not seen my name in the tunnel yet. I hope I can go in there when there’s no one else so I can take a picture and send it to my mom.”

    Before facing the media in Melbourne, she couldn’t help but notice other evidence at the venue of her breakthrough triumph.

    “There’s a really cool photo of me holding the trophy,” Keys said. “Getting to see those, it’s something you dream of in your career.”

    The 30-year-old American said it was easy to look back almost 12 months and think everything worked to perfection, but “also you think about, ‘Wow, I almost lost.’

    “I was match point down. So many three-set matches. There were some ugly matches. I think it kind of just makes everything a little bit better just because it wasn’t issue-free.”

    Keys won a tune-up tournament in Adelaide in 2025 before ending Sabalenka’s 20-match winning streak at the Australian Open. At 29, she was the tournament’s oldest first-time women’s champion. She also set a record as the player with the longest gap between their first two Grand Slam finals — her first was the 2017 U.S. Open.

    The Australian Open victory launched her into a Top 5 ranking the following month. After the breakthrough, though, she was ousted in the French Open quarterfinals, the third round at Wimbledon and had a nervy first-round exit at the U.S. Open. At the season-ending WTA Finals, she lost two group-stage matches.

    Sabalenka, meanwhile, admitted Friday that the loss here to Keys last year was tough.

    “She played incredible and overplayed me. Took me a little time to recover,” she said. “We had matches after that. I worked on my mistake on those matches.

    “Going to this AO, I’m not really focusing on that last year result but of course I would like to do just a little bit better than I did last year!”

    Sabalenka, who beat Keys in the quarterfinals last week en route to the Brisbane International title, plays her first-round match Sunday night against Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah, a wild-card entry from France.

    Keys also lost in the quarterfinals in her title defense in Adelaide earlier this week. But she’s taking it in her stride as she prepares for another career first: defending a major title.

    “Even though I’ve been on tour for a long time, this is also still my first experience as that,” she said. “I’m really just trying to soak in all of the really cool fun parts.”

    Seeded ninth and on the other side of the draw from Sabalenka, Keys is scheduled to open against Oleksandra Oliynykova of Ukraine.

    “Yes, I’m sure going on court I’m going to be very nervous,” she said, “but I don’t think I’ve ever walked on court first round of a Grand Slam and not been nervous.”

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  • Aryna Sabalenka advances to the Brisbane International final after beating Muchová

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    BRISBANE, Australia — Top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka defeated Karolina Muchová 6-3, 6-4 Saturday to advance to the Brisbane International final.

    Sabalenka, the defending Brisbane champion, clinched the semifinal at Pat Rafter Arena on her fourth match point to advance to Sunday’s final against the winner of a later semifinal between fourth-seeded Jessica Pegula and Marta Kostyuk.

    On Friday, in a rematch of last year’s Australian Open final, Sabalenka broke Madison Keys’ in five straight service games on the way to a 6-3, 6-3 win. Last year at Melbourne Park, Keys beat Sabalenka for her first Grand Slam singles title.

    The Brisbane International is a tuneup event for this year’s Australian Open, which begins Jan. 18.

    In the men’s tournament at Brisbane, top-seeded Daniil Medvedev will play Alex Michelsen of the United States in a later semifinal. Two Americans feature in the other semi, with Aleksandar Kovacevic playing Brandon Nakashima.

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  • Sabalenka dominates Bucsa at Brisbane International, prepares for Australian Open

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    BRISBANE, Australia — The Battle of the Sexes exhibition was a bit of fun for Aryna Sabalenka, and a showdown she also regarded as good preparation for the Australian Open.

    In her first match since playing Nick Kyrgios in Dubai last month, top-ranked Sabalenka overwhelmed No. 50 Cristina Bucsa 6-0, 6-1 on Tuesday to start her title defense at the Brisbane International. The aim was to lay down a marker ahead of a potential quarterfinal against Madison Keys, who had a 6-4, 6-3 win over McCartney Kessler.

    The exhibition attracted some criticism but also, at least as far as Sabalenka is concerned, a lot of positive attention.

    “It was fun. It was a great challenge. I think we brought so many eyes on tennis,” she said. “What I’m sad about is that some people got it wrong, the whole idea of that event.

    “And I don’t care. I feel like there’s always going to be people who don’t like you, don’t respect you, don’t support you, but there’s so many people who support me, who really cheer me on and who find inspiration in me. I’m focusing on that part.”

    Sabalenka’s focus now is getting back onto a winning roll in Australia. She won back-to-back Australian Open titles in 2023 and ’24 and was on a 20-match winning streak at Melbourne Park until a loss in last year’s final to Keys.

    “Going into (Tuesday’s) match, I was just playing my tennis, I was focusing on my game, on things that I was working on,” Sabalenka said, adding that the exhibition with Kyrgios helped. “I mean, when you play against the guys, the intensity is completely different, especially when there is Nick who is like drop shotting every other shot, so you move a lot. So there was a great, great fitness for me.”

    It wasn’t so great for the often-injured Kyrgios, the 2022 Wimbledon finalist and former Brisbane International winner who lost 6-3, 6-4 to No. 58 Aleksandar Kovacevic in his first ATP Tour match since March.

    He’s been restricted to just six matches in the last three years because of knee and wrist surgeries.

    The mercurial Australian has been playing exhibitions in an effort to get back into touch and if he doesn’t get a wildcard entry for the Australian Open, he’s planning on entering qualifying.

    For No. 7 Keys, preparation for an attempted Australian Open title defense will go via Brisbane and then Adelaide, where she won last year to kick start her run to a first Grand Slam title.

    “Last year was a dream come true,” Keys said. “I would obviously love a repeat of last year. That is always the goal.”

    ___

    More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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