ReportWire

Tag: Tennis

  • ‘I’m sorry… I feel responsible’ | Heung-Min Son takes the blame for Conte departure

    ‘I’m sorry… I feel responsible’ | Heung-Min Son takes the blame for Conte departure

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    An emotional Heung-Min Son feels he is partly to blame due to his performances this season following Tottenham coach Antonio Conte’s departure from the club.

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  • Who should Francis Ngannou face in boxing? | ‘Anthony Joshua is the money fight’

    Who should Francis Ngannou face in boxing? | ‘Anthony Joshua is the money fight’

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    Former champion and UFC fan Enzo Maccarinelli believes that Francis Ngannou vs Anthony Joshua is the money fight for both.

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  • Cristian Stellini to take caretaker charge of Spurs until end of season – Michael Bridge: ‘It’s a surprise’

    Cristian Stellini to take caretaker charge of Spurs until end of season – Michael Bridge: ‘It’s a surprise’

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    Sky Sports News’ Michael Bridge analyses what went wrong for Antonio Conte at Tottenham, and assesses the possible contenders for the role.

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  • Brooklyn Nets 129-100 Miami Heat | NBA highlights

    Brooklyn Nets 129-100 Miami Heat | NBA highlights

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    Highlights of the Brooklyn Nets and Miami Heat in Week 23 of the NBA season.

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  • Sheikh Jassim submits second bid to buy Manchester United

    Sheikh Jassim submits second bid to buy Manchester United

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    Sky Sports News chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol provides the latest news on the Manchester United takeover.

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  • ‘We all work in our own way’ | Zlatan Ibrahimovic speaks up for Antonio Conte

    ‘We all work in our own way’ | Zlatan Ibrahimovic speaks up for Antonio Conte

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    Swedish footballer Zlatan Ibrahimovic says ‘sometimes you pay for being yourself’ after Antonio Conte was criticised for expressing his opinion.

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  • Gerwyn Price completes 6-1 destruction of Michael van Gerwen with stunning 10-dart leg!

    Gerwyn Price completes 6-1 destruction of Michael van Gerwen with stunning 10-dart leg!

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    Gerwyn Price completed his impressive 6-1 win over Michael van Gerwen with a stunning 10-dart leg.

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  • Thomas Zilliacus: Financing Man Utd bid isn’t a big obstacle

    Thomas Zilliacus: Financing Man Utd bid isn’t a big obstacle

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    Finnish Businessmen Thomas Zilliacus says he has the finances available to become an investor in Manchester United.

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  • Phoenix Suns 111-122 Los Angeles Lakers | NBA highlights

    Phoenix Suns 111-122 Los Angeles Lakers | NBA highlights

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    Highlights of the Phoenix Suns against the Los Angeles Lakers in Week 22 of the NBA season.

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  • David Brooks scores first half hat-trick after return from cancer

    David Brooks scores first half hat-trick after return from cancer

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    David Brooks continued his return from cancer with a first half hat-trick for Bournemouth in a 5-2 win over Portsmouth in the Hampshire Senior Cup.

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  • Constitution Hill: Nico de Boinville says Champion Hurdle winner was ‘hair’s breadth’ from final-flight ‘failure’

    Constitution Hill: Nico de Boinville says Champion Hurdle winner was ‘hair’s breadth’ from final-flight ‘failure’

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    Matt Chapman caught up with Nico de Boinville at Plumpton with the jockey revealing how close he came to a final-flight disaster on Constitution Hill in last week’s Champion Hurdle at Cheltenham.

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  • Women’s tennis works to safeguard against predatory coaches

    Women’s tennis works to safeguard against predatory coaches

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    Lindsay Brandon is a lawyer whose past clients include athletes disputing doping suspensions. In her new post as the WTA’s first director of safeguarding, Brandon is leading an increased effort to protect athletes from predatory coaches — and others — on the women’s professional tennis tour.

    “Safeguarding is about emotional abuse. Physical abuse, as well. And it’s not just coach-athlete,” Brandon said in a telephone interview from the BNP Paribas Open, which wrapped up Sunday in Indian Wells, California, and was the first tournament she visited as part of the job she began 3 1/2 months ago.

    “There are other people that are part of this process,” Brandon told The Associated Press. “There can be athlete-to-athlete issues. There can be issue with respect to training staff separate from coaches. Those are just some of the examples.”

    Her priorities include managing the WTA security team’s investigations of complaints — she did not reveal how many are currently active — and “monitoring any potential concerns,” along with improving education and creating a safeguarding code of conduct she hopes will be published in 2024.

    The aim of that code, which Brandon said is separate from a general code of conduct that already exists, is to create a rulebook that outlines behavioral standards and establishes procedures to follow if a matter arises. It will apply to anyone who is credentialed “in the WTA environment,” Brandon said, including players, coaches, physiotherapists, other members of entourages, tournament staff and tour staff.

    “Safeguarding is multifaceted and strongest when the entire population is educated, invested and held to the same standards. … We have a diverse body of players, staff and support teams, so the challenges and areas of concern will vary. As the governing body, our focus is making sure that players feel they can come forward and share their concerns, which plays a critical role in being able to address the issues that may be at hand,” WTA Chairman and CEO Steve Simon said in an email to The Associated Press.

    Might be hard to gauge the success of such an initiative so soon, but Simon found at least one positive measure.

    “We are seeing more athletes coming forward,” he said, “which is a great initial result.”

    Adding what Simon called “the expertise of a dedicated safeguarding position” is the biggest public-facing step taken by the Florida-based WTA in this area since the issue of protecting players drew increased attention last year: A French player once ranked as high as No. 39 accused her former coach of rape; another player sued the U.S. Tennis Association for failing to protect her from a coach she says sexually abused her at one of its training centers when she was 19; 2002 International Tennis Hall of Fame inductee Pam Shriver, who won 21 Grand Slam titles in women’s doubles, said she “had an inappropriate and damaging relationship with my much older coach” that began when she was 17 and he was 50.

    “Maybe we need to talk more to players and tell them what’s going on with everything so they know to be careful,” said two-time Grand Slam finalist Ons Jabeur, a 28-year-old from Tunisia. “Maybe it’s never enough and we should do more.”

    Simon expressed a similar sentiment during an interview at the tour’s season-ending championships in November.

    “We have … background checks on our coaches. We have an athlete assistance program in place. We have mental health experts who are here to help if there’s an emotional issue. We have all sorts of education programs. We have investigators coming in,” he said. “One of the things that we’re educating everybody on is: We need to help ourselves. If you see it, you need to report it. We need to work with our players to have them learn to set up the appropriate boundaries around themselves and what’s right and what’s wrong.”

    Brandon, who said she played tennis through high school and for one tournament in college, came to the WTA after about seven years working for Howard Jacobs, a well-known sports lawyer who recently helped tennis pro Varvara Lepchenko get a doping ban reduced from four years to 21 months.

    “Lindsay’s knowledge in this area (applicable rules, inappropriate behavior, etc.) is likely more in-depth than anyone the WTA could have hired for this role,” Jacobs wrote in an email to the AP.

    Brandon planned to travel to the Miami Open, where play begins Tuesday, and “as many tournaments as I reasonably can this year,” including smaller events where younger players compete.

    “The earlier you can provide support and outreach to these athletes, the better,” Brandon said. “I tell people that I don’t want to just be a response resource; I want to be a support resource and a preventative resource, as well.”

    ___

    AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • SkyPad analysis: Why Fernando Alonso received penalty and lost third place

    SkyPad analysis: Why Fernando Alonso received penalty and lost third place

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    Sky F1’s Karun Chandhok analyses why Fernando Alonso received a post-race penalty at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

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  • Novak Djokovic to miss Miami Open due to COVID vaccination status, tournament says

    Novak Djokovic to miss Miami Open due to COVID vaccination status, tournament says

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    Tennis champion Novak Djokovic is set to miss his second U.S. tennis tournament this year, after he was denied entry into the country for being unvaccinated against COVID-19.

    The 35-year-old Djokovic will miss the Miami Open, which begins March 22, tournament director James Blake confirmed to the Tennis Channel on Friday. Djokovic has won the Miami Open six times — three of those consecutively. The latest win came in 2016. 

    Blake said tournament organizers spoke with federal officials and tried their best to get an exception to the U.S. policy, which restricts unvaccinated international travelers from entering the U.S. 

    “Obviously, we’re one of the premier tournaments in the world, we’d like to have the best players that can play,” Blake told the Tennis Channel. “We did all that we could. We tried to talk to the government, but that’s out of our hands.”

    Some, like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, are calling on President Biden to remove the vaccination requirement and allow the Serbian athlete to compete in U.S. tournaments again. 

    In a press conference earlier this month, DeSantis joked that he would run a boat from the Bahamas to Miami to bring Djokovic to the tournament.

    “He poses zero risk to the United States, zero risk to the state of Florida and zero risk to Miami,” the governor said at the time.

    Novak Djokovic in action against opponent in Dubai tournament
    Novak Djokovic in action against Daniil Medvedev in the Men’s Singles Semi Final match during day thirteen of the Dubai Duty Free Tennis at Dubai Duty Free Tennis Stadium on March 03, 2023 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    Amin Mohammad Jamali / Getty Images


    A spokesman from the U.S. Tennis Association told the Associated Press Saturday that they are “very hopeful” Djokovic will be able to play in the U.S. Open, which begins on Aug. 28.

    “Policies concerning access to the United States are determined by the White House. We are very hopeful that the policy preventing Novak Djokovic from entering the United States will be rescinded, or lapse, in the near future,” Chris Widmaier said. “No COVID-19 restrictions are in place at the U.S. Open for any player, fan or other attendee. Novak, one of our sport’s great champions, would be welcome to compete at the 2023 U.S. Open.”

    Djokovic is currently tied with Rafael Nadal for the most career Grand Slam titles of all time, with 22. In February, he broke the record for the most time spent by a professional tennis player in the No. 1 spot of the ATP rankings after winning the men’s singles title at the Australian Open in January — a tournament he was turned away from in 2022 for being unvaccinated.

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  • Motherwell 2-4 Rangers | Scottish Premiership highlights

    Motherwell 2-4 Rangers | Scottish Premiership highlights

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    Highlights of the Scottish Premiership match between Motherwell and Rangers.

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  • Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher take on ‘Stuart Broad’s Cricket Challenge’

    Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher take on ‘Stuart Broad’s Cricket Challenge’

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    Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher took on Nottingham Forest fan and England fast-bowler Stuart Broad’s cricket challenge… It’s a must watch.

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  • Erik ten Hag: Manchester United can’t always have a full squad like Arsenal

    Erik ten Hag: Manchester United can’t always have a full squad like Arsenal

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    Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag believes his team have done well to compete with players missing for a majority of their games.

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  • Iga Swiatek: World No.1 calls for more support for Ukrainian tennis players | CNN

    Iga Swiatek: World No.1 calls for more support for Ukrainian tennis players | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    World No.1 Iga Świątek has called for more support for Ukrainian players from the Women’s Tennis Association (WTA), adding that “everything we discuss in tennis is about Belarusian and Russian players.”

    Świątek’s comments on Tuesday follow incidents at the Indian Wells tournament, where Russia’s Anastasia Potapova wore a Spartak Moscow soccer jersey, and Ukrainian player Lesia Tsurenko pulled out of the tournament this week.

    Tsurenko had been due to play against Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka but did not end up taking to the court Monday, with Reuters news agency reporting that organizers said that the Ukrainian had withdrawn for personal reasons.

    When asked about Tsurenko at her post-match press conference, the 21-year-old Polish star Świątek said: “I totally understand why she withdrew, because honestly I respect the Ukrainian girls so much, because if like a bomb landed in my country or if my home was destroyed, I don’t know if I could handle that.”

    As of March 12, at least 8,231 civilians have been killed and 13,734 injured in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which began 24 February last year, according to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

    OHCHR says it believes that the actual figures are “considerably higher, as the receipt of information from some locations where intense hostilities have been going on has been delayed and many reports are still pending corroboration.”

    “I feel more should be done to help Ukrainian players because everything we discuss in tennis is about Belarusian and Russian players,” Świątek said Tuesday.

    Świątek was also critical of the WTA’s leadership after Russian Potapova entered the court Sunday wearing a Spartak Moscow soccer shirt ahead of her match against American Jessica Pegula. Potopova has been pictured wearing the shirt on several occasions, including in Dubai, in a photo she posted to her own Instagram account.

    “It’s a tough situation,” Świątek said.”There is a lot of tension in the locker room that, well, obviously it’s going to be there, because there is a war.

    “But maybe it should be a little bit less if the WTA put some action at the beginning to kind of explain to everybody what is right and what is not,” Świątek added.

    CNN reached out to the WTA for comment following Świątek’s criticism.

    Earlier on Tuesday when asked about Tsurenko’s withdrawal the WTA said to CNN: “First and foremost, we acknowledge the emotions Lesia and all of our Ukrainian athletes have and continue to manage during this very difficult period of time.

    “We are witnessing an ongoing horrific war that continues to bring unforeseen circumstances with far reaching consequences that are affecting the world, as well as the global WTA Tour and its members.

    “The WTA has consistently reflected our full support for Ukraine and strongly condemn the actions that have been brought forth by the Russian Government.

    “With this, a fundamental principle of the WTA remains, which is ensuring that individual athletes may participate in professional tennis events based on merit and without any form of discrimination, and not penalized due to the decisions made by the leadership of their country,” the WTA statement added.

    Three-time grand slam winner Świątek continued her impressive form on Wednesday, reaching the quarterfinals at Indian Wells after defeating Emma Raducanu 6-3 6-1.

    On Tuesday, Świątek beat 2019 US Open champion Bianca Andreescu in straight sets.

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  • ‘Just like that!’ | Anthony Davis seals 35 Points over New Orleans Pelicans

    ‘Just like that!’ | Anthony Davis seals 35 Points over New Orleans Pelicans

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    Los Angeles Lakers forward Anthony Davis dazzles with 35 points in an excellent performance against the New Orleans Pelicans.

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  • ‘Disappointed’ Pep Guardiola: My idol Julia Roberts went to see Manchester United, not us!

    ‘Disappointed’ Pep Guardiola: My idol Julia Roberts went to see Manchester United, not us!

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    Manchester City’s Pep Guardiola admits he was sad that his idol Julia Roberts went to watch United rather than his team when she was in Manchester!

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