Coach Anton Dubrov on the secret behind Aryna Sabalenka’s return to No. 1 spot in women’s tennis

Coach Anton Dubrov on the secret behind Aryna Sabalenka’s return to No. 1 spot in women’s tennis
Coach Anton Dubrov. (AFP)
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Updated 15 November 2024
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Coach Anton Dubrov on the secret behind Aryna Sabalenka’s return to No. 1 spot in women’s tennis

Coach Anton Dubrov on the secret behind Aryna Sabalenka’s return to No. 1 spot in women’s tennis
  • ‘I think she’s more mature, to understand what you need to do to be on this level … with all the stress at this level) you always have to be consistent, or even higher, all the time,’ says Dubrov
  • He adds that one of her strengths is that she is very open to making changes to her game as long as she has been convinced such tweaks will help her improve

Aryna Sabalenka’s last order of business in Riyadh, before she officially wrapped up her 2024 season and hopped on a plane to go on vacation, was a photoshoot with the trophy for being world No. 1.

The Belarusian fell to Coco Gauff at the semi-final stage of the WTA Finals last week but still left Saudi Arabia with some valuable silverware, having achieved one of her biggest goals: finishing the year at the summit of the rankings.

Sabalenka occupied the top spot for eight weeks last year but could not hold off Iga Swiatek, who reclaimed the No. 1 position in the closing week of the season to finish 2023 at the top.

This time, Sabalenka managed to cap an incredible campaign. during which she won two Grand Slams, the Australian Open and US Open, and two WTA 1000 crowns in Cincinnati and Wuhan, by clinching the year-end No. 1 ranking and the trophy that goes with it.
 

“I’m proud of myself this season. I think I achieved a lot,” Sabalenka said after her last match in Riyadh. “There is no room for disappointment.”

As she begins her second stint as world No. 1, she believes she is “mentally, more ready” for her position at the top of the rankings. Her coach, Anton Dubrov, agrees.

“I don’t think you can hold the No. 1 ranking, to be honest, but I think she’s more mature, to understand what you need to do to be on this level,” Dubrov told Arab News in Riyadh last week.

“Because to hold it, you cannot hold it. The only thing you can do is your next match. And this is the thing: because you’re No. 1, everyone plays against you like they have nothing to lose. They can play the best game they can do. And you, with all the stress and all this level, you always have to be consistent, or even higher, all the time.

“I think, for her it’s about finding the way to adapt to all the situations. She is much better at doing that right now. She understands, even if she’s not at her best level. I think that’s what happened in China; she wasn’t playing her best tennis, it’s end of the season, she’s tired. But she adapted to the situation and accepted that she can even play not the best game and still find the way.”
 

Dubrov saw Sabalenka play for the first time when she was 14 years old, at a European team championship in Minsk.

“I think my grandpa was a captain of the team,” Dubrov recalls. A year later, he started to see her more often because she was training at the national academy, and they went on their first trip abroad, for International Tennis Federation tournaments in China, when she was about 16.

“I think it’s more than 10 years we have known each other,” he said.

Did he expect her to have such a great career when he first met her as a teenager?

“Firstly, what everyone would tell you is that you can hear that she’s hitting really hard,” he said. “She’s trying really hard. You never see her like, not trying. No matter how she is playing — she can play incredible, she can play not great — but she still will fight for it.

“And I wasn’t the guy who was like, ‘OK, she will be, like, No. 1 or, like, top 100.’ No, I wasn’t like this.

“When she was 16, I could see the biggest improvement because of her approach to herself. If someone will tell her that she needs to do something, and she agrees, she’s the one who the very next day will do it, and she will do it not just in the practice, she will do it actually when she’s going to play points.

“Most of the players, they still go into old habits more often. I would say she’s doing it less. If she agrees with you, she accepts it, even if it’s a new technique. And this is the worst one for tennis players because it’s really sensitive how you are used to doing something with a specific technique. So I think this is her talent, that if she accepts the thing, she’s doing it straight away.”

Dubrov said that to this day, Sabalenka remains very open to making changes as long as she has been convinced and shown evidence that such tweaks will make her game better.

“You need to show her why and then, definitely, she will do it,” he added.

Having previously worked with Sabalenka as a hitting partner, Dubrov was hired to be her coach in 2020. It has been a successful four-year partnership so far, during which she has claimed three majors and reached the top of the rankings twice.

“Thinking about a tennis coach, always I was looking for not, like, big names because sometimes big names are just big names,” Sabalenka said, reflecting on her decision to work with Dubrov.

“I was looking for someone smart and someone who will always be looking for something, and who's going to always search for stuff, who’s open to talk to whoever, you know, who is ready to receive any sort of advice.

“And of course, knowing my emotions, I was looking for someone who can understand that even if I go crazy on court, it’s nothing personal. It’s just like the way I am, throwing out all that negative stuff in my head so I can keep focusing on the game.”

Dubrov is on exactly the same page, which perhaps explains why they have enjoyed so much success together. He says irrespective of how well they get along, the most important thing is that he can help her improve her game; everything else is secondary to that.

“We had this conversation a lot during the 2022 season, when she served a lot of double faults. So we found Gavin (MacMillan, a biomechanics coach) to help us,” said Dubrov.

“We always need to find a way to improve, otherwise why are we doing something together? So if we are still working together, doing something, first it should be about your tennis. OK, it’s great, it’s a safe environment, that’s awesome. But the main thing is your tennis.

“So if we can cover this part and we still see progression, great, we can still keep working. If not, we need to talk, need to find a new approach, need to find something. You need to find maybe some other guy to join, to replace or something.

“Because your career, we have to think really quick, because it’s changing really quick and with tennis, you have to prove every week that you’re No. 1.”

Dubrov notes that the biggest improvement Sabalenka made to get back to the top of the rankings was her ability to focus on “how to do it, not thinking about just the outcome.” Coming to an understanding that the “how” is directly within her control while the outcome is not has worked wonders for the 26-year-old, and now she and Dubrov are looking forward to 2025 with that mindset.

This year, Sabalenka lost in the quarter-finals of the French Open while dealing with a stomach bug that hampered her progress, and she missed Wimbledon with a shoulder injury.

She told Arab News recently that she has every reason to believe she can translate her success in hard-court Grand Slams to the clay of Roland Garros and the grass of Wimbledon.

“I think this is, for us, the biggest challenge as a team: to manage that, with preparation mostly,” said Dubrov. “Because it’s a really tight time between Roland Garros and Wimbledon, and they are different surfaces. So I think this is more about how we can manage the calendar, preparation and her adaptation to different things.

“But she’s doing that much better. And yes, she has those chances on all the surfaces. But we need to focus on what we have to do for this and start with the managing before the tournament. Then we have the chances.”


Prosecutors demand Rubiales forced kiss trial be re-run

Updated 1 sec ago
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Prosecutors demand Rubiales forced kiss trial be re-run

Prosecutors demand Rubiales forced kiss trial be re-run
They said judge Jose Manuel Fernandez-Prieto "unduly" prevented the prosecutor in the trial, Marta Durantez, from posing certain questions
The judge "made no mention in the sentence" of key evidence brought up during the trial

MADRID: Prosecutors on Thursday requested that the trial of Spain's ex-football federation chief Luis Rubiales for his forced kiss on Jenni Hermoso be annulled and re-run, notably questioning the judge's impartiality.
Spain's top criminal court last month found Rubiales guilty of sexual assault for the kiss and fined him 10,800 euros ($11,670), sparing him jail in a sentence considered lenient by feminist groups.
The sentence fell well short of the demands of prosecutors, who had sought a total of two and a half years in prison for Rubiales, one year for sexual assault and 18 months for allegedly coercing Hermoso to downplay the kiss.
Hermoso is appealing the sentence, which also cleared Rubiales and three other defendants of coercion, including former women's team coach Jorge Vilda and two senior ex-federation officials.
The prosecutors said in a statement that they were appealing the sentence and requested the trial be declared null and void and "held again by another judge not tainted, to say the least, by an appearance of bias".
They said judge Jose Manuel Fernandez-Prieto "unduly" prevented the prosecutor in the trial, Marta Durantez, from posing certain questions and cited the "arbitrariness" of his sentence.
The statement added that the judge "made no mention in the sentence" of key evidence brought up during the trial, "as if such evidence had not existed".
Fernandez-Prieto attracted attention during the trial for his brusque attitude, frequently interrupting and scolding participants.
Rubiales was also banned from going within a 200-metre radius of Hermoso and from communicating with her for a period of one year. He denied the charges and is also appealing the ruling.
It was not immediately clear when the courts would decide on the various appeals.
The former federation chief sparked worldwide uproar when he kissed Hermoso on the lips as she went up to receive her winner's medal after Spain beat England in the 2023 Women's World Cup final in Sydney.
The backlash unleashed by the kiss forced Rubiales to relinquish his post in disgrace that year, saw him banned from all football-related activity for three years and plunged the federation into a prolonged period of turmoil.
The trial captivated Spain and made Hermoso, the all-time top scorer of the national women's team, an icon of the fight against sexism and macho culture in sport.
Hermoso said after the verdict that the trial would "create an important precedent in a social environment where there is still much to be done".

New Zealand vow to ‘find little ways’ to beat India in final

New Zealand vow to ‘find little ways’ to beat India in final
Updated 54 min 39 sec ago
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New Zealand vow to ‘find little ways’ to beat India in final

New Zealand vow to ‘find little ways’ to beat India in final
  • New Zealand posted Champions Trophy record 362-6 to beat South Africa to qualify for final
  •  India beat New Zealand by 44 runs in the group stage of the tournament earlier this month 

LAHORE: New Zealand have vowed to “find little ways to win moments” against India after making Champions Trophy history to power into Sunday’s final.
The Black Caps posted a Champions Trophy record 362-6 before restricting South Africa to 312-9 in Wednesday’s semifinal in Lahore.
They now face India in Dubai to decide the winners of the eight-nation 50-over tournament.
Rohit Sharma’s India are playing all their games in Dubai after they refused to tour hosts Pakistan because of political tensions.
India beat New Zealand by 44 runs in the group stage but batting all-rounder Daryl Mitchell said that would have no bearing on Sunday’s result.
“Final is a new day,” Mitchell said after scoring 49 against South Africa.
“Really excited to be stuck into that challenge and will adapt to whatever surface and conditions we get on the day, and will find little ways to win moments throughout that game.”
The tournament’s tangled schedule, with teams flying in and out of the United Arab Emirates from Pakistan while India have stayed put, has been hugely controversial.
The pitches have been vastly different in the two countries.
Pakistan tracks produced big totals, in contrast to the slow and turning decks of Dubai’s international cricket stadium.
“We don’t quite know how the Dubai pitch is like,” said Rachin Ravindra, one of the heroes of New Zealand’s semifinal win with a 101-ball 108.
“We know our game against India it did turn and Aussie v India (semifinal) didn’t turn so much, so I think we pride ourselves in adapting and playing the situation in front of us.”
India unleashed four spinners against New Zealand in the group phase and Varun Chakravarthy returned figures of 5-42 to bowl the Black Caps out for 205 in their chase of 250.
Rohit’s side were unchanged in their four-wicket win over Australia as the spin-heavy selection came up trumps again, albeit on a pitch that turned a little less this time around.
“They are all pretty good,” Mitchell said of India’s slow bowlers.
“But we have got some pretty good spinners ourselves.”


International hockey returns to Pakistan as German junior team arrives in Islamabad 

International hockey returns to Pakistan as German junior team arrives in Islamabad 
Updated 06 March 2025
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International hockey returns to Pakistan as German junior team arrives in Islamabad 

International hockey returns to Pakistan as German junior team arrives in Islamabad 
  • Pakistan marked first international hockey match played in the country for 7 years when it played series against China in 2011 
  • Before that, Pakistan had last staged an international match in 2004 when it hosted the Champions Trophy in Lahore 

ISLAMABAD: The German Junior Hockey Team, world champions, arrived in Pakistan on Thursday for a four-match series, marking the return of international hockey to Pakistan after nearly a decade and a half, the government’s press department said in a statement. 

Pakistan marked the first international hockey match played in the country for seven years when Chinese played four matches here in what was dubbed as the ‘Friendship Series’.

Before that, Pakistan had last staged an international match in 2004 when it hosted the Champions Trophy in Lahore but after that foreign teams refused to play in the country due to security concerns.

Since the September 11 attacks in the United States, foreign teams have been reluctant to travel to Pakistan in many sports and the South Asian country was left completely isolated as a sporting venue after militants attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore in March 2009.

“Under the vision of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, this initiative aims to provide Pakistani junior players with international exposure and reestablish Pakistan as a hub for global hockey,” PID said about the four-math series between Pakistan and Germany.

“The series will feature one match in Islamabad and three in Lahore, promising a thrilling competition for fans.”

The two teams will face each other in Lahore on Mar. 6, 8 and 11 while one match will be played in Islamabad on Mar. 13.

“The series holds great significance for both teams as they prepare for the Hockey Junior World Cup being played 2025 in India,” state media reported. 

Field hockey, Pakistan’s national sport, once propelled the country to Olympic gold and global glory, but the game has waned in popularity and participation over the past two decades. Poor management, lack of infrastructure and the rise of cricket has contributed to the decline. The failure to adapt to modern demands, including fitness and artificial turfs, has further deepened the crisis.

According to the latest rankings released by the International Hockey Federation, Pakistan is ranked number 15 in the world in field hockey.


British champion Murphy back in Riyadh after success at Saudi Cup

British champion Murphy back in Riyadh after success at Saudi Cup
Updated 06 March 2025
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British champion Murphy back in Riyadh after success at Saudi Cup

British champion Murphy back in Riyadh after success at Saudi Cup
  • Oisin Murphy has strong book of rides following win on Byzantine Dream in the Longines Red Sea Turf Handicap

RIYADH: Oisin Murphy is returning to Saudi Arabia for the penultimate week of Riyadh Season, and the four-time British champion is seeking to extend his good fortune at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse after his strike on Byzantine Dream in the Longines Red Sea Turf Handicap.

The Irishman had belated got off the mark in the country during the Diriyah International Jockeys’ Challenge at The Saudi Cup meeting, before his win in the stayers’ race which came just before Forever Young and Romantic Warrior’s epic conclusion to the main event.

And he has picked up a dazzling book of rides over the three days of this week’s racing, standing in for the sidelined Camilo Ospina in the famous white stable colors of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz & Sons.

“It was brilliant to win at The Saudi Cup meeting — I thought it was very well organized and it was a fantastic event,” said Murphy.

“I am going to be riding Thursday, Friday and Saturday this week and there are some nice races over the three days.

“I am riding for one of the leading stables as Camilo is unfortunately serving a whip suspension. Hopefully the horses can go very well and we can get some good results.”

His top-class rides include Prince Khalid Abdullah Cup winner, Ireland’s Bolide Porto, and the mare Motathabetah from the Kingdom who landed a domestic Group 1 in January and runs in Friday’s Abdullah bin Ibrahim Aba Alkhail Award Race.

He also races Carmel Road from the US in the North America Cup on Saturday.

Murphy was amongst the winners at Lingfield Park in the UK on Wednesday having been back in the Middle East last weekend for Super Saturday in Dubai.

“It is a very busy time of year for me but I really enjoy it and it is great to be part of this international schedule, particularly when the horses have chances,” he added.


Fearless Ian Chappell brings illustrious association with cricket to an end

Fearless Ian Chappell brings illustrious association with cricket to an end
Updated 06 March 2025
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Fearless Ian Chappell brings illustrious association with cricket to an end

Fearless Ian Chappell brings illustrious association with cricket to an end
  • The Australian great excelled in two careers for over 60 years, first as player then as a journalist

Failure in major tournaments often leads to retirements from captaincy, a particular format of cricket or from international cricket altogether. The 2025 Champions Trophy has proved to be no exception.

In the wake of England’s failure to reach the semi-finals its captain, Jos Buttler, has resigned as white ball captain, two years after lifting the T20 World Cup in November 2022. Australia’s defeat at the semi-final stage led Steve Smith to announce his retirement from the ODI format. It is too early to know if any of India’s stalwarts will make similar judgements after Sunday’s Champions Trophy final against New Zealand in Dubai.

Alongside these announcements, the one that really caught my eye was from a former player turned commentator and journalist. Ian Chappell captained Australia between 1971 and 1975, retiring from all first class cricket a year later. However, in 1977, he was lured out of this by Kerry Packer, who established World Series Cricket as a competitor to cricket played under cricket’s establishment. This appealed to Chappell’s support of the fight to increase players’ remuneration and his irreverent attitude toward administrators and the establishment in general.

He moulded an Australian team between 1971 and 1975 very much in his own image. As an attacking No. 3 batter, Chappell was never afraid to take the bowlers head on and he encouraged his players in the practice of “sledging,” or verbally abusing, players from opposing sides. A win-at-all-costs approach earned the team the sobriquet of “ugly Aussies,” during a series against New Zealand. Chappell was loyal to his players and they returned this in abundance.

On his return to captaincy in the WSC, Chappell needed these attributes to counter the fearsome might of a pack of West Indian fast bowlers. After Packer and the Australian authorities reached rapprochement in 1979, WSC was wound up. Chappell played Test matches for one more season and retired for a second time in 1980.

His next foray was into the commentary box and journalism. His blunt and honest opinions about players and administrators may have grated with many, but he was unbiased, non-partisan and principled, seeking to uphold the game’s integrity.

This was famously exemplified when his youngest brother, Trevor, was instructed by his next youngest brother, Greg, to bowl the last ball of an ODI match in underarm fashion to prevent New Zealand having the opportunity to hit a six to tie the match. Ian’ s first reaction was “No Greg, no, you cannot do that,” followed by the harsher “Fair dinkum Greg, how much pride do you sacrifice to win $35,000?” His reaction echoed the thoughts of those listeners and cricket lovers who felt that the act impugned the integrity of the game.

Chappell’s take on the infamous “sandpaper-gate” incident in 2018 is also instructive of his lack of bias. During a Test match at Newlands, Cape Town, Australian fielder Cameron Bancroft was filmed applying sandpaper on the ball to assist it to swing in flight. The fall-out resulted in year-long bans for the Australian captain at the time, Steve Smith, vice-captain David Warner and nine months for Bancroft. Two years after the incident, Chappell revealed that the Australian team had received prior warning over “doing something with the ball.”

He added that “what happened in Newlands, apart from the fact that it was illegal, was absolute stupidity. How do you think you can get away with all those cameras in the ground?” He was also of the view that “anyone who thought there were only three people involved” was deluded and that “anybody trying to say that that was the only time that it happened with Australia” was similarly affected.

Both Smith and Warner returned to play again for Australia, albeit not to everyone’s approval. It has not been clear if the bans influenced the players’ approach to the game. During the recent Champions Trophy group match between Australia and Afghanistan, the latter’s Noor Ahmad wandered out of his ground after the last ball of an over, before the umpire had called over. Ahmad was given out but Smith, as captain, withdrew the appeal. Whether he wanted to avoid another microscopic examination of Australia’s behaviour or whether he has genuinely espoused “sportsmanship” may never be known.

Unlike the incredulous reaction of some Australians, Chappell’s view on Smith’s action is unrecorded. Chappell announced, suddenly, that his Feb. 23 ESPNcricinfo column would be his last. This represents the end of his five-decade journalistic career. Chappell said that it was the right time to “put down the pen and pack away the computer,” adding that the decision was as emotional as it had been stepping away from playing.

In recent times Chappell has become extremely critical of the way in which cricket’s landscape is being shaped by its administrators. This is one which belongs to franchise T20 leagues with Test cricket pushed to the margins. In a coruscating comment he said that “the ICC is widely regarded as an event management company. They should add ‘and not a very good one.’” He went on to say that “cricket being run by a competent ICC is a pipe dream. Hence the growing T20 calendar and the current scheduling schemozzle that plagues the game.”

Perhaps his decision to put down the pen is a realization that this direction of travel is inevitable and that whatever he says on the subject will be ineffectual. By retiring, he has spared himself the opportunity to comment on the way in which the ICC has managed the Champions Trophy. In particular, this applies to the absurdity of the final not being played in the host country, all because India refuse to play in Pakistan. On the timing of his retirement, Chappell revealed that in his playing days he asked former Australia captain Richie Benaud if retirement was a difficult decision.

“No Ian,” Benaud replied wisely, “It’s easy. You’ll know the right time.”

It appears that he did know. Chappell excelled in playing and leading at the summit of cricket. He challenged those who administer the game and inspired listeners, viewers and readers on radio, television and in print. He excelled in two careers for more than 60 years, building a legacy in both. In cricket’s gold-rush age, Chappell’s authoritative, independent brand of opinion is in danger of being marginalised. His retirement deserves greater regret than others in the past two weeks.