Serena Williams into US Open third round

Serena Williams returns a shot to Anett Kontaveit during the second round of the US Open tennis championships, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2022, in New York. (AP)
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Updated 01 September 2022
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Serena Williams into US Open third round

  • The 40-year-old, 23-time Grand Slam title winner triumphed 7-6 (7/4), 2-6, 6-2 in front of a raucous, partisan Arthur Ashe Stadium Court crowd

NEW YORK: Serena Williams dramatically extended her iconic career on Wednesday with a never-say-die, three-set victory over world number two Anett Kontaveit at the US Open.
The 40-year-old, 23-time Grand Slam title winner triumphed 7-6 (7/4), 2-6, 6-2 in front of a raucous, partisan Arthur Ashe Stadium Court crowd to reach the third round of a tournament she has won six times.
Having declared that she was already “evolving away from tennis” after a 27-year career, Williams’ force of will ensured that the retirement party was put on hold for a little longer.
“There’s no rush,” said Serena on court when reminded that she had declared herself to be in the closing stages of her career.
“There’s still a little left in me so we’ll see. I’m a pretty good player. I love a challenge.”
“I’m just Serena, you know. Honestly after I lost the second set I thought ‘oh my goodness, I’ve got to give my best effort because this could be it.”
She added: “I’m just looking at it as a bonus. I don’t have anything to prove. I have absolutely nothing to lose. I’ve had an ‘X’ on my back since 1999.”
The American arrived on court with the stadium announcer proudly introducing her as “the greatest of all time” while Kontaveit waited patiently at her chair.
Organizers, who laid on a spectacular welcome and post-match celebration for the American at her emotional first round win against Danka Kovinic on Monday, opted for a low-key party this time.
Golf superstar Tiger Woods watched from the Williams’ player box while Emmy award winning actress Zendaya also boosted the A-list of invitees from the Arthur Ashe Stadium stands.

Kontaveit, whose Grand Slam career has yielded just one quarter-final appearance, served a love game to get the contest underway but Williams was quickly level.
The 26-year-old Estonian fought off two break points in the third game but was then unable to convert one of her own in the fourth game.
Kontaveit saved four break points in the seventh game, each success greeted with muted, polite applause from the partisan crowd.
Former world number one Williams, now ranked at a lowly 609, had the crowd on their feet when she converted the sixth break point for a 5-4 lead.
Her legion of passionate fans were quickly sitting down again when she handed the break straight back on a double fault.
Williams, however, played a composed tiebreak to take the opener after 63 minutes courtesy of a fifth ace.
To her credit, Kontaveit hit straight back, stretching to a double break for 3-0 before Williams retrieved one.
It was a brief respite as the Estonian broke again for a 4-1 lead on her way to levelling the tie.
Williams was ahead for 2-0 in the decider but then saw a 40-0 lead slip away as Kontaveit hit back.
The Estonian dropped serve again as Williams went to 3-1 and then 4-1 with a solid hold.
Victory was in sight at 5-2 with Williams winning a 19-shot rally.
It was all too much for Kontaveit who was broken to love with the match secured with a backhand winner.
Williams next faces Australia’s Ajla Tomljanovic for a place in the last 16.


PSG is banking on a new direction after Kylian Mbappe’s move to Real Madrid

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PSG is banking on a new direction after Kylian Mbappe’s move to Real Madrid

Now the French club is looking to the future and an end to its age of excess
Time will tell how PSG’s post-Galactico era will work out

MANCHESTER: Kylian Mbappe. Lionel Messi. Neymar.
The talent drain at Paris Saint-Germain over the past 12 months was unprecedented in the world of soccer.
Now the French club is looking to the future and an end to its age of excess.
“It is a new era of PSG,” president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said. “All respect to Messi, Neymar, Kylian. We know what they’ve done for the club.
“It was very important to have them all. I wish them all the best for their new challenges, but as a club, for sure, I think the star is the collective.”
Time will tell how PSG’s post-Galactico era will work out. But the signings of Messi, Neymar and Mbappe ultimately failed to achieve the Qatar-backed club’s overriding ambition of conquering Europe.
For all of PSG’s dominance of the French league — winning it in 10 of the last 12 seasons — it has reached just one Champions League final since being bought by Qatar Sports Investments in 2011.
A procession of icons has gone through the club in that time from David Beckham to Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Angel di Maria and Sergio Ramos. Yet the Champions League has so far remained out of reach.
Even Messi couldn’t change PSG’s fortunes, despite ending his own search for the World Cup title in 2022 in his final year in Paris.
So it is perhaps understandable that Al-Khelaifi is looking to go in a different direction, having spent a record $262 million on Neymar and $190 million on Mbappe in one spectacular offseason in 2017. Messi was a free agent from Barcelona, but the combined salary for all three was a reported $152 million annually, plus bonuses.
For all of that exorbitant spending, PSG has watched on as Madrid has continued to dominate the Champions League, winning the trophy in six of the last 11 seasons. Abu Dhabi-backed Manchester City, which like PSG, has used its newfound riches to shake up the traditional order of European soccer’s elite, won the Champions League for the first time last year.
PSG’s so-called shift started last year following the exits of Messi to Inter Miami and Neymar to Saudi-team Al-Hilal. Mbappe’s departure was also anticipated.
Not that it is shopping in the bargain basement, having spent around $500 million on new players over that period.
Randal Kolo Muani was signed for 95 million euros ($103 million); Goncalo Ramos was 65 million euros ($70 million) and Ousmane Dembele was 50 million euros ($54 million).
More signings will come during this offseason.
Bradley Barcola, another signing last year, and Warren Zaire-Emery are emerging French talents.
Zaire-Emery was a graduate from the club’s academy and after building a state of the art training center, PSG hopes more will follow.
While the wait for European success goes on, PSG’s new-look team won the domestic league and cup double last season and was a beaten semifinalist in the Champions League.
“(It was an) amazing season we had, missing only two matches to win the big trophy (the Champions League). It was a great season. More than what we expected,” Al-Khelaifi said. “We did a lot of changes.”
That success, however, was achieved with Mbappe still at the heart of the team and scoring 40 goals in all competitions to fill the void left by Messi and Neymar a year before.
Whether Mbappe can be replaced, is another question entirely.

“It is a new era of PSG,” president Nasser Al-Khelaifi said. “All respect to Messi, Neymar, Kylian. We know what they’ve done for the club. (AFP/File)

Sabalenka, Zverev eye French Open semis after Djokovic withdrawal

Updated 05 June 2024
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Sabalenka, Zverev eye French Open semis after Djokovic withdrawal

  • “When you finally get there, to your goal, it actually gives you so much confidence in yourself,” the Belarusian said
  • Zverev and De Minaur, playing in only his second Slam quarter-final, will face off for the remaining last-four spot against Ruud

PARIS: Aryna Sabalenka eyes a place in a seventh consecutive Grand Slam semifinal when she takes on Russian teenager Mirra Andreeva at the French Open on Wednesday, with the schedule diminished following the withdrawal of Novak Djokovic.
The other two singles quarter-finals on Court Philippe Chatrier see Elena Rybakina face Jasmine Paolini and Alexander Zverev play Alex de Minaur in the night session.
World number two Sabalenka, who is still on course to meet rival Iga Swiatek in Saturday’s final, has not failed to reach a Slam semifinal since lifting her first major title at last year’s Australian Open.
“When you finally get there, to your goal, it actually gives you so much confidence in yourself,” the Belarusian said.
Sabalenka has powered through the draw so far without dropping a set, including a 6-1, 6-2 dismantling of Andreeva’s older sister Erika in the first round.
However, 17-year-old Mirra, the youngest woman to reach the quarter-finals since 2005, could prove a tougher nut to crack despite having failed to win a set against Sabalenka in two previous meetings.
“Of course, we will add a few adjustments,” she said. “We will change something, because the way I played last two times didn’t work.
“I don’t have anything in my head, so I hope my coach will help me with it.”
The winner will play either former Wimbledon champion Rybakina or Italian 12th seed Paolini for a spot in the final.
Rybakina will be a strong favorite to progress, but the 28-year-old Paolini will be full of confidence after an excellent year which has seen her fly up the rankings.
“Before was, like, ‘I cannot win these matches’. I have to, I don’t know, do a miracle,” Paolini said after beating Elina Avanesyan to reach her first Grand Slam quarter-final.
“But now I step on court, and I say, ‘Okay, I can have my chance’. I have to play well, of course, but I have chances.”
Djokovic had been due to face Casper Ruud in a repeat of last year’s final, but the 24-time Grand Slam champion’s title defense was abruptly ended by a knee injury he suffered during his dramatic last-16 victory over Francisco Cerundolo.
Media reports suggested Djokovic was set to undergo surgery, which would put his participation at Wimbledon and potentially the Paris Olympics in doubt.
Jannik Sinner will now usurp Djokovic as world number one next week and the Italian goes up against Carlos Alcaraz in Friday’s men’s semifinals.
Zverev and De Minaur, playing in only his second Slam quarter-final, will face off for the remaining last-four spot against Ruud.
German fourth seed Zverev will be targeting a fourth straight Roland Garros semifinal after making the last eight for the sixth time in seven years.
He needed five sets to beat Tallon Griekspoor in the third round, before fighting back to defeat Holger Rune in another decider in a last-16 tie which finished at 1:40 am local time — the second-latest finish in French Open history.
“I’ve played a total of eight-and-a-half hours over the last three days so I need to recover,” said Zverev.
“I need to do everything possible to be ready for the quarter-final match.”
Zverev is playing under the shadow of an ongoing trial in Berlin over allegations of assaulting an ex-girlfriend.
Australian De Minaur, seeded 11th, had never even got past the second round in Paris before this year, winning just three of 10 matches.
“It’s one of my best Slam results. Looks like I’ve converted myself into a clay specialist,” De Minaur said.
There will be a first-time French Open men’s champion on Sunday, with Ruud the only man left in the draw who has previously reached the final.


French court stops the sale of Maradona’s World Cup Golden Ball trophy amid ownership dispute

Updated 05 June 2024
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French court stops the sale of Maradona’s World Cup Golden Ball trophy amid ownership dispute

  • The appeal court in Versailles overturned a judicial decision last month that allowed the trophy’s auction to go ahead
  • Pending a decision on the merits of the case, it ordered its sequestration to avoid any risk of further disappearance of the trophy

PARIS: Diego Maradona’s heirs won an appeal ruling to stop the auction of a trophy the late soccer great was awarded after the 1986 World Cup when a French court ordered it placed in judicial possession on Wednesday.
The appeal court in Versailles overturned a judicial decision last month that allowed the trophy’s auction to go ahead as planned despite the opposition from Maradona’s heirs.
The tribunal argued there was a genuine dispute as to the ownership of the World Cup Golden Ball that Maradona received for being the best player of the 1986 tournament. Pending a decision on the merits of the case, it ordered its sequestration to avoid any risk of further disappearance of the trophy, which resurfaced after being missing for decades.
Gilles Moreu, a lawyer for the heirs, told The Associated Press he will now lodge a legal action to have a court look at the merits of the case and decide who owns the trophy.
“We are satisfied with this decision, which complies with our requests and reassures my clients,” he said.
French judicial officials last month opened an investigation after they received a complaint related to the resale of allegedly stolen goods.
The Golden Ball disappeared in uncertain circumstances. Maradona’s heirs say the trophy was stolen and claimed the current owner wasn’t entitled to sell it. The auction house Aguttes said the trophy reappeared in 2016 among other lots that were acquired from a private collection at auction in Paris.
The current owner and Aguttes claimed that when he bought the trophy years ago he was not aware it had been stolen.
Maradona received the award in 1986 at a ceremony in Paris. It subsequently disappeared, giving rise to rumors. One is that Maradona stored it in a safe in a Naples bank that was robbed by local gangsters in 1989 when he played in the Italian league. Maradona’s heirs believe it was stolen from the bank.
Maradona, who died in 2020 at age 60, captained Argentina in its 3-2 win over West Germany in the 1986 final in Mexico City.
Aguttes decided last week to postpone the sale that was planned on Thursday, citing a “litigious climate” and “uncertainties (which) do not allow connoisseurs to approach this acquisition calmly.”


PFL MENA 2 confirmed for July 12 in Riyadh

Updated 05 June 2024
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PFL MENA 2 confirmed for July 12 in Riyadh

  • Saudi Arabia’s Hattan Alsaif returns to the SmartCage as Jarrah Al-Silawi of Jordan meets Iraq’s Bashar Thaer in the welterweight main event

RIYADH: The Professional Fighters League has announced the matchups for PFL MENA 2 (Middle East and North Africa), which takes place at The Green Halls in Riyadh on July 12.

The second fight card of PFL MENA’s debut season features fighters in the welterweight and lightweight divisions competing in the patented PFL Playoff win and advance format. In the welterweight main event, PFL veteran and multiple champion Jarrah “The Jordanian Lion” Al-Silawi (19-6-0) of Jordan meets Iraq’s Bashar Thaer (7-2-0).

PFL MENA 2 will air live in prime time on MBC Action, with the free-to-air broadcasts accessible to fans across the region. In addition to PFL MENA, MBC Action will air the PFL Global Season, PFL Europe, the Bellator Champions Series and PFL’s pay-per-view Superfight Division events.

In the lightweight division, Josh Togo (13-5-0) of Lebanon takes on Iran’s Mohsen Mohammadseifi (4-2-0) and Saudi Arabia’s own Hattan Alsaif, fresh from her spectacular mixed martial arts debut earlier this month, makes her return to the PFL SmartCage in a women’s atomweight amateur showcase bout.

Pete Murray, CEO of PFL, said: “The Professional Fighters League is excited to return to Riyadh for PFL MENA 2. The PFL, along with our great partners SURJ Sports, could not be happier to see a shared vision become a reality. PFL MENA has put a global spotlight on great fighters across the region and provided passionate MMA fans with a premium live experience.” 

The complete PFL MENA 2 fight card:

Welterweight bout:

Jarrah Al-Silawi (19-6-0) vs. Bashar Thaer (7-2-0)

Welterweight bout:

Badreddine Diani (7-3-0) vs. Amir Fazli (6-1-0)

Welterweight bout:

Mohammad Alaqraa (5-0-0) vs. Youcef Ouabbas (3-0-0)

Middleweight showcase bout:

Mostafa Rashed Neda (8-3-0) vs. TBD

Lightweight bout:

Josh Togo (13-5-0) vs. Mohsen Mohammadseifi (4-2-0)

Lightweight bout:

Ahmed Amir (12-4-1) vs. Souhil Tahiri (6-4-1)

Welterweight bout:

Omar El Dafrawy (10-6-0) vs. Anthony Zeidan (5-1-0)

Women’s atomweight amateur showcase bout:

Hattan Alsaif (1-0) vs. Eman Baraka (1-0)

Lightweight bout:

Abdullah Saleem (5-0-0) vs. Omar Reguigui (4-0-0)

Lightweight bout:

Abbas Khan (6-2-0) vs. Georges Eid (8-4-0)

Flyweight showcase bout:

Hadi Al-Hussaini (5-0-1) vs. Ziad Ayman Kareem (3-1-0)


Cristiano Ronaldo back in the global spotlight at Euro 2024 and out to show he’s still a force

Updated 05 June 2024
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Cristiano Ronaldo back in the global spotlight at Euro 2024 and out to show he’s still a force

Cristiano Ronaldo had tears in his eyes as he walked off the field and seemingly into international retirement.
It was the 2022 World Cup and Portugal had just lost to Morocco in the quarterfinals, a shocking result that left Ronaldo inconsolable.
He was nearly 38 years old. Unarguably past his best. No longer a guaranteed starter for his country.
Was this the last time the soccer world would see Ronaldo — one of the game’s greatest-ever players — in a Portugal jersey?
We really shouldn’t have underestimated him.
Eighteen months later, Ronaldo is still scoring hat tricks, still breaking records, still owning that will to win and self-belief — not to mention the toned physique — which has long set him apart from pretty much anyone else.
And still a key member of the Portugal team heading to the European Championship in Germany as one of the tournament favorites.
Indeed, Portugal coach Roberto Martinez, who was hired weeks after the World Cup, has retained the 39-year-old Ronaldo as captain.
“For us, he brings that experience,” Martinez said, “but, more than anything, probably the biggest surprise is that he approaches every day as a new way to be the best, a new way to keep impressing.”
The Euros represent an opportunity for Ronaldo to remind soccer fans that he is still a force in the game.
Since the start of 2023, he has been playing in Saudi Arabia, pretty much out of the global spotlight and in a league that has thrown money at some high-profile — if maybe over-the-hill — superstars to generate attention and change the impression of soccer in the kingdom.
Ronaldo, earning a reported $200 million a year, is still pouring in the goals — he was the top scorer in the Saudi Pro League with 35, a record in that division — even if critics have been quick to point out the low standard of play in the country.
“We don’t make choices based on where the players play,” said Martinez, who could not be more impressed with what Ronaldo has been doing in Saudi.
“He has become a central figure of a new project and the important thing for us, as a national team coach, is that he has been able to carry on scoring goals,” Martinez said.
“His stats are better than anything, subjectively, that you can say. He’s been the top goal scorer in 2023 in world football and he makes a total new beginning in a league that in the next few years is going to be talked about a lot.”
Ronaldo committed himself to Portugal even though it looked like his time with the national team was up after being benched for its knockout-stage games at the World Cup.
However, Portugal changed coaches — Martinez came in for Fernando Santos — and Ronaldo felt he still had plenty more to offer, not least adding to his world record of goals scored in men’s internationals that now stands at 128.
In a qualifying group for the Euros that didn’t feature any of Portugal’s top rivals, Ronaldo started nine of the 10 games and scored 10 goals — only behind Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku (14). He was captain whenever he started.
In short, Martinez fully believes in Ronaldo, a player he describes as “an iconic figure of the game,” heading into what will be the striker’s record-extending sixth European Championship and 11th major tournament.
“He keeps making the difference,” Martinez said, “and I think that, for us, this is a wonderful example for young players.”
Key is whether Ronaldo will be trusted — and he has the all-round fitness and sharpness — for the biggest games. He wasn’t in Qatar, after all.
Portugal has been drawn in a benign group on paper, also featuring Turkiye, the Czech Republic and tournament debutant Georgia. But, what if Portugal plays France or the Netherlands in the quarterfinals, as could happen according to the knockout bracket: Does Ronaldo start then?
A big difference to the World Cup is that his backup, Goncalo Ramos, hasn’t been a regular starter at Paris Saint-Germain since his move from Benfica. He isn’t pushing Ronaldo for a starting place as much as he was in Qatar, where he arrived in red-hot form.
Martinez seems willing to forgo some of Ronaldo’s limitations — his inability to press as well as others, for example — because he is still so dangerous in front of goal.
Ronaldo has a long list of exciting midfielders and wingers ready to feed him chances — Bruno Fernandes, Rafael Leao, Diogo Jota, Bernardo Silva, Joao Felix. With holding midfielder Joao Palhinha protecting so well a defense that conceded just two goals in the entire qualifying campaign, there’s so much to like about Portugal’s chances in Germany.
Ronaldo saw his longtime rival, Lionel Messi, grab all the limelight at the World Cup by leading Argentina to the title.
Maybe there’s one more big major tournament left in Ronaldo, too.