↩ Accueil

Vue normale

Il y a de nouveaux articles disponibles, cliquez pour rafraîchir la page.
Aujourd’hui — 23 janvier 2025Flux principal

Madison Keys defeats Swiatek in instant classic to reach Australian Open final

23 janvier 2025 à 14:59

Deep in the final set of one of the most extraordinary matches of her career, the violent, destructive ball striking of Madison Keys was still in full flow. From a set down, Keys had dragged herself back into the match by brutalising every tennis ball in sight. Then she had shown her gritty resilience throughout a desperately tight third set. Whenever Iga Swiatek tried to pull away, Keys somehow forced her way back in.

One of the enduring questions surrounding Keys’ career has been whether she possesses the killer instinct and nerve to maintain her supreme shot-making under pressure in the biggest matches of her career. The answer has often been negative, but here Keys offered a supreme demonstration of her toughness as she saved a match point before emerging victorious in an instant classic, defeating a gritty Iga Swiatek to reach her first Australian Open final with a 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (8) win over the No 2 seed.

Continue reading...

💾

© Photograph: James Ross/EPA

💾

© Photograph: James Ross/EPA

Noisy fans add to sport's spectacle but loss of perspective and anger soon follows | Emma John

Par : Emma John
23 janvier 2025 à 14:47

Clashes between players and spectators at Australian Open are just another example of the shouty polarities of our age

Eva Asderaki-Moore probably loves her job. But there were times, during Novak Djokovic’s Australian Open win over Carlos Alcaraz on Tuesday, when the chair umpire clearly had it with the crowd. “Ladies and gentlemen, please,” she pleaded. And then “That’s e-nough!” – which she enunciated like a schoolteacher marshalling her charges on a very long, very noisy coach trip.

You had to feel for her. What is tennis thinking after all? It throws 15,000 people into an arena, whips them up into a state of delirium with some of the greatest feats of athleticism seen in a grand slam quarter-final, then expects pin-drop silence between points. At 1am? When some of these people have been drinking since lunchtime?

Continue reading...

💾

© Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA

💾

© Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA

Australian Open semi-finals: Keys v Swiatek goes to final set; Sabalenka beats Badosa – live

23 janvier 2025 à 13:31

Sabalenka 0-1 Badosa* (denotes server) A big service-winner down the T makes 15-all, but Sabalenka takes control of the next point with a booming forehand return, cleaning up with with another down the line Then, facing a second serve, she steps in a little and starts thwacking … but just when15-40 seems a matter of time, a backhand on the stretch and on to the line hauls Badosa back into the point and eventually the error comes; 30-all. But a double presents break point; another service-winner confiscates it, and so far, the underdog is coping with the pressure well, as I type spanking an ace down the T for advantage. And though she oughtn’t win the next rally, Sabalenka in at the net and unable to finish, she makes her opponent play enough balls such that the error comes. Badosa is into this!

Badosa to serve and ready … play.

Continue reading...

💾

© Photograph: David Gray/AFP/Getty Images

💾

© Photograph: David Gray/AFP/Getty Images

Hier — 22 janvier 2025Flux principal

Djokovic’s Australian Open show of steel sends a message: there’s still more to come | Tumaini Carayol

22 janvier 2025 à 14:12

The 37-year-old showed killer instinct against younger rival, a willingness to go to hell and back in pursuit of glory

In the most recent late-night exhibition of his insatiable resilience and desire, as he again belied his ageing body to deliver another legendary performance, one of the most significant moments of Novak Djokovic’s quarter-final defeat of Carlos Alcaraz at the Australian Open came as the Serb clung on desperately to his frail momentum.

With a set point on his serve at 5-3 in the third set, Djokovic was hurled around the court by Alcaraz, chasing down a drop shot before stumbling back to the baseline in pursuit of a lob. The frantic point – and set – ended with Djokovic slipping an angled backhand passing shot by Alcaraz before cupping his hands to his ear while the Rod Laver Arena erupted.

Continue reading...

💾

© Photograph: Joel Carrett/EPA

💾

© Photograph: Joel Carrett/EPA

❌
❌