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TV presenter stuns in see-through during Champions League coverage

TV presenter stuns in see-through during Champions League coverage

News.com.au2 days ago

Mexican television host Miroslava Montemayor has turned heads with a stunning look ahead of the Champions League final.
The 35-year-old presents TNT Sports' coverage of the tournament in Mexico.
Miroslava is known for her daring on-air fashion choices.
And her latest wardrobe choice has sent her 884,000 followers into a frenzy.
Miroslava previewed PSG's showdown against Inter Milan on Saturday night.
She picked her best XI of the tournament - controversially leaving out Barcelona wonderkid Lamine Yamal.
But fans admitted they 'forgive her' as she dazzled in a gorgeous see-through black dress.
One fan gasped: 'You are a queen.'
Another commented: 'Simply stunning.'
Miroslava also gave her followers a glimpse into TNT's halftime show for the final in Munich.
Rocking a traditional German dirndl, she wrote: 'Behind the scenes of rehearsals for the Champions League halftime show … Munich, here we come!'
One lovestruck fan replied: 'I need to watch this.'
And a second said: 'The look is EVERYTHING.'
Miroslava represented her country at Miss International 2013 in Japan.
She began her foray into TV over a decade ago after leaving modelling behind.
Her first TV gig was on Azteca Noreste sports show ADN.
She joined up with ESPN in 2015, fronting a number of their Spanish-language shows.
The presenter turns her hand to everything from American football to tennis.
Miroslava left ESPN in 2019 to join TNT, where she has since fronted the network's Champions League coverage in Mexico.

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The 22-year-old had been an afterthought in the sport until April when British player Harriet Dart had complained to the umpire during their match in Rouen: "Can you tell her [Boisson] to wear deodorant because she smells really bad?" The comments caused the inevitable social media firestorm but Boisson came out of the episode well, laughing it off and making fun of herself, while Dart bore the brunt of criticism and apologised for the outburst. But that episode quickly became ancient history when Boisson, who'd been due to make her debut in Paris last year only to suffer a serious knee injury a fortnight before the tournament, which kept her out of action for nine months, pulled off an 'incroyable' triumph over the US Open runner-up. Boisson, in her first slam main draw, is the only home hope left in either men's or women's draws after a woeful tournament, and asked about her ambitions for the rest of the tournament, shrugged delightfully: "I hope to win, right? 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