
Cameron Norrie vs Nicolas Jarry: Score and latest Wimbledon updates
'It's a great match to play, I'm excited for it,' said Norrie. 'I think he's one of the most dangerous players on the tour when he's confident, and he is confident. He beat Holger in a crazy match. I think he looks like a guy with nothing to lose. He's so dangerous. He's got one of the best serves on tour. I think he likes the grass a lot. I'm going to have to really raise my level from how I played [in round three].'

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BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Rinderknech collapses on court in Cincinnati heat
Arthur Rinderknech collapsed on court in sweltering conditions before retiring from his Cincinnati Open third-round match with Felix lost the first set 7-6 (7-4) but was level at 2-2 in the second before collapsing near the baseline as Canada's Auger-Aliassime prepared to and the umpire ran over to check on the Frenchman, before medical staff arrived on 30-year-old, who had been playing for nearly two hours, had a cooling break with ice packs on his neck and legs before declaring he was able to he lasted just two more games before retiring to send Auger-Aliassime through to the last have been struggling with the heat during the tournament, with temperatures regularly exceeding number two Cameron Norrie looked unwell and was often drenched in sweat during his second-round loss to veteran Roberto Bautista Agut on experienced its hottest opening day in June, with temperatures reaching 32.3C. Carlos Alcaraz's five-set first-round win over Fabio Fognini was completed following a 15-minute pause in the deciding set, when a spectator sitting in the sun was taken Australian Open also had sweltering temperatures approaching 34C. Organisers introduced the Australian Open Heat Stress Scale in 2019 to monitor conditions and minimise risk to players' health.


The Sun
16 minutes ago
- The Sun
Barcelona get green light to play LaLiga match in MIAMI – could Premier League games be next?
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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Emma Raducanu ‘proud' of pushing Aryna Sabalenka to limit in Cincinnati Open
Emma Raducanu says she is proud of the improvements she displayed on Monday afternoon as she pushed Aryna Sabalenka to the limit in their punishing tussle in the third round of the Cincinnati Open. Five weeks on from their memorable third-round match at Wimbledon, Raducanu showed her continued progress by making life even more difficult for the world No 1 and coming close to pulling off the best individual victory of her career. After three hours and nine minutes on court, Raducanu lost 7-6 (3), 4-6, 7-6 (5). 'She's world No 1 for a reason and I pushed her more than I did at Wimbledon so that's an improvement,' said Raducanu. 'And also, it was good to have this result on a hard court because it's very different to grass. I was always thinking that grass suits me a lot more and I still believe that so to have pushed her on a hard court like that, I'm pretty proud of it. The 30th seed continued: 'I think starting the point is a big takeaway. I think she did that incredibly well in the big moments, she served and returned really well. Me too in certain moments of the match. To hold that level on starting the point in the match is a big thing to me.' After falling down a set, Raducanu recovered brilliantly, serving well for large stretches of the match and then finding a way through an incredible 13-deuce service game at 3-4 in the final set. In the end, Sabalenka showed mental toughness by saving her best tennis for the most important moments of the match. 'You take the lessons from this,' said Raducanu, 22. 'I was able to play some good tennis for patches of the match, but I think it also dropped off for other patches of the match. So I think with work and going on the practice court, I can do it for longer and hold the level high for longer. But that being said, we had a three-hour match and I felt pretty good out there for the most part against Aryna who's achieved everything she has, so it's mostly positives.' Raducanu's defeat also marks an end to her first tournament with her new coach Francisco Roig, a former member of Rafael Nadal's coaching team, who has been working with the Briton since last Tuesday. After Raducanu's comfortable first round win against Olga Danilovic, this was their first big match together. Roig was extremely vocal throughout with both encouragement and specific tactical advice. 'I think the first week went well,' said Raducanu. 'I think we practised well. I made some improvements and I think for certain moments, you could see some stuff we practised peek through. But given that it's only been a week, I think there's been improvements.'