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Emma Raducanu's former coach issues defiant defence of British No 1 - and names the key reason he thinks star can succeed on the eve of the US Open

Emma Raducanu's former coach issues defiant defence of British No 1 - and names the key reason he thinks star can succeed on the eve of the US Open

Daily Mail​15 hours ago
's former coach Mark Petchey has issued a defiant defence of his former charge as the British No 1 gears up to mimic her 2021 US Open triumph at Flushing Meadows this week.
Raducanu began working with Petchey during the Miami Open, and under the former coach of Andy Murray 's aegis, the 22-year-old has experienced a consistency in her form that has only ever been rivalled in her career during those months ahead of her miraculous victory in New York four years ago.
After improving her limited clay-court prowess, Raducanu enjoyed strong outings on grass, playing one of the matches of the tournament at Wimbledon against world No1 Aryna Sabalenka.
During the American swing, Raducanu has also impressed, reaching the semi-finals in Washington DC, and taking Sabalenka the distance in their second meeting this summer at last week's Cincinnati Open.
Now working with Rafael Nadal 's old mentor Francisco Roig, Raducanu will be keen to make a deep run at the US Open, having never come close to replicating her debut success.
But Petchey was bullish about the British No 1's chances to again hit the heights she did with her first Grand Slam win, in part due to her total immersion in the sport.
'From my perspective, I hope people can really understand how much she loves tennis,' Petchey told OLBG as he reflected on the 'awesome' experience coaching Raducanu short-term.
'She's totally invested in it. She watches it all the time. She practices as hard as anyone I know and has spent more time on the court, or as much time on the court, as everybody else. And obviously she's living a very different life.
'She's living a lot of her career in reverse and that's not been easy. Having set the bar so high so early on in your career every week you are measured not just by other people's expectations but also your own expectations. That is a good thing because it drives you to be as good as you can be.
'But on the other hand, it's difficult, because at times it can feel like you're not hitting the standard you want to because that's where your bar is at. From that perspective, her work ethic and her desire to be able to do what she did back in 2021 is as great as I remember it in 2020 when I first had a chance to work with her.'
Petchey and Raducanu only worked together formally until the end of Wimbledon due to the short-term nature of their partnership, which was in part dependent on his ongoing broadcasting commitments.
During their handful of months together, Petchey was at times unable to watch Raducanu's matches - such as at the French Open in May, when his daughter Myah filled in as a 'mini-Mark' while he was offering up punditry on air.
In Roig - who cut an encouragingly vocal presence in Cincinnati, their first tournament together - Raducanu will be able to rely on a constant figure, something Petchey believes will be an enormous benefit to the young player.
'The way we stopped working together was totally amicable,' Petchey continued. 'My job at the start with her was going to be just Miami. Then obviously it became longer through to Wimbledon, and then obviously she had three days with Francis Roig, Rafael Nadal's former coach, after Wimbledon and that went well.
'But he couldn't start due to other commitments until Cincinnati. So, around the work stuff that I have, we stayed in contact, and I helped her up in Montreal as best I could.
'But eventually my commitments were going to be too much to be a lead person for her in that environment. I think it's really a great opportunity for her to work with somebody like Francisco who has worked with one of the best players of all time.
'To have time alone with Francisco, to work on the stuff is a golden opportunity for her and him to try to take her game to the next level where she's going to be able to win majors.
'I think they'll be great, I think they'll be a great partnership. I'm super happy for her and I'm super excited about her potential.'
'We never got to the stage where we discussed whether it would be a full-time role. But she knows where I am. I'm not planning to change my number!'
Raducanu's time in New York got off to an exciting, if not particularly successful, start on Tuesday afternoon, when she partnered up in a hotly anticipated mixed doubles pairing with Carlos Alcaraz as part of the US Open's revamped event.
Although the pair did not progress past the first round, their connection on-court was clear
Although competing for an eye-watering $1million prize, Alcaraz and Raducanu looked completely at ease with one another's company, laughing and chatting between points and displaying what Raducanu referred to as their 'genuine connection' on-court.
The players' pairing-up had first sparked romance rumours, but both were insistent that they are simply good friends.
But friendship alone could not help the two strong singles players against fierce opposition, with fellow British No 1 Jack Draper and his partner, ex-world No 1 in doubles Jessica Pegula claiming the win in straight sets.
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‘She did it, big time': Ilona Maher's road to becoming rugby's biggest breakout star since Lomu
‘She did it, big time': Ilona Maher's road to becoming rugby's biggest breakout star since Lomu

The Guardian

time10 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘She did it, big time': Ilona Maher's road to becoming rugby's biggest breakout star since Lomu

One Saturday in September 2014, the women's rugby team from Quinnipiac University in Connecticut travelled to Norwich, Vermont. On the home team, a powerful 18-year-old prop scored three tries in a convincing win. Quinnipiac coach Becky Carlson turned to her assistant. 'Oh man,' she remembered saying. 'Who's the kid in the pink scrum cap? I'd give my right arm to have her. 'And then that same fall, I had a voicemail. I saved it. And she sounds like a little kid. 'Hello, Coach Carlson, this is Ilona Maher. I just wanted to call and tell you I want to transfer from Norwich to Quinnipiac. I'm a nursing student. I would like for you to call me back.' 'And I was like: 'I didn't have to give my right arm.'' A decade later, many would give their right arm for time with Ilona Maher. Ahead of a World Cup in England set to take the women's game to new audiences, the 5ft 10in US center is a global star. Followed by millions on social media, a reality TV contestant and swimsuit model broadcasting a message of body positivity, the kid in the pink scrum cap has become a phenomenon – easily rugby's biggest breakout star in the 30 years since the All Blacks wing Jonah Lomu stormed the . Maher was born in Burlington, Vermont, in August 1996, a year after Lomu lit up his World Cup in South Africa. Michael and Mieneke Maher had three daughters, all athletic. In high school, in her dad's words, Ilona became 'a multi-sport star: starting pitcher for the softball team, state all-star, state all-star for field hockey, state all-star for basketball. 'But when she got to senior spring, she didn't like the way the softball program was … in terms of the lack of exercise. She would say: 'Dad, they kept us for two-and-a-quarter hours, they didn't ever sweat it once. I'm not going to do it.'' The Mahers had a rule: you've got to play something. Ilona considered lacrosse or track but there was rugby too. Michael Maher found the game at college and stayed with it, propping for Mad River RFC, a club outside Stowe. While Michael played and refereed, Ilona spent a lot of time on the sidelines. 'There was a rugby programme at the other high school in Burlington that allowed people from different high schools to come to it and was coached by friends of mine,' Michael Maher said. 'Ilona decided to try that. Phone calls started right away.' US college sports are serious business, coaches competing to recruit the best of the best. Ilona chose Norwich, an hour south of home, once a military school. Her first year brought success on the field but the culture wasn't a fit. And so she placed that fateful call to Quinnipiac, a small college in Hamden, CT. Quinnipiac women's rugby had varsity status, bringing funding and focus. Most importantly to Maher, the program was led by Carlson, a coach widely known for her dedication to success on the field and equality with the men's game off it. As Maher described it to the Guardian in July, before a US national team game against Fiji in Washington: 'Having a force like that behind you, who believes in you, believes that as a program we deserve more funding, as women we deserve more, that has kind of carried over.' Carlson switched Maher from prop to center, her size and speed propelling the Bobcats to three national titles and herself to the MA Sorensen award for best women's collegiate player. Maher got her nursing degree, top of the class, alongside an intense rugby schooling. As Carlson described it, for three years, Maher and her teammates 'got up at five in the morning to lift. You have breakfast, you have training … two sessions a day. You're still talking about going through rigorous courses with nursing and all the pre-science they take. You're doing strength and conditioning, you're doing agility, you're going to practice. You're watching game film. All of it.' Maher graduated in 2018. There was no professional 15-a-side option for women but sevens had Olympic status. As her father tells it: 'She said: 'You know, Dad, I'm not done. I want to keep going, I think I can make the Eagles Sevens.' Which to me seemed a little funny, because I think of that as a skinny person's game. But boy, she just worked at it. She stayed so fit and she did it, big time.' In 2018, Maher made her US debut in Paris. Covid intervened in 2020 but at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Maher made an impact, her play and her social media posts attracting a growing following. In 2024, at the Paris Games, the Eagles took bronze with a thrilling win over Australia, Maher's muscular contribution celebrated alongside widely shared TikTok videos from the athletes' village complete with her personal hashtag: #BeastBeautyBrains. Back home came lift-off: competing on Dancing with the Stars, posing for Sports Illustrated, endorsing Kamala Harris, launching her own line of cosmetics. Wanting to play 15s at the 2025 World Cup, she signed a short‑term contract with Bristol in England where she attracted record Premiership crowds before flying home. In July, at an awards ceremony in Los Angeles, ESPN named Maher Best Breakthrough Athlete. From the podium, she told fans: 'Strong is beautiful. Strong is powerful. And I hope more girls can feel how I feel … Take up space. Pitch it faster. Run harder. Put another plate on the bar and never tone it down.' A few days later, in DC, more than 15,000 paid to see Maher and the Eagles face Fiji — the Ilona effect clearly moving from the digital realm to the real world. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion 'I don't know if anybody could quantify it,' Bill Goren, USA Rugby CEO, says of her influence. 'She has made a massive impact on our community, especially our young women who are engaging in a game they probably never would have otherwise.' Similarly, Sally Horrox, director of women's rugby for World Rugby, saluted how Maher had 'come out of the rugby bubble' and entered the American sporting consciousnessto become 'the eighth-most marketable sports property globally'. Amid pomp and circumstance in DC, pressing flesh as cameras flashed, Maher sometimes seemed slightly uneasy, at least with her press. Frustrated by the Eagles' stuttering play, or her own performance, or just the questions thrown her way, her fierce edge was on display. From afar, Carlson looked on. She has experienced frustrations of her own amid 15 years at the sharp end. When Maher was there with her, she felt similar pressures. 'We would go from these really big peaks to these really deep chasms,' Carlson said. 'It was like: 'Yes, this is something I can do, this is what I want to do, no, I can't do this.' I'm sure this is the story of a lot of high-profile athletes that we never see, because social media is what it is – it's beautiful, everybody was birthed perfect, there were never any hard decisions, never any hard conversations.' In reality, she says, Maher's path to stardom has been 'really hard'. Seeking to help her athlete, Carlson 'had a long conversation with one of my really good friends, Becky Burleigh, who coached [record-setting USA striker] Abby Wambach at Florida. I would be, like: 'How did you coach Abby through this?' Because Abby was very similar to Lo in stature, in the way she played, but also in this other sinking feeling of self doubt that never projected anywhere else. That's not something that's usually part of Ilona's story.' Nor, sometimes, is Maher's status as just another player. Before the Fiji game, at a gala dinner near the White House, Maher was in demand but stayed close to her fellow Eagles, dressed in uniform track jacket, jeans and sneakers, blending in when all were called onstage. She and sisters Olivia and Adrianna – co-hosts of a podcast, House of Maher – regularly speak of the need to stay grounded. Michael and Meineke Maher are certainly so, radiating positivity. At the World Cup, the American women face a stern test. Samoa should be beaten but Pool A also includes Australia and England, overwhelming favorites to lift the trophy. Next Friday, the Eagles will kick off against the Red Roses in Sunderland, at the Stadium of Light. Fortunately for the US, their star is well used to fame's bright glare. At the DC gala dinner, at the Maher family table, Michael Maher looked back again to his daughter's days at college, in the program that made her. 'Ilona came in, led Quinnipiac in tries for three years,' he said. 'But more important, she led in assists for three years too. Ilona loves being a playmaker. 'All these people that were pooh-poohing her for wanting to play 15s, saying she doesn't know what she's doing? They should see her college record. She's the complete package.'

‘F***, I'm sorry' – Jack Draper and Jessica Pegula miss out on $1m US Open jackpot after astonishing tie-break collapse
‘F***, I'm sorry' – Jack Draper and Jessica Pegula miss out on $1m US Open jackpot after astonishing tie-break collapse

The Sun

time10 minutes ago

  • The Sun

‘F***, I'm sorry' – Jack Draper and Jessica Pegula miss out on $1m US Open jackpot after astonishing tie-break collapse

JACK DRAPER and Jessica Pegula missed out on a shot at the $1million jackpot after narrowly losing in the US Open mixed doubles semi-finals. The British-American duo teamed up late on for the event, after Draper's previous partners Zheng Qinwen and Paula Badosa were both forced to withdraw due to injury. 3 3 Draper and Pegula stormed through the first two rounds of the controversially revamped event - sweeping past Carlos Alcaraz and Emma Raducanu, then Daniil Medvedev and Mirra Andreeva. Things started brightly last night, as they grabbed the first set 5-3 against Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud. Swiatek and Ruud came roaring back, however, winning the second set 5-3 to set up a dramatic match tiebreak to 10. Draper and Pegula raced to an 8-4 lead, with the former playing brilliantly and the latter an extremely accomplished doubles player. But incredibly their lead soon evaporated, with the scratch pair losing six points in a row to crash out of the tournament. On match point Pegula opted to volley a Swiatek forehand, setting up an easy winner for the Pole when Draper may have had a more presentable shot had she left the ball. As Pegula and Draper sat down following the epic match, both looked extremely dejected. Pegula appeared to tell her partner: "F***, I'm sorry." Draper, 23, did not allow Pegula to blame herself, and instead seemed to try and gee her up - having admitted that he had barely spoken to her prior to this week. The Brit had previously been chided by his partner for describing the tournament as an "exhibition" - with the USTA having been at pains to stress that it remains a proper Grand Slam event. Jack Draper told off by partner after comment following US Open win over Raducanu and Alcaraz Following defeat, Draper clarified: "I think yesterday there was times where it felt a little bit more that way from our opponents. "Whereas tonight we were in the changing rooms, you're seeing Iga and Casper, they're fully dialled in. It was intense. We both wanted to win." Pegula then weighed in: "You can't go out there at 7pm on Ashe knowing you could play the final, and feel like you're just out there." Draper was returning to action for the first time since losing in round two of Wimbledon, having since battled injury. 'I LOVED IT' Addressing Pegula after the match, the British No1 said: "I enjoyed the competition. I loved it, playing alongside Jessica. I wasn't expecting probably to have as good of a time as I did. "Honestly, I thought we played great. Tonight was a tough match. They were on good form. But just overall a really positive experience. Loved playing with you. Hope to do it again." Swiatek and Ruud went on to face defending champions Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori in the final. Errani and Vavassori went into the showpiece fully pumped up, having been the only specialist doubles team admitted into the tournament. The Italians went on to triumph 6-3 5-7 10-6 - successfully defending their crown in front of a full house on Arthur Ashe Stadium. After the final, 38-year-old Errani pointedly said: "I think this one is also for all the doubles players that couldn't play this tournament. I think this one is also for them." While Vavassori added: "It was an amazing atmosphere, so I have to say thanks to the organisation, to [tournament director] Stacey [Allaster], to Eric [Butorac] also for giving us the opportunity to play. "I have to say that we showed today that doubles is a great product… "I think it was amazing to play on this court with so many people and I have to say thanks from the bottom of my heart for the atmosphere." 3

Jack Draper's mixed doubles US Open run over with semi-final defeat
Jack Draper's mixed doubles US Open run over with semi-final defeat

The National

time12 minutes ago

  • The National

Jack Draper's mixed doubles US Open run over with semi-final defeat

Draper and American Jessica Pegula went into the event, played for the first time in the week before the main tournament, as the top seeds and eased through to the last four on Tuesday, including beating Emma Raducanu and Carlos Alcaraz in the first round. In front of another packed crowd on Arthur Ashe Stadium on Wednesday, this time under the roof on a soggy New York evening, Draper and Pegula looked poised for victory when they led 8-4 in a deciding tie-break against Iga Swiatek and Casper Ruud, only to lose out 3-5 5-3 (10/8). Iga and Casper are headed to the finals! They win the last 6 points of the tiebreak to defeat Pegula/Draper!#USOpen — Tennis TV (@TennisTV) August 21, 2025 Draper admitted he and Pegula had barely spoken to each other prior to forming a last-minute team after his previous intended partners Zheng Qinwen and Paula Badosa, both withdrew through injury. He was also apparently unaware of the American's prowess in doubles, and she was the key player in the opening set, while Draper and Pegula seemed to have taken a stranglehold on the match when they also led by a break in the second set. But Swiatek and Ruud came back into the contest, with Draper's lack of doubles experience evident, and the Polish-Norwegian duo finished the match by winning six points in a row. The radical change to the event with the aim of attracting the big-name players usually missing from grand slam doubles has been successful but controversial. Jack Draper strikes a forehand (Yuki Iwamura/AP) Draper was playfully chided by Pegula after describing it as an 'exhibition' on Tuesday, but he had a different feeling in the semi-final. 'I think yesterday there was times where it felt a little bit more that way from our opponents,' said the British number one. 'Whereas tonight we were in the changing rooms, you're seeing Iga and Casper, they're fully dialled in. It was intense. We both wanted to win.' Pegula added: 'You can't go out there at 7pm on Ashe knowing you could play the final, and feel like you're just out there.' The fact that there's a full crowd tonight is a massive win, kudos to @usopen on the new format — Brad Gilbert (@bgtennisnation) August 21, 2025 The really serious business for Draper begins on Sunday, though, when the singles tournament starts, with the 23-year-old bidding to follow up last year's achievement of reaching a more meaningful US Open semi-final. Getting some competitive points under his belt on the big stage could yet prove important, however, given Draper has not played a singles match since Wimbledon because of an arm injury. 'I enjoyed the competition,' he said. 'I loved it, playing alongside Jessica. I wasn't expecting probably to have as good of a time as I did. 'Honestly, I thought we played great. Tonight was a tough match. They were on good form. But just overall a really positive experience. Loved playing with you. Hope to do it again.' Victory and the heavily increased prize money of one million dollars (£743,000) went to the only established doubles team given entry, defending champions Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori. The Italian pair have made no secret of their desire to show that doubles prowess counts for more than star billing in this format and they claimed a 6-3 5-7 (10/6) victory over Swiatek and Ruud in the final.

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