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Joint wins Wimbledon warm-up

Joint wins Wimbledon warm-up

Rising Aussie star Maya Joint defeated Alexandra Eala to won the Eastbourne Open, a crucial Wimbledon lead-up tournament.

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Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr live: Fight time and how to watch
Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr live: Fight time and how to watch

Herald Sun

timean hour ago

  • Herald Sun

Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr live: Fight time and how to watch

Jake Paul called out a who's who of world boxing as he sets his sights on a world title after scoring a dominant win over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. The 28-year-old singled out cruiserweight champions Gilberto 'Zurdo' Ramirez and Badou Jack, former heavyweight kingpin Anthony Joshua, reality TV star Tommy Fury and Gervonta Davis. Noticeably absent from that list was Aussie IBF cruiserweight world champion Jai Opetaia, who also has his eyes on Zurdo Ramirez. Jake Paul celebrates after his win against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Picture: AP Photo Paul was too big and too strong for the former middleweight world champion Chavez Jr, winning a lacklustre unanimous decision with scores of 99-91, 97-93 and 98-92. He then used his post-fight speech to line-up his next opponent. 'I want tougher fighters. I want to be world champion,' Paul said afterwards. 'Zurdo looked slow and shit tonight. 'That'd be easy work. 'Badou Jack, Anthony Joshua, Gervonta (Davis). Tommy (Fury) stop running. 'I'm just getting warmed up in this shit. I'm ready. I'll stay active and fight everybody. There's a long line. I've got time, I'll take on anyone, any time, any place.' Jake Paul and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. during their cruiserweight bout. Picture: AFP Ramirez defended his WBO and WBA cruiserweight titles in an ugly unanimous decision win over Yuniel Dorticos on Paul's undercard, and immediately called for a fight with Opetaia. 'That's the fight I want. I'm the king,' he said of Opetaia. 'Make sure you get my phone number and call me. 'No one calls me. I want it.' Opetaia was scheduled to be in the arena to confront Zurdo, but the face-to-face meeting didn't eventuate. Paul has called out Joshua several times in the past, and was in line for an exhibition bout with Gervonta 'Tank' Davis before the American's shock draw with Lamont Roach in March. Jake Paul punches Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. during their cruiserweight bout. Picture: AP Photo Meanwhile, Fury – younger brother of Tyson Fury and former Love Island star – is the only man to beat Paul, scoring a split decision win in 2023 that 'The Problem Child' wants to avenge. In the main event, Chavez Jr – the son of Mexican all-time great Julio Cesar Chavez – barely threw any punches in a frustrating opening three rounds. The bout finally came to life in round nine when Chavez Jr threw caution into the wing and began attacking properly. Paul was caught on the chin and held on in the final round, but Chavez Jr ran out of time. Known as the Problem Child, Paul was nearly drowned out in boos as he spoke in the ring afterwards. 'All the boos are awards and actions speak louder than words,' he said. 'I'm him. I just beat your boy's ass. 'Wait till I get going even more, mother****rs. He's a tough guy, he's never been stopped. 'He's a Mexican warrior. I respect Mexico, but I'm a warrior and I came out on top tonight. 'It was flawless. He just survived, I did great. 10 rounds against a former world champion who's never been stopped. 'He went the distance with Canelo and I embarrassed him.' It was Paul's first fight since his win over Mike Tyson in November, while Chavez Jr – the son of Mexican legend Julio Cesar Chavez – is a former world champion. Relive the action live in our blog below! Originally published as Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr live results: Fight time and how to watch

I'm good with Coco: Sabalenka buries Gauff fall-out
I'm good with Coco: Sabalenka buries Gauff fall-out

The Advertiser

time4 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

I'm good with Coco: Sabalenka buries Gauff fall-out

Wimbledon top seed Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the air with Coco Gauff after she raised eyebrows with her remarks in the aftermath of her French Open final loss to the American. An emotional Sabalenka described the match as the "worst tennis" she had played for many months and that her mistakes, rather than Gauff's excellence, had been the decisive factor. Sabalenka wrote to Gauff to apologise soon after, labelling her remarks "unprofessional" and the two rivals were seen chatting happily on the Wimbledon practice courts this week. "We've always been really good with Coco. Honestly, as I said in the statement and I messaged to her, I didn't really want to offend her," said Sabalenka, 27, who is aiming for her first Wimbledon title. "I was just completely, like, upset with myself, and emotions got over me. I just completely lost it. "Of course, she's got my respect. She knew it. She knows it. I'm happy that she was, like, 'yeah, it's all good, don't worry.' I was talking, we are good, we are friends. I hope the US media can be easy on me right now. "I did what I did. I get what I deserved, I believe. It was a tough time for me," she added, saying she has immersed herself in reading books to take her mind off her Paris heartache. Gauff won that error-strewn French final 6-7(5-7) 6-2 6-4 and is seeded No.2 at Wimbledon and the likelihood is that their compelling rivalry could continue in the final in a fortnight. Asked whether she would relish the chance to avenge the loss by beating Gauff in the Wimbledon final, Sabalenka sounded unsure. "I don't know, in this case maybe I don't want to see Coco if I make it to the finals. But if she's going to be there, I'm happy because I want to get the revenge!", said Sabalenka, who starts on Monday against Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine Gauff has an added reason to achieve Wimbledon success, the completion of a rare Channel Slam. The last woman to achieve the Channel Slam -- winning Wimbledon and the French Open in the same year -- was Serena Williams, who accomplished the feat in 2002 and 2015. The 21-year-old Gauff, who became the first American woman since Williams in 2015 to win on the Roland Garros clay, said: "I understand why it (a Channel Slam) hasn't been done that often. Except I guess Carlos (Alcaraz), he makes it look pretty easy. Novak (Djokovic), too. I didn't realise it was 10 years since Serena.I would love to do that." Meanwhile Jessica Pegula showed she could be a Wimbledon contender as she beat five-time major champion Iga Swiatek 6-4 7-5 in the final of the Bad Homburg Open. With agencies Wimbledon top seed Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the air with Coco Gauff after she raised eyebrows with her remarks in the aftermath of her French Open final loss to the American. An emotional Sabalenka described the match as the "worst tennis" she had played for many months and that her mistakes, rather than Gauff's excellence, had been the decisive factor. Sabalenka wrote to Gauff to apologise soon after, labelling her remarks "unprofessional" and the two rivals were seen chatting happily on the Wimbledon practice courts this week. "We've always been really good with Coco. Honestly, as I said in the statement and I messaged to her, I didn't really want to offend her," said Sabalenka, 27, who is aiming for her first Wimbledon title. "I was just completely, like, upset with myself, and emotions got over me. I just completely lost it. "Of course, she's got my respect. She knew it. She knows it. I'm happy that she was, like, 'yeah, it's all good, don't worry.' I was talking, we are good, we are friends. I hope the US media can be easy on me right now. "I did what I did. I get what I deserved, I believe. It was a tough time for me," she added, saying she has immersed herself in reading books to take her mind off her Paris heartache. Gauff won that error-strewn French final 6-7(5-7) 6-2 6-4 and is seeded No.2 at Wimbledon and the likelihood is that their compelling rivalry could continue in the final in a fortnight. Asked whether she would relish the chance to avenge the loss by beating Gauff in the Wimbledon final, Sabalenka sounded unsure. "I don't know, in this case maybe I don't want to see Coco if I make it to the finals. But if she's going to be there, I'm happy because I want to get the revenge!", said Sabalenka, who starts on Monday against Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine Gauff has an added reason to achieve Wimbledon success, the completion of a rare Channel Slam. The last woman to achieve the Channel Slam -- winning Wimbledon and the French Open in the same year -- was Serena Williams, who accomplished the feat in 2002 and 2015. The 21-year-old Gauff, who became the first American woman since Williams in 2015 to win on the Roland Garros clay, said: "I understand why it (a Channel Slam) hasn't been done that often. Except I guess Carlos (Alcaraz), he makes it look pretty easy. Novak (Djokovic), too. I didn't realise it was 10 years since Serena.I would love to do that." Meanwhile Jessica Pegula showed she could be a Wimbledon contender as she beat five-time major champion Iga Swiatek 6-4 7-5 in the final of the Bad Homburg Open. With agencies Wimbledon top seed Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the air with Coco Gauff after she raised eyebrows with her remarks in the aftermath of her French Open final loss to the American. An emotional Sabalenka described the match as the "worst tennis" she had played for many months and that her mistakes, rather than Gauff's excellence, had been the decisive factor. Sabalenka wrote to Gauff to apologise soon after, labelling her remarks "unprofessional" and the two rivals were seen chatting happily on the Wimbledon practice courts this week. "We've always been really good with Coco. Honestly, as I said in the statement and I messaged to her, I didn't really want to offend her," said Sabalenka, 27, who is aiming for her first Wimbledon title. "I was just completely, like, upset with myself, and emotions got over me. I just completely lost it. "Of course, she's got my respect. She knew it. She knows it. I'm happy that she was, like, 'yeah, it's all good, don't worry.' I was talking, we are good, we are friends. I hope the US media can be easy on me right now. "I did what I did. I get what I deserved, I believe. It was a tough time for me," she added, saying she has immersed herself in reading books to take her mind off her Paris heartache. Gauff won that error-strewn French final 6-7(5-7) 6-2 6-4 and is seeded No.2 at Wimbledon and the likelihood is that their compelling rivalry could continue in the final in a fortnight. Asked whether she would relish the chance to avenge the loss by beating Gauff in the Wimbledon final, Sabalenka sounded unsure. "I don't know, in this case maybe I don't want to see Coco if I make it to the finals. But if she's going to be there, I'm happy because I want to get the revenge!", said Sabalenka, who starts on Monday against Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine Gauff has an added reason to achieve Wimbledon success, the completion of a rare Channel Slam. The last woman to achieve the Channel Slam -- winning Wimbledon and the French Open in the same year -- was Serena Williams, who accomplished the feat in 2002 and 2015. The 21-year-old Gauff, who became the first American woman since Williams in 2015 to win on the Roland Garros clay, said: "I understand why it (a Channel Slam) hasn't been done that often. Except I guess Carlos (Alcaraz), he makes it look pretty easy. Novak (Djokovic), too. I didn't realise it was 10 years since Serena.I would love to do that." Meanwhile Jessica Pegula showed she could be a Wimbledon contender as she beat five-time major champion Iga Swiatek 6-4 7-5 in the final of the Bad Homburg Open. With agencies Wimbledon top seed Aryna Sabalenka says she has cleared the air with Coco Gauff after she raised eyebrows with her remarks in the aftermath of her French Open final loss to the American. An emotional Sabalenka described the match as the "worst tennis" she had played for many months and that her mistakes, rather than Gauff's excellence, had been the decisive factor. Sabalenka wrote to Gauff to apologise soon after, labelling her remarks "unprofessional" and the two rivals were seen chatting happily on the Wimbledon practice courts this week. "We've always been really good with Coco. Honestly, as I said in the statement and I messaged to her, I didn't really want to offend her," said Sabalenka, 27, who is aiming for her first Wimbledon title. "I was just completely, like, upset with myself, and emotions got over me. I just completely lost it. "Of course, she's got my respect. She knew it. She knows it. I'm happy that she was, like, 'yeah, it's all good, don't worry.' I was talking, we are good, we are friends. I hope the US media can be easy on me right now. "I did what I did. I get what I deserved, I believe. It was a tough time for me," she added, saying she has immersed herself in reading books to take her mind off her Paris heartache. Gauff won that error-strewn French final 6-7(5-7) 6-2 6-4 and is seeded No.2 at Wimbledon and the likelihood is that their compelling rivalry could continue in the final in a fortnight. Asked whether she would relish the chance to avenge the loss by beating Gauff in the Wimbledon final, Sabalenka sounded unsure. "I don't know, in this case maybe I don't want to see Coco if I make it to the finals. But if she's going to be there, I'm happy because I want to get the revenge!", said Sabalenka, who starts on Monday against Canadian qualifier Carson Branstine Gauff has an added reason to achieve Wimbledon success, the completion of a rare Channel Slam. The last woman to achieve the Channel Slam -- winning Wimbledon and the French Open in the same year -- was Serena Williams, who accomplished the feat in 2002 and 2015. The 21-year-old Gauff, who became the first American woman since Williams in 2015 to win on the Roland Garros clay, said: "I understand why it (a Channel Slam) hasn't been done that often. Except I guess Carlos (Alcaraz), he makes it look pretty easy. Novak (Djokovic), too. I didn't realise it was 10 years since Serena.I would love to do that." Meanwhile Jessica Pegula showed she could be a Wimbledon contender as she beat five-time major champion Iga Swiatek 6-4 7-5 in the final of the Bad Homburg Open. With agencies

Raising the bar: tennis super duo setting new standards
Raising the bar: tennis super duo setting new standards

The Advertiser

time4 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Raising the bar: tennis super duo setting new standards

As Wimbledon pub lunches go, it could have proved a particularly indigestible one for an already miserable Alex de Minaur as he dined while watching two of his rivals serving up a televised feast of tennis in the French Open final. Knocked out in the second round, Australia's big hope had come to England for a bit of r and r with fiancee Katie Boulter, wanting nothing to do with the sport for a while - and the sight of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner duelling in one of the greatest tennis matches looked designed to make him feel even more deflated. For didn't the sublime standard of the game they were producing make Australia's No.1 - and perhaps the rest of the best in the men's game - feel they were playing almost a different sport, such was the level the pair reached in their five-and-a-half hour classic finally edged by Alcaraz? On the contrary, reckoned 'Demon'. "By the time we got to dinner, it was on every single TV. And the whole fifth set was captivating from the very first point to the last -- and it was truly great to watch as a fan of the sport," he reflected. So, no sigh of resignation then? "No, I think those two are bringing out the best in each other, and are raising the bar constantly. So the way I was looking at it as a competitor and a fellow player, I saw that as the benchmark. "And it keeps on rising. So ultimately, from my side, I've got to keep on improving too, because, ultimately, what I truly want in this sport is to compete for the biggest tournaments, then I've got to get to that level, or as close as I can to that level. "And that means for me to keep on looking at myself in the mirror and improving in certain areas. And obviously it gives me drive, motivation and hunger." Whether the rest of the Wimbledon men's field feel the same way is unclear as the same dynamic duo of world No.1 Sinner and his nearest Spanish pursuer start Wimbledon as almost unbackable favourites this week, having won the last six slams between them. This increasing duopoly seems ominous even to the peerless Novak Djokovic, who conceded on Saturday that this edition could be his best chance of finally sealing that elusive record 25th grand slam at the age of 38. Seeking to become the oldest slam winner in the Open era, he told reporters: "My wish is to play for several more years, I would love to be healthy physically and also mentally motivated to keep on playing at the highest level. "That's the goal, but you never know at this stage. "I would probably agree that Wimbledon could be the best chance because of the results I have had, because of how I feel, how I play in Wimbledon. "But whether it could be my last dance, I'm not sure, as I'm not sure about Roland Garros or any other slam that I play next." So if Djokovic trips up in this last waltz, who else might be a contender to end the Sinner-Alcaraz grand slam feast? How about American Taylor Fritz, the fifth seed who quietly wrapped up another ATP title in Eastbourne on Saturday, his third at the traditional Wimbledon curtain raiser, by defeating Jenson Brooksby 7-5 6-1 in the final. "I'm going to be ready to go," beamed the 27-year-old, who has a quick turnaround before kicking off his campaign against Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in a battle of the big hitters on Monday. As Wimbledon pub lunches go, it could have proved a particularly indigestible one for an already miserable Alex de Minaur as he dined while watching two of his rivals serving up a televised feast of tennis in the French Open final. Knocked out in the second round, Australia's big hope had come to England for a bit of r and r with fiancee Katie Boulter, wanting nothing to do with the sport for a while - and the sight of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner duelling in one of the greatest tennis matches looked designed to make him feel even more deflated. For didn't the sublime standard of the game they were producing make Australia's No.1 - and perhaps the rest of the best in the men's game - feel they were playing almost a different sport, such was the level the pair reached in their five-and-a-half hour classic finally edged by Alcaraz? On the contrary, reckoned 'Demon'. "By the time we got to dinner, it was on every single TV. And the whole fifth set was captivating from the very first point to the last -- and it was truly great to watch as a fan of the sport," he reflected. So, no sigh of resignation then? "No, I think those two are bringing out the best in each other, and are raising the bar constantly. So the way I was looking at it as a competitor and a fellow player, I saw that as the benchmark. "And it keeps on rising. So ultimately, from my side, I've got to keep on improving too, because, ultimately, what I truly want in this sport is to compete for the biggest tournaments, then I've got to get to that level, or as close as I can to that level. "And that means for me to keep on looking at myself in the mirror and improving in certain areas. And obviously it gives me drive, motivation and hunger." Whether the rest of the Wimbledon men's field feel the same way is unclear as the same dynamic duo of world No.1 Sinner and his nearest Spanish pursuer start Wimbledon as almost unbackable favourites this week, having won the last six slams between them. This increasing duopoly seems ominous even to the peerless Novak Djokovic, who conceded on Saturday that this edition could be his best chance of finally sealing that elusive record 25th grand slam at the age of 38. Seeking to become the oldest slam winner in the Open era, he told reporters: "My wish is to play for several more years, I would love to be healthy physically and also mentally motivated to keep on playing at the highest level. "That's the goal, but you never know at this stage. "I would probably agree that Wimbledon could be the best chance because of the results I have had, because of how I feel, how I play in Wimbledon. "But whether it could be my last dance, I'm not sure, as I'm not sure about Roland Garros or any other slam that I play next." So if Djokovic trips up in this last waltz, who else might be a contender to end the Sinner-Alcaraz grand slam feast? How about American Taylor Fritz, the fifth seed who quietly wrapped up another ATP title in Eastbourne on Saturday, his third at the traditional Wimbledon curtain raiser, by defeating Jenson Brooksby 7-5 6-1 in the final. "I'm going to be ready to go," beamed the 27-year-old, who has a quick turnaround before kicking off his campaign against Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in a battle of the big hitters on Monday. As Wimbledon pub lunches go, it could have proved a particularly indigestible one for an already miserable Alex de Minaur as he dined while watching two of his rivals serving up a televised feast of tennis in the French Open final. Knocked out in the second round, Australia's big hope had come to England for a bit of r and r with fiancee Katie Boulter, wanting nothing to do with the sport for a while - and the sight of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner duelling in one of the greatest tennis matches looked designed to make him feel even more deflated. For didn't the sublime standard of the game they were producing make Australia's No.1 - and perhaps the rest of the best in the men's game - feel they were playing almost a different sport, such was the level the pair reached in their five-and-a-half hour classic finally edged by Alcaraz? On the contrary, reckoned 'Demon'. "By the time we got to dinner, it was on every single TV. And the whole fifth set was captivating from the very first point to the last -- and it was truly great to watch as a fan of the sport," he reflected. So, no sigh of resignation then? "No, I think those two are bringing out the best in each other, and are raising the bar constantly. So the way I was looking at it as a competitor and a fellow player, I saw that as the benchmark. "And it keeps on rising. So ultimately, from my side, I've got to keep on improving too, because, ultimately, what I truly want in this sport is to compete for the biggest tournaments, then I've got to get to that level, or as close as I can to that level. "And that means for me to keep on looking at myself in the mirror and improving in certain areas. And obviously it gives me drive, motivation and hunger." Whether the rest of the Wimbledon men's field feel the same way is unclear as the same dynamic duo of world No.1 Sinner and his nearest Spanish pursuer start Wimbledon as almost unbackable favourites this week, having won the last six slams between them. This increasing duopoly seems ominous even to the peerless Novak Djokovic, who conceded on Saturday that this edition could be his best chance of finally sealing that elusive record 25th grand slam at the age of 38. Seeking to become the oldest slam winner in the Open era, he told reporters: "My wish is to play for several more years, I would love to be healthy physically and also mentally motivated to keep on playing at the highest level. "That's the goal, but you never know at this stage. "I would probably agree that Wimbledon could be the best chance because of the results I have had, because of how I feel, how I play in Wimbledon. "But whether it could be my last dance, I'm not sure, as I'm not sure about Roland Garros or any other slam that I play next." So if Djokovic trips up in this last waltz, who else might be a contender to end the Sinner-Alcaraz grand slam feast? How about American Taylor Fritz, the fifth seed who quietly wrapped up another ATP title in Eastbourne on Saturday, his third at the traditional Wimbledon curtain raiser, by defeating Jenson Brooksby 7-5 6-1 in the final. "I'm going to be ready to go," beamed the 27-year-old, who has a quick turnaround before kicking off his campaign against Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in a battle of the big hitters on Monday. As Wimbledon pub lunches go, it could have proved a particularly indigestible one for an already miserable Alex de Minaur as he dined while watching two of his rivals serving up a televised feast of tennis in the French Open final. Knocked out in the second round, Australia's big hope had come to England for a bit of r and r with fiancee Katie Boulter, wanting nothing to do with the sport for a while - and the sight of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner duelling in one of the greatest tennis matches looked designed to make him feel even more deflated. For didn't the sublime standard of the game they were producing make Australia's No.1 - and perhaps the rest of the best in the men's game - feel they were playing almost a different sport, such was the level the pair reached in their five-and-a-half hour classic finally edged by Alcaraz? On the contrary, reckoned 'Demon'. "By the time we got to dinner, it was on every single TV. And the whole fifth set was captivating from the very first point to the last -- and it was truly great to watch as a fan of the sport," he reflected. So, no sigh of resignation then? "No, I think those two are bringing out the best in each other, and are raising the bar constantly. So the way I was looking at it as a competitor and a fellow player, I saw that as the benchmark. "And it keeps on rising. So ultimately, from my side, I've got to keep on improving too, because, ultimately, what I truly want in this sport is to compete for the biggest tournaments, then I've got to get to that level, or as close as I can to that level. "And that means for me to keep on looking at myself in the mirror and improving in certain areas. And obviously it gives me drive, motivation and hunger." Whether the rest of the Wimbledon men's field feel the same way is unclear as the same dynamic duo of world No.1 Sinner and his nearest Spanish pursuer start Wimbledon as almost unbackable favourites this week, having won the last six slams between them. This increasing duopoly seems ominous even to the peerless Novak Djokovic, who conceded on Saturday that this edition could be his best chance of finally sealing that elusive record 25th grand slam at the age of 38. Seeking to become the oldest slam winner in the Open era, he told reporters: "My wish is to play for several more years, I would love to be healthy physically and also mentally motivated to keep on playing at the highest level. "That's the goal, but you never know at this stage. "I would probably agree that Wimbledon could be the best chance because of the results I have had, because of how I feel, how I play in Wimbledon. "But whether it could be my last dance, I'm not sure, as I'm not sure about Roland Garros or any other slam that I play next." So if Djokovic trips up in this last waltz, who else might be a contender to end the Sinner-Alcaraz grand slam feast? How about American Taylor Fritz, the fifth seed who quietly wrapped up another ATP title in Eastbourne on Saturday, his third at the traditional Wimbledon curtain raiser, by defeating Jenson Brooksby 7-5 6-1 in the final. "I'm going to be ready to go," beamed the 27-year-old, who has a quick turnaround before kicking off his campaign against Frenchman Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard in a battle of the big hitters on Monday.

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