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From Queen's Club court views to Fred Perry's former home, here are smashing homes for tennis fans

From Queen's Club court views to Fred Perry's former home, here are smashing homes for tennis fans

Why bother with tickets — or queues — for Queens when you can watch the tennis from your terrace? This two-bedroom apartment, listed for £700,000 with John D Wood & Co., overlooks the Queens Club grounds in West Kensington, which host the annual HSBC Championships. This year, it's running from 7 to 22 June, featuring some of the biggest names in the sport, including Carlos Alcaraz, Taylor Fritz, Jack Draper, Emma Raducanu and Naomi Osaka.

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Alcaraz, Sinner face big tests to set up dream French Open final
Alcaraz, Sinner face big tests to set up dream French Open final

Reuters

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  • Reuters

Alcaraz, Sinner face big tests to set up dream French Open final

PARIS, June 5 (Reuters) - The French Open men's singles semi-finals take centre stage at Roland Garros on Friday. Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz meets Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti in a rematch of their Monte Carlo final and Rome semi-final, both of which the Spaniard won to arrive in Paris with the perfect preparation. World number one Jannik Sinner plays 24-times Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic looking for a fourth straight win over the Serbian to edge their head-to-head record after a ninth meeting. If there were lingering questions about Alcaraz's ability to match Sinner's efficiency after a couple of unconvincing matches at Roland Garros, they were emphatically dismissed by the second seed when he crushed American Tommy Paul last time out. The four-times Grand Slam winner will head to Court Philippe Chatrier as the firm favourite on the back of five straight victories over Italian Musetti since losing a three-set thriller in the 2022 Hamburg final. "Carlos has always had the level, the problem is it's hard to produce it in every match," the Spaniard's coach Juan Carlos Ferrero said. "We know when he plays positively, bravely, when he plays without fear, he's a player with a potential that is still yet to be realised. "But you also have to see the other side of it: pressure, tension, fear, difficulties, opponents, a tournament you want to win more than others, the importance we all put on it ... all these things also come into play." Musetti, who won the Olympic bronze medal on the red dirt of Roland Garros, will be buoyed by making at least the semi-finals at the four biggest claycourt events this season. "It's going to be a beautiful battle," Alcaraz said. "We're both playing great tennis. Monte Carlo final, semi-finals in Rome, so it's going to be great for people to watch as well." Alcaraz could meet Sinner in a dream French Open final if the Italian top seed can navigate his semi-final against three-times Paris champion Djokovic, who is back playing at a level that won him an Olympic gold last year but went missing thereafter. Sinner has dominated the duo's recent meetings, winning four out of the last five, though he was beaten in straight sets in their only match on clay in Monte Carlo four years ago. Sinner, however, is now a ruthless machine who is rejuvenated since returning from his short doping ban and few would bet against the U.S. Open and Australian Open champion reaching another major final. "I wouldn't have thought to be here in this position since my comeback," Sinner said, after dismantling Alexander Bublik to reach the last four. "I'm happy to take things like they are and hopefully I'm ready. I want to watch my side of the net and then we'll see." Djokovic will hope to land one more punch for the old guard as the last active member of the "Big Four" of men's tennis and he has hit top gear at the right time after winning his 100th tour-level title in Geneva ahead of Roland Garros. He took another step towards a record 25th major by swatting aside Alexander Zverev and reminded fans about how he thrives on the grandest stage. "This is where I lock in and give my best," Djokovic said. "I just hope that I'll be able to physically keep up with Sinner. It's a big challenge for me. "It's only going to get tougher, but it's good. It's how it's supposed to be, at the highest level." FRENCH OPEN ORDER OF PLAY ON FRIDAY (prefix number denotes seeding) COURT PHILIPPE CHATRIER (not before 1230 GMT) 2-Carlos Alcaraz (Spain) v 8-Lorenzo Musetti (Italy) (Not before 1700 GMT) 1-Jannik Sinner (Italy) v 6-Novak Djokovic (Serbia)

LTA commits to introducing equal prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne by 2029
LTA commits to introducing equal prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne by 2029

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

LTA commits to introducing equal prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne by 2029

The Lawn Tennis Association has committed to paying equal prize money to female players at Queen's and Eastbourne by 2029. Women will play at Queen's Club next week for the first time in more than 50 years at the inaugural HSBC Championships, featuring the likes of Emma Raducanu, Katie Boulter and top-10 stars Madison Keys and Zheng Qinwen. The LTA announced on Thursday it would pay total prize money of 1.415million US dollars (approximately £1m), the highest for a WTA 500 event of its draw size this year. But that is still less than half of the prize pot that will be paid out to the male players the following week for the equivalent tournament on the ATP Tour. At the Lexus Eastbourne Open, a joint WTA and ATP event staged the week before Wimbledon beginning on June 23, the difference is even starker, with the women's prize fund of 389,000 US dollars (approximately £287,000) significantly inferior to the more than £630,000 that will be paid to the men. While prize money is equal at the grand slams and some joint tour events, generally remuneration on the WTA Tour is substantially lower than the ATP. The LTA stated an aim to achieve parity before 2029 but its rationale comes against a £4million loss made across the grass-court events it staged last year – Wimbledon is run by the All England Club – with the men's event at Queen's the only profitable tournament. Scott Lloyd, the governing body's chief executive, said: 'We are making significant increases this year to the women's prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne and want to achieve equal prize money as soon as possible. 'The LTA is committed to growing women's tennis, both at professional and grass-roots level, and this move is an important part of that commitment. 'This year fans will be able to enjoy both men's and women's tennis on the biggest stages that we can offer and we want to develop the tournaments so that the women's events deliver a path to profitability and greater visibility for the sport.' Ticket sales for the women's event at Queen's are currently around 80 per cent, with the men's tournament sold out, while 55 per cent of those purchasing WTA tickets have been female.

LTA promises equal prize money at Queen's by 2029
LTA promises equal prize money at Queen's by 2029

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

LTA promises equal prize money at Queen's by 2029

The LTA has pledged to introduce equal prize money at Queen's and Eastbourne by no later than total prize fund for the WTA event at Queen's Club - which begins on Monday - will be $1.415m (£1.043m), with the LTA voluntarily increasing the standard prize money by a that still comes nowhere near the amount the men will be paid for competing at the same venue the following prize money levels are set by the tours, and the ATP tournament will offer a total prize fund of 2.522m euros (£2.122m).Queen's Club is hosting a women's tournament for the first time since 1973, with Britons Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter set to compete. Both the men's and women's events are '500' category tournaments - the third-highest tier after the Grand Slams and Masters 1000 ATP event at Queen's has already sold out, while just over 80% of the tickets have so far been bought for the women's prices are lower in the WTA week, which will not yet be able to raise anything like the revenue of the long established men's spent on prize money cannot also be spent on developing grassroots tennis in the UK, and the LTA says the summer events lost a total of £4m last LTA's promise to introduce equal prize money by 2029 is four years before the deadline set by the WTA. While the WTA says major combined events should have equal prize money by 2027, standalone events - which the Queen's week technically is - have until is a combined '250' event, and will feature both men and women in the week before Wimbledon. The women's prize money is $389,000 (£286,650) - making it the highest-paying tournament of that size on the tour this year - while the men will share 756,875 euros (£637,000)."The LTA is committed to growing women's tennis, both at professional and grass-roots level and this move is an important part of that commitment," said LTA chief executive Scott Lloyd."This year fans will be able to enjoy both men's and women's tennis on the biggest stages that we can offer."We want to develop the tournaments so that the women's events deliver a path to profitability and greater visibility for the sport."

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