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Sabalenka ends Swiatek's reign on clay to set up French Open final against Gauff

Sabalenka ends Swiatek's reign on clay to set up French Open final against Gauff

Irish Times4 days ago

After successfully devoting the past few years of her life to becoming a more well-rounded player and mentally durable individual,
Aryna Sabalenka
arrived on court for her second
French Open
semi-final certain that she was finally ready for more. No challenge, not even the task of ending an era of total dominance at Roland Garros, felt beyond her.
In the face of her greatest rival on the court
Iga Swiatek
has made her own, Sabalenka converted her phenomenal form and fortitude into one of the most significant victories of her career as she held her nerve in three delicious, tension filled sets to topple the four-time French Open champion 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-0 and reach the final at Roland Garros for the first time in her career.
Saturday's final will be a tussle between the top two players after
Coco Gauff
, the No 2 seed, put an end to Lois Boisson's fairytale run to the semi-finals by ruthlessly dismantling the local wildcard 6-1, 6-2 to reach her second French Open final and third major final overall.
Having entered her first Grand Slam tournament with a wildcard and a modest ranking of 361st, Boisson has produced one of the surprising Grand Slam runs in history, defeating the world number three Jessica Pegula, and the world number six Mirra Andreeva en route to the last four. Gauff, who has been the most consistent player during the clay court season with finals in Madrid, Rome and now Roland Garros, proved a step too far.
READ MORE
Despite long being considered a player who thrives on all surfaces, Sabalenka's sixth career Grand Slam final marks the world number one's first final appearance away from her favoured hard courts. Swiatek's incredible 26-match winning streak at Roland Garros and her pursuit of an unprecedented fourth consecutive French Open title comes to an end.
'It was a big match, and it felt like a final, but I know that the job is not done yet, and I have to go out there on Saturday, and I have to fight and I have to bring my best tennis, and I have to work for that title,' said Sabalenka. 'I'm ready. I'm ready to go out, and I'm ready to fight. And I'm ready to do everything it's going to take to get the win.'
Coco Gauff in action against Lois Boisson in their French Open semi-final at Roland Garros. Photograph:Although Sabalenka and Swiatek have established an era-defining rivalry in women's tennis over the past few years, only one of their previous 12 meetings had occurred at a Grand Slam tournament. The significance of this heavyweight bout was told by the dramatic, emotionally exhausting battle that followed.
While Swiatek has spent this tournament trying hard to rediscover her best form after a difficult period, Sabalenka has looked perfectly at ease throughout. She has worked tirelessly on her game in recent years, evolving from a one-note shotmaker into a complex attacking player with variation and restraint. Her mental transformation has been even more essential, with the 27-year-old growing from an impulsive and over-emotional competitor to a player who remains composed under pressure.
The challenge of facing Swiatek on the Pole's favoured surface offered Sabalenka every reason to lose her composure. After taking apart Swiatek's pitiful serve early on, her own serve crumbled under pressure from Swiatek's returns in a turbulent first set, but Sabalenka kept her cool and closed out an excellent tiebreak.
Then, in the second set, the tide turned rapidly as Swiatek played her most assured stretch of attacking tennis. As she has done so often over the past 18 months, Sabalenka shrugged off her disappointment, she reasserted pressure on her great rival and she did not let up throughout a flawless final set.
'The way the third set went, it's actually shocking for me, to be honest,' said Sabalenka. 'I'm super happy that I found the rhythm on my serve, and it was much easier after I figured I'm in control of my serve, and also I put so much pressure on her serve.'
One day after the French crowd had first made its presence felt with an impromptu rendition of the national anthem before Boisson's stunning victory over Andreeva, this time they punctuated every shot of the warm-up with a cry of 'Olé!' Gauff's introduction to the crowd immediately generated scattered boos.
Unlike Pegula and Andreeva, however, Gauff maintained her composure and she blunted the French crowd with her own brilliance to reach another major final: 'I tried to block it all out,' Gauff said. 'When you guys were chanting her name, I was saying to myself my name.' – Guardian

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Tennis fans slam BBC live coverage of Queen's after Emma Raducanu snub ahead of Wimbledon
Tennis fans slam BBC live coverage of Queen's after Emma Raducanu snub ahead of Wimbledon

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Tennis fans slam BBC live coverage of Queen's after Emma Raducanu snub ahead of Wimbledon

TENNIS fans slammed the BBC for snubbing live coverage of Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter's doubles debut. The all-star British duo teamed up for the first time at Queen's in the opening grass-court event ahead of Wimbledon. Advertisement 3 Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter played their first competitive doubles match together Credit: Getty 3 The British pairing beat Fang-Hsien Wu and Xinyu Jiang 6-4 6-2 Credit: PA But despite the BBC holding the rights to the tournament and the euphoria around tennis after yesterday's epic French Open final, they opted against spotlighting two of GB's biggest names and instead only showed the singles action on the main show court - now called the Andy Murray Arena. While Sonay Kartal, Jodie Burrage and two-time Wimbledon champ Petra Kvitova were live on TV, that meant that And their match against Fang-Hsien Wu and Xinyu Jiang was not available for British tennis fans to watch on either the red button or iPlayer. BBC presenter Isa Guha said: "Unfortunately, we won't be able to show you this match because we're focused on Andy Murray Arena, but we will be bringing you updates throughout the course of the afternoon." Advertisement READ MORE ON TENNIS But wannabe viewers were not happy. One moaned: "Errrrr you've got two Brits linking up in the doubles - don't you think that might have been of an interest to the British viewers?" Another blasted: "You have the British women 1 and 2 playing together in doubles and you're not showing it? Make it make sense!! So frustrating!!" A third added: "You just showed a clip of Court 1 where Emma and Katie are starting their match; so why not show the match as a second option or one court on iPlayer and one on BBC Two? Very frustrating!" Advertisement Most read in Tennis CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS A fourth complained: "Literally just showed us a clip of it why can't we watch it?!!!!" A fifth fumed: "Absolutely ridiculous you're not showing Boulter/Raducanu in doubles." Katie Boulter destroys tennis star fiance Alex de Minaur in four words after newly-engaged couple lose in doubles And a final user typed: "Why isn't Court 1 on BBC iPlayer though? Can't watch Boultercanu?" Advertisement The match was Raducanu's second WTA doubles match of her career - and a first win. Quizzed if they would team up again at Wimbledon, the former US Open champion downplayed their ambitions. Advertisement "We thought about it in Madrid, Miami and Paris. 'Moving to the grass, which is a very different surface, it helps us get a feel of serving, returning and playing some points." Tennis stars' new careers PLENTY of tennis stars have stayed involved in the sport since retiring. But others pursued very different careers. Here are some of the best… I reached French Open and Wimbledon finals as a teenager but I I won Wimbledon mixed doubles with my sister but got fed up with English weather so I was tipped for stardom aged 12 but retrained to I earned £9m and won French Open before setting up I'm last Frenchman to win Roland Garros, now I'm singer with six albums hitting No1 in charts I'm former world No1 but quit aged 29 - instead I went on to play professional poker and golf I was destined for the top but swapped lobs for labs as award-winning Harvard physicist But partner Boulter interjected: 'Scrap what she said - we're going for the Wimbledon title! "No, just kidding… we haven't thought about that. Advertisement "We both return very well and have great volleys, so if one of us hits a good ball we can capitalise on that. "I'm very confident that Emma is going to put the ball away if I hit a good shot." World No37 Raducanu - who Boulter, three places higher than her partner in the WTA rankings, takes on Ajla Tomljanovic. Advertisement SunSport has contacted the BBC for comment on the snub, which comes after news that the 3 Raducanu had only played one WTA doubles match before Credit: Getty Wimbledon ditching line judges a double fault for British tennis By THE absence of line judges at Wimbledon will be a sad sight. For as long as I can remember, the men and women decked out in their Ralph Lauren outfits have been part of the furniture at the All England Club. Yes, they provided some mild entertainment on the court when one would call "fault" with plenty of extra, and unnecessary, gusto and volume that boomed around Centre Court, prompting a snigger from the fans. Then there was the ongoing game of dodgeball they had to play when a big serve nailed a mammoth ace down the line and they had to take rapid evasive action or take a whack to the top of the head. And challenges provided some audience participation, excitedly joining in the clapping countdown before the inevitable "oooh" when the graphic showed just how close the ball was to landing in or out. Purely objectively, Wimbledon's decision to replace line judges with Hawk-Eye Live makes total sense. The accuracy and consistency of calls in real-time will speed things up, save time and should mark the end of arguments over the tight incorrect calls - well, until the technology malfunctions. And Wimbledon's hand was somewhat forced to ditch tradition for their standing in tennis. The Australian Open and US Open already use electronic line calling and the ATP Tour is adopting Hawk-Eye Live across all of its tournaments from 2025. Wimbledon's refusal to comply would leave them lagging behind and exposed to the threat of needless controversy over human error. But the impact - as is so often the case in these decisions - has ramifications further down, below the surface with very little impact on Wimbledon's Championships or the players. It is on the line judges themselves. Approximately 300 officials - aged from 18 to 80 - covered more than 650 matches at Wimbledon. A fraction travel internationally with the circuit but the vast majority of those are part-time line judges based in the UK, earning up to £180 per day to work at the prestigious tournament and their chance to play their part at Wimbledon. For many, they will help out at British tournaments throughout the year, spurred on by the possibility of taking to the lawns of the All England Club. But it is understood many of those officials would be reluctant to work at the lower-level tournaments without the carrot of Wimbledon dangling in the summer. That in turn will put a major stumbling block in the pathway for British tennis umpires, who grind up through the ranks to reach the pinnacle of the sport. Like football with referees, tennis needs umpires and line judges. So the inability to call "out" at Wimbledon could prove to be a major "fault" for the future of the UK's tennis officials and therefore the state of the sport on these shores.

Alcaraz's ridiculous victory over Sinner sets tone for next decade of rivalry at top of tennis
Alcaraz's ridiculous victory over Sinner sets tone for next decade of rivalry at top of tennis

Irish Times

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Alcaraz's ridiculous victory over Sinner sets tone for next decade of rivalry at top of tennis

Five hours into the madness, when their legs should have been fading and sanity departing, the miraculous French Open final between Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner ascended to even greater heights. So much had already happened. For a long time, Alcaraz had been dominated with the same ruthless efficiency Sinner reserved for the rest of the field and he soon stared into the abyss, trailing triple championship point at 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth set. That moment would instead mark the beginning of Alcaraz's unprecedented, preposterous comeback as he completely turned the match around. He soon closed in on victory, leading by a break in the fifth set against a weary opponent. With his back to the wall, time running out, Sinner produced a transcendent return game as Alcaraz served for the title at 5-4 to draw level again. In their delirium, desperation meeting sheer ambition, the moment elicited the best of both players. Having invested so much time and effort into their pursuit of this title, they simply had no choice but to abjure all thoughts from their minds and swing as freely as possible. The frenzied final games of the 2025 French Open final will go down as one of the greatest stretches of play in the history of Grand Slam championship matches. In the end, the suffocating pressure imposed by Sinner inspired Alcaraz to elevate his own level to wondrous heights. Despite how rapidly he has built an all-time great career, Alcaraz has had his own struggles on the court. His game is so complete and he has so many more options at his disposal than any adversary, but this can also play tricks on his mind. READ MORE At its worst, he plays disordered and chaotic tennis. He goes for overzealous, low percentage shots and his impulsiveness takes over. Occasionally, he hits himself off the court. Just as he can bulldoze any opponent on any day, he is also capable of taking a straight sets loss to Botic van de Zandschulp in the second round of the US Open, as he did last year. In tennis, however, success means rising up in the most important moments. Beyond Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal, nobody thrives under those circumstances like Alcaraz. His ability to find order after his game was in total disarray seconds earlier is remarkable. Alcaraz knows his quality and he believes his potential is boundless. He tackles those tough moments with the full belief that he can always find a path to victory regardless of the obstacle before him. Down triple championship point Alcaraz was still reassuring his coach, Juan Carlos Ferrero: 'He was love-40 in the fourth, 5-3, and he looks at me and still make me like this [shaking] the racket, saying: 'I'm still here,' said Ferrero. Carlos Alcaraz poses for a photo with the ball kids after his win over Jannik Sinner at the French Open. Photograph:Even though still at the start of his career, Alcaraz is starting to have a record for winning tight matches than few other players in the game's history can rival. He trailed Alexander Zverev by two sets to one before turning the match around in last year's final. He improbably found a path to victory in his breathless 2023 Wimbledon win against Djokovic. This comeback victory over Sinner had been preceded by another win from match point down in their 2022 US Open quarter-final before Alcaraz won the title. He is now the second player in history, after Djokovic, to win multiple major titles from match point down and he is a perfect 5-0 in major finals. He is only 22. By defending his French Open title, Alcaraz is the third youngest men's player to win five Grand Slam titles. It has been obvious for years that Alcaraz has set himself on a path to becoming one of the greats but only time will determine if he has the longevity to come at all close to the generation that preceded him. As Alcaraz and Sinner pushed each other to the limits of their powers, the spectacle on Sunday night underlined the important role they will each play in their rival's career. This was the first Grand Slam final between Alcaraz, a five-time champion, and Sinner, a three-time champion, who have now equally split the last six major titles between them. There has been so much hype around this rivalry for years and both players felt the significance of the match-up. Still, after decades of dominance by Nadal, Djokovic and Roger Federer, and the many classics they played between them, the standard they set for greatness is so tough to reach. It was reasonable to accept that the new generation might not be able to immediately live up to those high standards. Instead, in a tournament that began with Nadal's elaborate farewell ceremony and saw an emotional Djokovic admit he is unsure about whether he will return to Paris next year, Alcaraz and Sinner used the occasion to play one of the greatest Grand Slam finals of all time, affirming their status as leaders in this new era of men's tennis to the world and setting the tone for what could be a decade at the top of the sport. These matches will make them better, the minuscule margins between them inspiring them to constantly improve and work on their games. Even as they tussle across borders and surfaces, their combined greatness will also help them to stay more than a step ahead of the rest. – Guardian

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