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Tennis star's incredible display of sportsmanship

Tennis star's incredible display of sportsmanship

News.com.au2 days ago

Carlos Alcaraz has conceded a point in his match against Ben Shelton after admitting to throwing his racquet.

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Joshua Jackson files emergency custody order against Jodie Turner-Smith
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Joshua Jackson files emergency custody order against Jodie Turner-Smith

Last month, the Dawson's Creek actor and Queen & Slim star finalised their divorce after splitting in October 2023 following four years of marriage. While the former couple agreed to maintain joint physical and legal custody of their five-year-old daughter Juno, Jackson recently filed legal documents in which he requested changes be made to the to a filing obtained by E! News on Monday, the 46-year-old alleged Turner-Smith enrolled Juno in a new school without his permission and outside of the agreed commute from his Los Angeles home.

Swiatek and Sabalenka set up French Open clash as Alcaraz in hunt for semis
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News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Swiatek and Sabalenka set up French Open clash as Alcaraz in hunt for semis

Three-time defending champion Iga Swiatek set up a blockbuster French Open semi-final clash with world number one Aryna Sabalenka on Tuesday, with men's holder Carlos Alcaraz also chasing a last-four berth. Swiatek, the fifth seed, got past 13th-seeded Ukrainian Elina Svitolina 6-1, 7-5 in Paris after top women's seed Sabalenka won a nervy quarter-final against Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen, 7-6 (7/3), 6-3. "(Aryna) has been having a great season so I'm not going to lie, it is going to be a tough match. But I'm happy for the challenge," said Swiatek after reeling off her 26th win in a row at the French Open. Both players have shared the number one ranking between them since April 2022. Sabalenka ended Swiatek's 11-month reign as world number one last October but the Pole leads 8-4 in their previous meetings. World number five Swiatek has been struggling for her best form and has not reached a final since winning the French Open title last year. But she gave Svitolina little opportunity on her favoured clay surface, breaking in the fourth game to ease through the first set. The pair exchanged consecutive breaks of serve early in the second set, before Swiatek forced the breakthrough at 5-5 with a powerful forehand down the line. She then sealed the win with back-to-back aces. Swiatek is aiming to become the first woman to win four straight Roland Garros crowns since Suzanne Lenglen 102 years ago. - Zheng streak over - Earlier, reigning US Open champion Sabalenka defied the windy conditions and Zheng to avenge her recent loss to the Chinese star in Rome. "The last tournament I was pretty exhausted," said Sabalenka. "Today I was more fresh I was ready to battle." Sabalenka once again got the upper hand on Zheng, who had been on a winning streak of 10 matches on the Paris clay after her run to Olympic gold last year. Zheng broke and led 4-2 in the first set. But numerous unforced errors -- 31 in total -- allowed the Belarusian to come back. The second set was also tight before Sabalenka broke back to lead 4-3, taking advantage of her opponent's errors. "I gave her the chance, so easy," said Zheng, who has lost seven times in eight meetings to Sabalenka, including in last year's Australian Open final. Madrid Open champion Sabalenka feels she is ready to go all the way in Paris, where her previous best performance was reaching the semi-finals two years ago. "It's high-level matches. I'm super excited to go out there and to fight and to do everything I need to get the win," said Sabalenka of her tie against Swiatek. - Alcaraz faces 'tough' challenge - Spaniard Alcaraz, the men's second seed, will go head to head with American Tommy Paul in Tuesday's night session on Court Philippe Chatrier. Alcaraz is through to the last eight for the fourth year running and aims to become the third man this century to defend his title, after Gustavo Kuerten and Rafael Nadal. The 22-year-old has dropped a set in each of the past three rounds but holds a 4-2 career record against Paul, the US 12th seed who Alcaraz beat in the quarter-finals of the Paris Olympics on the way to a silver medal last August. "I remember that every match that I've played against him he was really tough," said Alcaraz. "His level is really high right now. He has a lot of confidence." If Alcaraz gets past Paul he will meet the winner of Tuesday's other men's quarter-final between in-form Italian Lorenzo Musetti and Frances Tiafoe. Musetti has been one of the form players on clay this season, reaching at least the last four in all three of the principal warm-up events ahead of the French Open. Both Musetti and US 15th seed Tiafoe are appearing at this stage of Roland Garros for the first time. Tiafoe, twice a US Open semi-finalist, has yet to drop a set in Paris and is confident he can go even further. Both Paul and Tiafoe are the first US men's quarter-finalists at the event since Andre Agassi in 2003.

‘It's coming': Tom Homan ‘convinced' US will see major terror attack, blames lax Biden border policy
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News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘It's coming': Tom Homan ‘convinced' US will see major terror attack, blames lax Biden border policy

Donald Trump's Border Czar says he's 'convinced' that a '9/11 or worse' will soon strike the US as a result of former President Joe Biden's immigration and border policies. The bombshell from Trump's right-hand-man in immigration, Tom Homan, came during Fox News host Sean Hannity's most recent segment after Hannity openly pondered, 'What did we learn from 9/11?' and expressed concern about the possibility of a major terror attack. Hannity cited this week's antisemitic terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, where a man who was in the country illegally allegedly injured 12 people by using a makeshift flamethrower and molotov cocktails. The suspected firebomber, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, is a 45-year-old Egyptian national who entered the country on a tourist visa in 2022, sought asylum and later obtained a work permit from the Biden administration, according to the Trump administration. But the accused's work visa expired this past March, meaning he was no longer in the US legally. Hannity eventually asked, 'if we don't find these people soon, we're at risk of a 9/11 or worse?' referencing an opaque amount of undocumented migrants in the US. 'It's coming,' Homan said before pausing briefly. During the previous administration, around 2 million so-called 'gotaways' were not apprehended by border patrol agents, Homan argued. 'These 2 million known gotaways scares the hell out of me,' he said, claiming some of that disputed figure could be terrorists. 'I'm convinced something's coming unless we can find them.' Homan, who President Trump has assigned to oversee the implementation of his controversial mass deportation plan, theorised that millions of migrants were going to great lengths to avoid detection. 'Why did 2 million illegal aliens pay more to get away?' Homan told Hannity. 'They could have paid half of what they paid to cross the border, turn themselves into border patrol agents, get released that same day, get a free airline ticket to the city of their choice, get a free hotel room, get three meals a day, plus free medical care and work authorisation.' 'Two million people paid more to get away,' he argued. 'They didn't want to be vetted. They didn't want to be fingerprinted. Why?' 'This scares the hell out of me and I've been doing this for 40 years. It should have scared the hell out of every American what the Biden administration did.' Homan described the 'gotaways' as 'the biggest national security vulnerability this country's ever seen' and predicted US authorities may be searching for them 'for the next ten years.' Homan added, 'even through the legal process, the Biden administration was bringing people unvetted' and 'handing out work visas like they're candy.' Late last month, the US Supreme Court handed President Trump a major victory Friday in his immigration crackdown, giving his administration the green light to revoke the legal status of half a million migrants from four Caribbean and Latin American countries. The decision puts 532,000 people who came from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to the United States under a two-year humanitarian 'parole' program launched by former president Joe Biden at risk of deportation. And it marked the second time the highest US court has sided with Trump in his aggressive push to deliver on his election pledge to deport millions of non-citizens through a series of policy moves that have prompted a flurry of lawsuits. The administration's struggles with determining exactly who is and is not wanted in the US were made apparent late last week when the president assured Chinese international students in the country that they would be fine amid his crackdown on foreign students. Trump's administration this week said it would specifically target permissions for Chinese students in its latest broadside against US higher education. But when asked what message he would send to Chinese college students in the country, Trump insisted: 'They're going to be OK. It's going to work out fine.' 'We just want to check out the individual students we have. And that's true with all colleges,' he told reporters. The softer tone followed a judge's decision on Thursday to extend a temporary block on Trump's bid to prevent Harvard from enrolling international students. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio previously vowed on Wednesday to 'aggressively' revoke visas to students from China. Rubio has already yanked thousands of visas, largely over students' involvement in activism critical of Israel's offensive in Gaza, but also over minor traffic violations and other infractions.

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