
BBC Sport extends Queen's Club tennis broadcast deal until 2027
The deal will bring the event to audiences across TV, radio and digital services until 2027.
The 2025 edition of Queen's will feature women for the first time in over 50 years, with a WTA 500 event taking place in the week before the men take to the courts.
The London tournament is a traditional fixture in the grass-court season before Wimbledon.
British number one Katie Boulter and former US Open winner Emma Raducanu are set to compete in the women's event, while 2024 Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz will take part in the men's event.
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Daily Mail
17 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Emma Raducanu beams in sunny getaway as she enjoys impromptu holiday before teaming up with Carlos Alcaraz at the US Open
Emma Raducanu made the most of her downtime before heading to the US Open by relaxing and soaking up the sun on an impromptu holiday. The British No 1 took to social media to share a series of photos of her short trip to Martha's Vineyard, an island in Massachusetts and a popular tourist destination. Raducanu will not return to the court until the Cincinnati Open begins later this week and she was therefore able to jet out to the haven with a group of friends. She shared several holiday snaps of the trip on Instagram, accompanied by a lighthearted caption which read: 'Ted's on the vineyard - heard it here first. Spontaneous 36h New England summer fun time w [with] friends in MA.' Martha's Vineyard sits just south of Cape Cod in the Atlantic and is famed for its picturesque harbour towns, lighthouses, sandy beaches and farmland. However, there was no sign of Carlos Alcaraz, Raducanu's close friend and doubles partner at the US Open after they were confirmed as wild card entries. Currently ranked No 33 in the world, the Brit was last in action on August 2 when she lost out to world No 7 Amanda Anisimova in the third round in Montreal. Shortly after the defeat, it was confirmed that she had hired Rafael Nadal's former coach, Francisco Roig - the eighth trainer of her burgeoning career. Roig, 57, was in the box for all 22 of Nadal's Grand Slam titles and is highly regarded. Raducanu had worked with old friend Mark Petchey since the Miami Open and vastly improved under his guidance, but the fact he had to split his time between coaching and his broadcast commitments meant the partnership would never be long-term. Petchey himself admitted in July: 'We are very aware she needs a second coach to come on board and maybe just one coach, not me, as well.' Talks with Roig began during Wimbledon, and a trial took place shortly after. Obligations meant he was not available until this week, and he landed in Cincinnati on Monday to help Raducanu prepare for the final WTA 1000 event before the US Open. She will look to earn the wins needed to ensure she is seeded at Flushing Meadows. Then, the US Open will get underway in New York on August 25. Raducanu's highly anticipated doubles partnership is set to take place on August 19 and 20. Alcaraz revealed he had approached Raducanu about teaming up through their agents, and she said yes after taking 'time to think a little bit'. 'I'm super excited about it. I think it's going to be great. It was an amazing idea for the tournament,' Alcaraz said after his opening win at Queen's.


The Guardian
17 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Will Hearts' army of data nerds back up Tony Bloom's title talk?
Despite the Scottish Premiership title race being more predictable than Football Daily at a bottomless brunch, fitba has never been short of drama. Who can forget Ross County deleting their own website, Kirk Broadfoot suffering facial burns after microwaving an egg and former Hearts manager Robbie Neilson trying to give journalists the slip as he left the club's training ground by sending out a decoy (sports scientist John Hill) to the car park in a Robbie Neilson mask. Edinburgh, very much the second city in Scotland when it comes to football, still has one of the game's finest rivalries between two grand old clubs, Hearts and Hibernian. Each have had their moments in recent derbies: last year Hearts' Lawrence Shankland celebrated scoring a penalty by catching and eating a pie thrown by a Hibs supporter. In March, Jack Iredale scored a screamer to win the derby for Hibs. The post-match celebrations at Easter Road featured one of the finest ever renditions of Sunshine on Leith, a song sung with so much feeling that it left some Hibs players in tears. And who can blame them? If you get goosebumps watching that song, imagine what it must be like to come from that corner of Scotland, stand on that terrace and sing those lyrics in front of your victorious team. Magic. The point is, fitba is far greater than just Rangers and Celtic. And this is very much the opinion of Tony Bloom, the owner of Brighton who bought a 29% stake in Hearts this summer for £9.86m. Following the club's opening win over Aberdeen – a 2-0 victory that leaves the Jambos top of the Premiership table – Bloom was in a bullish mood as he faced the media, explaining that he thinks Hearts can challenge for glory. 'If we have not won the league title in the next 10 years, I will be very disappointed,' Bloom stated. 'I want to make sure that we are in the talk to win the title at the start of each season.' We have heard this sort of patter before, a new owner coming in and telling a club's supporters what they want to hear. The difference is, Bloom has a track record of using his army of data nerds and analytics gurus to drastically improve clubs with savvy recruitment. Brighton are now one of the best run clubs in England, while Union Saint-Gilloise, who were bottom of Belgium's second tier when the Englishman took over in 2018, won the Belgian top flight a few months ago for the first time in 90 years and are in Bigger Cup. The last time a club that wasn't called Celtic or Rangers won the Scottish Premiership was 1985 and the last time Hearts won it was 65 years ago, but Bloom seems untroubled. 'I understand there will be a lot of Celtic and Rangers fans, maybe Hibs and Aberdeen fans, who will be laughing and saying 'we've heard it all before',' he blathered. 'I just thought there was an opportunity here to shake things up in Scotland. I think we've got a very good chance of at least being second this season. I've just got a lot more confidence of what Hearts can do compared to when I did my first press conference at Union seven years ago.' Bloom has wasted no time in bringing in a new striker, Cláudio Braga, who (very much in the Brighton ilk) was signed from Norwegian second-division side FK Aalesunds for around £400,000. The Portuguese bagged four goals in five pre-season matches – including one in a 3-0 win over Premier League Sunderland – and already has a chant among the Tynecastle faithful: 'All we need is … Cláudio Braga,' set to the tune of the Queen classic. Sunshine on Leith it is not, but Hearts fans will be getting goosebumps regardless. A couple of friends had come over to see me, we were chatting, and suddenly they said they couldn't understand what I was saying. My speech was slurring. I had gone for a walk that morning and felt wobbly, just very lethargic. I was sapped of any energy and a couple of times I felt as though I might stumble but I didn't' – in an extract from a new book, the former Portsmouth, Leeds and Exeter defender Noel Blake talks about the emotional and physical battle of recovering from a stroke. Celta Vigo signing Athletic Bilbao youngster Luis Bilbao and signing Bryan Zaragoza are yet more disappointing nails in coffin of nominative determinism. Now, it's just me and a lad I knew at school called Gareth Thickett who failed all his exams that are keeping up the good fight …' – Noble Francis. I rarely agree with Dr Tottenham, but he's right … it will be greatly appreciated when he leaves' – Chris Brown. If you have any, please send letters to Today's winner of our letter o' the day is … Chris Brown, who lands some Football Weekly merch. Terms and conditions for our competitions are here. Our man David Squires veers away from football this week to tell the story of his boxing forebear who died on the Titanic. It's well worth your time. On Thursday 11 September, join Max Rushden, Barry Glendenning and a host of your other Football Weekly favourites live on stage for an evening of unfiltered football punditry at Troxy in London and livestreamed globally. Book now. Football stardom is a young person's game these days. As in: very young. The stars of the future have social media disgrace presences way before they can apply for a provisional driving licence – all part of the career plan. And these young ballers recognise ball, to use a phrase we're decades too old to carry off. Judging by Monday night's showing against Athletic Bilbao, Rio Ngumoha is a kid for Liverpool fans to get VERY excited about, capping it with a beautiful goal. He's only 16, and his performance was hailed by Max Dowman, Arsenal's heir apparent, still just 15 but of whom huge things are expected. Dowman described Ngumoha as 'the coldest' on InstaChat, using ye olde vernacular of time-served veteran Cole Palmer, 23. Gunners fans are hoping to see their future king in the first team soon, alongside such oldsters as Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri. Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey has appeared in court charged with six sexual offences. The 32-year-old was bailed to appear at the Old Bailey for trial later this year over allegations of rape and sexual assault, which he denies. Sheffield Wednesday captain Barry Bannan expects the crisis club to play their opening game of the Championship season against Leicester on Sunday. 'It's easier to pull out of a pre-season friendly game than it is a Championship fixture,' he sighed. 'We've come into training and just got on with it.' Manchester United and Newcastle United are involved in a tug of war for Leipzig's Benjamin Sesko, having both tabled bids worth more than £70m. And in other Old Trafford news, the 1958 fans' group will protest against the club's ownership in the opening game of the Premier League season against Arsenal by displaying a banner that could have done with a taste test. It reads: 'Jim Can't Fix This'. Rangers have completed the signing of Go Ahead Eagles winger Oliver Antman on a four-year deal. Celtic have completed the signing of Steven Kangtheconqueror on a four-year deal. Meanwhile, yogi guru Russell Martin insists his scathing assessment of Rangers' players after the draw at Motherwell came from a place of love, man. 'I think if they know us by now as a group of coaching staff, that it all comes from [that] place … really, and [we] care for them,' he ommed. 'They're good people, but the default is to try and protect yourself when it gets tough.' And expect some Hollywood-style long-range passing at Wrexham next season, after Kieffer Moore checked in on a three-year deal from Sheffield United for around £2m. 'I'm over the moon,' yelped the Wales striker. The latest edition of our sister email is here on the Big Cup winner, Marco Simone, and his grand ambitions for a new women's club in Monaco. Jonathan Wilson declares the utter pointlessness of deriving any conclusions from pre-season while, er, deriving some conclusions from pre-season. As Xabi Alonso enters his first Liga season as Real Madrid coach, Coralie Salle hears from those who worked with him when he was dishing out the cones as coach of Real Sociedad's B team. A local affair but an international one too, will take place when Malmö meet FC Copenhagen in Tuesday's all-Scandi Bigger Cup clash. Billy Munday bridges the great divide. Big Website's Premier League pre-season preview series continues with Bournemouth and Brentford, two clubs shorn of key personnel by the bigger boys. And come and get your latest transfer rumours, right here! 4 July 1995: Liverpool moving for the hottest striker in English football is a familiar story. Back in 1995, they got their man in Nottingham Forest's Stan Collymore, seen here with manager Roy Evans after a whopping £8.5m transfer. Stan the Man got off to a decent start with a cracking goal against Sheffield Wednesday on the opening day of the 1995-96 season, before forming a deadly partnership with Robbie Fowler, sharing 55 goals. It was a Collymore goal that decided the following April's all-time 4-3 classic with Newcastle but that Liverpool team never achieved its potential. Wearing white suits as losing FA Cup finalists and some tabloid-splashed big nights out led to their Spice Boys tag. Meanwhile, Collymore's form began drifting. The rapid rise of Michael Owen meant he was sold to Aston Villa, his boyhood idols, for £7m, Liverpool never quite enjoying the best of his huge potential.


BreakingNews.ie
17 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
I don't think about it – Liverpool's Florian Wirtz unfazed by £100m price tag
Liverpool's record signing Florian Wirtz insists his price tag is irrelevant to him and he is just focused on making the Premier League champions better ahead of their title defence. The Germany attacking midfielder arrived at Anfield for an initial £100million, with a further £16m of achievable add-ons making his move from Bayer Leverkusen a potentially British record-breaking one. Advertisement However, speaking after impressing in a 3-2 friendly win over Athletic Bilbao on Monday evening, the 22-year-old brushed off the figures involved. Wirtz insists his price tag does not affect him (Peter Byrne/PA) 'I don't think about it. I just want to play football and how much money the clubs pay between each other, it doesn't matter,' he said. 'Of course the big challenge is to win the title again and it is the most difficult thing so (I will) try and just create chances and also work against the ball. 'I can also run a lot so (I will) bring this to the team and then with the ball I can make the team better and bring my team-mates into better situations. Advertisement 'I came because I thought I could fit in this team and I am enjoying to play with these players and getting every time a little bit better so I am happy with how it is going.' Wirtz's game is based around carrying the ball with purpose and bringing team-mates into play with his close control and lots of touches in and around the penalty area. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Florian Wirtz (@flowirtz) However, he will also provide a goal threat – he scored 57 times in 197 appearances for Leverkusen – and almost broke the deadlock against Bilbao with a header which clipped the crossbar. He may find the Premier League is less forgiving than the Bundesliga but he is looking forward to finding out. Advertisement 'I am a player who needs freedom on the pitch and the manager gives it to me because I have to respect the position and the players around me,' he added. 'I will try to find the right places to be and the right spaces to get the ball and to be dangerous and create chances – I have not played a match in the Premier League but I am looking forward and that is why I came.' First appearances as Reds at Anfield for our summer arrivals ✊🔴 — Liverpool FC (@LFC) August 4, 2025 Sport Mohamed Salah scores as Liverpool unleash £270m ne... Read More Asked whether he thought playing in England was more difficult than Germany and whether he would be able to continue to play his own game, he replied: 'To be honest, I don't know. 'There are some differences to Germany but I think there is also something I can learn and make me better so I am really looking forward to it. Advertisement 'It's more intense and more physical, every player is really strong, really fast. That is what everybody is telling me.'