
Iga Swiatek's serve deserts her in Italian Open upset against Danielle Collins
ROME — Iga Świątek's struggles continue, at one of the last places anyone in tennis would have expected. Świątek, a master of clay-court tennis and defending champion at the Italian Open, lost to American Danielle Collins in the second round, falling 6-1, 7-5.
Collins had beaten Świątek just once before in eight meetings, but on Saturday in the Campo Centrale of the Foro Italico, Collins looked like she'd had her opponents number for years.
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The head-to-head record aside, world No. 35 Collins represents the sort of player Świątek has been losing to all year, in places where she tends not to lose at all: big hitters capable of jumping on her increasingly vulnerable first serve, which deserted her entirely in the first set against the American. The pressure builds behind Świątek's first serve, then her second serve, and then the rest of her game, sending her back to old patterns of play that she is trying, she said in an interview with SportoweFakty ahead of this match, to eliminate from her tennis. Over-pressing on returns sends them long or into the net. Rally balls go awry.
Świątek had looked to be back to her old dominating ways during her first match in Rome against Elisabeth Cocciaretto, winning 6-1, 6-0. Collins, a former Australian Open finalist and the Miami champion last year, posed a different challenge.
It may not have helped that the two have a bit of a history. At the end of their last match, at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games last summer, Collins spoke to Świątek about her retiring with an abdominal injury in the third set.
Collins later said that she called Świątek's sympathy fake.
'I told Iga she didn't have to be insincere about, you know, my injury,' Collins said in a news conference afterwards.
'There's a lot that happens on camera, and there are a lot of people with a ton of charisma and come out and are one way on camera and another way in the locker room. And I just haven't had the best experience, and I don't really feel like anybody needs to be insincere. They can be the way that they are. I can accept that, and I don't need that fakeness.'
A stunned Świątek said she had little clue why Collins might have gotten that sense, given their limited interactions.
In Italy, things started badly for Świątek and stayed that way for a while. Collins broke her serve three times in the first five games and then once more to win the first set. Świątek landed just 39 percent of her first serves in that set.
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She steadied herself in the second, even saving a match point by hammering a backhand cross court winner serving at 4-5. But before that, she failed to capitalize on break point opportunities and service breaks themselves. She broke Collins in the opening game, but gave it right back.
Collins got to 6-5 up, before earning three more match points when Świątek sent a backhand wide. The world No. 2, who will drop to at least world No. 4 when the WTA rankings update at the end of the tournament, saved one more match point, but could not escape the second.
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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Luciano Spalletti's abrupt sacking leaves Italy with much reflecting to do
It was professional and dignified, absurd and unprecedented. Luciano Spalletti appeared for his pre-match press conference on Sunday afternoon. He sat down with the forlorn hope of at least taking a couple of questions on Italy's opponents Moldova and the line-up he had in mind for the game in Reggio Emilia. One did come — about the compatibility of strikers Mateo Retegui and Lorenzo Lucca, and whether Bologna winger Riccardo Orsolini has it in him to play false nine. But it was tokenistic. Spalletti knew the only line of inquiry regarded his future. Advertisement An hour before he was due in the auditorium at Italy's training base in Coverciano, a newsflash made it clear this would be a press conference like no other. Sky Italia's yellow ticker reported the breaking news of Spalletti's intention to resign after the Moldova game. It was true he was leaving. But it turned out reports of his inclination to quit were false. Spalletti had already been sacked by Gabriele Gravina, the president of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC). It was a bizarre scene. Why was Spalletti still in charge? Usually in these cases, a statement is released, an interim coach promoted and the floor handed to Gravina to explain the decision. But Gravina had already spoken in Parma at the Festival della Serie A that morning. He had eulogised Spalletti as 'extraordinary, a noble soul… the finest person I've ever met in football, a gentleman'. Not only for accepting the job in the first place but the way he took the news of being relieved of it. Spalletti's wish had been to continue after Friday's defeat by Norway in Oslo when Italy found themselves 3-0 down at half-time. The 66-year-old did not want to go out like that, and so an awkward compromise was reached whereby he would get to put Italy back on course in their World Cup qualifying campaign — something he achieved with a 2-0 win over Moldova on Tuesday — and then graciously break his contract without seeking a payout and return to his vineyard in the rolling Tuscan hills. Unless Juventus or Fiorentina decide to make him an offer in the coming weeks, Spalletti will finally get to have the sabbatical he left Napoli to go on in 2023. Spalletti was on his farm, La Rimessa, when Gravina picked up the phone and dialled his number that summer. He had just led Napoli to their first league title in 33 years and wanted more time with the family. But his country called, and Gravina would not take 'no' for an answer. He was desperate and rightly considered Spalletti the best man for the job. Advertisement Roberto Mancini had quit — supposedly after having second thoughts about the reshuffle of his staff imposed on him by the FIGC. Mancini was instead clearing the way to accept an offer from Saudi Arabia, a decision he now regrets. 'Mancio' did not leave Spalletti a great inheritance. He left Italy with little chance of catching England in their qualifying group for Euro 2024. They had lost to Gareth Southgate's side in Naples and Spalletti was immediately under pressure to beat Ukraine to the runners-up spot. An extreme generational transition was under way, too. Barely anyone from the team that had become European champions in 2021 remained. Giorgio Chiellini had retired after Italy failed to qualify for the World Cup in Qatar. Leonardo Bonucci was in his twilight and, after an acrimonious divorce from Juventus, ended his career at Union Berlin and Fenerbahce. Arsenal's signing of Declan Rice cut Jorginho's minutes. Marco Verratti, still only 32, was in Qatar. Lorenzo Insigne and Federico Bernardeschi moved to Toronto FC. Leonardo Spinazzola struggled to come back from the snapped Achilles he suffered nearly four years ago, while Ciro Immobile — the most prolific striker of his generation in Italy — later followed Bonucci to Turkey and joined Besiktas. Spalletti, in other words, had to figure a lot out in a short space of time. Drama was never far away. The police interrupted one of his first get-togethers after a paparazzo, Fabrizio Corona, blew the whistle on a betting scandal that led to long-term bans for Sandro Tonali and Nicolo Fagioli. Qualification for the 2024 Euros was not straightforward either. Ukraine, for instance, believed they deserved a penalty in the 93rd minute of a 0-0 draw, crying foul after Bryan Cristante took out Mykhailo Mudryk. The tension was unceasingly high. Italy's group at the Euros featured Spain and Croatia. 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He had only been in the job nine months and had got to work with the players just once in 2024 (the March international break) before the tournament started. Vindication seemed to follow quickly. Italy fell behind after 14 seconds in their first game back after the Euros. Bradley Barcola caught out his club team-mate Gianluigi Donnarumma, who was still wrapping up his gloves at the Parc des Princes. But Italy came back and won 3-1, winning in France for the first time in 70 years. The style with which they played that night also matched the initial expectations of what Spalletti might be able to achieve with the Azzurri. Tonali was back from suspension. Samuele Ricci made the midfield more cerebral. Andrea Cambiaso looked like the picture of a modern hybrid footballer. Strikers Retegui and Moise Kean were beginning to score. Not even the anterior cruciate ligament tears suffered by Gianluca Scamacca and Giorgio Scalvini could stop the blossoming of a new era. Two-nil up against Belgium, only a Lorenzo Pellegrini red card allowed their opponents back into the game to snatch a point. Had Pellegrini stayed on the field, Italy perhaps would have won their Nations League group instead of finishing second on goal difference to France, who beat them 3-1 in the return game at San Siro. It meant playing Germany, not Croatia, in the knockouts. Italy would take the lead in that game at San Siro but lost, and were 3-0 down at half-time in Dortmund, only to stage a heroic but ultimately futile comeback to make it 3-3 on the night. Overall, Spalletti's Italy reflected the worst febrility of his nature, and little of his genius. In the end, this is what disappointed him most. Advertisement A year ago, in the debrief after the Switzerland debacle, he acknowledged a leadership deficit in the post-Chiellini-Bonucci era. His hope was that players like Riccardo Calafiori would fill it. Spalletti wanted others to follow Tonali and Calafiori to the Premier League. Federico Chiesa swiftly did; however, he only started once for Liverpool in the Premier League. Heralded as Italy's next big thing after his goals against Austria and Spain at Euro 2020, Chiesa was overhyped and then badly injured. He has not lived up to expectations. Spalletti has instead had to build around a core of Inter players. One of the excuses he made for Italy's performance at the Euros last summer was that Inter won the league too early and had lost match rhythm going into the tournament. This week, the same players were, by contrast, exhausted after a 59-game season which ended without a treble or a trophy, and with the scars of a 5-0 defeat by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League final. That Friday's qualifier against Norway came only six days after Munich shows how relentless the football calendar is today. The Champions League has been expanded. The Nations League is bigger. 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Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Summer McIntosh breaks world record in 200m individual medley
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Boston Globe
4 hours ago
- Boston Globe
T.J. Oshie, US Olympic star in Sochi and Capitals Stanley Cup champion, announces he's retiring
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