logo
Emma Raducanu stalker prevented from buying Wimbledon tickets

Emma Raducanu stalker prevented from buying Wimbledon tickets

Time of India7 hours ago

Britain's Emma Raducanu reacts after losing to China's Zheng Qinwen in a women's singles quarterfinal match at the Queens Club grass court tennis championships in London, Friday, June 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Joanna Chan)
London:
The man accused of stalking tennis player Emma Raducanu tried to obtain tickets to Wimbledon but was blocked by the All England Club's security system, British media reported Tuesday.
The BBC and others reported that the man tried to apply for tickets through the public ballot for the Grand Slam tournament that starts June 30. His name had been red-flagged.
At the Dubai Championships in February, the man exhibited " fixated behavior " toward the 22-year-old Raducanu, who became distressed during a match when she noticed him in the crowd.
A day earlier, he had left her a letter and took her photograph, which unnerved the 2021 U.S.
Open champion.
After seeing the man in the stands, Raducanu took shelter behind the umpire's chair during her second-round match against Karolina Muchova. Raducanu later said she " couldn't see the ball through tears " and struggled to breathe before approaching the umpire.
The man was ejected from the tournament. He was later detained by Dubai police and signed a document pledging to "maintain distance" from Raducanu, who is ranked No. 36.
Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'My heart is so full': Tyrese Haliburton's girlfriend Jade Jones shares glimpse of placards put up by Indiana Pacers fans in her neighborhood
'My heart is so full': Tyrese Haliburton's girlfriend Jade Jones shares glimpse of placards put up by Indiana Pacers fans in her neighborhood

Time of India

time21 minutes ago

  • Time of India

'My heart is so full': Tyrese Haliburton's girlfriend Jade Jones shares glimpse of placards put up by Indiana Pacers fans in her neighborhood

Image credit: Jade Jones Tyrese Haliburton's girlfriend, Jade Jones, is undoubtedly his biggest cheerleader. The Indiana Pacers may have lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 5 of the NBA Finals, but Jones is making sure to do all she can to lift the spirits of the team, especially their star player, Haliburton. She has now shared a glimpse of all the placards she found in her neighborhood as Pacers fans cheer for Haliburton during the NBA Finals. Hopefully, that's enough to lift the spirits of the Pacers for the crucial Game 6. Jade Jones shares photos of placards put up by Indiana Pacers fans Taking to her Instagram Stories recently, Jade Jones shared a collage of all the photos she took of placards placed by Indiana Pacers fans in her area. She captioned the collage, 'I just went for a walk around our neighborhood and my heart is so full,' and added crying emojis along with emotional face and heart emojis. Expressing gratitude for the Indiana Pacers fans, she added, 'We love our community so much.' Image credit: Jade Jones The placards featured messages like 'Honk for Haliburton,' 'Go Pacers. #0 Tyrese Haliburton,' and 'Pacers in the Finals. Let's go.' Some others read: '#0 Go Pacers. What the Hellyburton,' 'Go Hali! Pacers in 5! Yes'Cers,' 'What the Hali,' and 'Yes Cers.' Jade Jones had confirmed herself as ''Cers biggest cheerleader' in one of her many posts on Instagram showing her support for her boyfriend and Indiana Pacers point guard, Tyrese Haliburton. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Memperdagangkan CFD Emas dengan salah satu spread terendah? IC Markets Mendaftar Tyrese Haliburton dealing with calf injury Tyrese Haliburton indeed needs all the best wishes and prayers, as he is currently dealing with a calf injury. The severity of the injury and whether he will be able to play in the crucial Game 6 of the NBA Finals is yet to be revealed. He had, however, managed to play despite the calf strain during Game 5, though he couldn't deliver his best performance. Despite his efforts through the injury, the Indiana Pacers lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder 120-109. Talking to the media, Haliburton hinted that he would play in Game 6 no matter what. He said, "It's the Finals. I've worked my whole life to be here and I want to be out there to compete, help my teammates any way I can. I was not great tonight by any means, but it's not really a thought of mine to not play here. If I can walk, then I want to play." Also Read: Jade Jones channels boyfriend Tyrese Haliburton in her custom NBA Finals fashion The Oklahoma City Thunder is currently leading the NBA Finals 3-2. Game 6 of the NBA Finals is scheduled for June 19. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

When women kill: Inside the minds of India's killer brides - love, rage and murder
When women kill: Inside the minds of India's killer brides - love, rage and murder

Time of India

time29 minutes ago

  • Time of India

When women kill: Inside the minds of India's killer brides - love, rage and murder

This is a representational AI image They were brides, girlfriends, influencers, wives — now, they are accused killers. Sonam. Muskan. Shivani. Ravina. Radhika. A string of young women from small-town India who, until recently, were navigating their own quiet corners of life. Today, they are front-page headlines and viral hashtags, painted in dual strokes — as women and as alleged husband-killers. Their names have become shorthand for both fascination and fury. They've forced a reckoning, one uncomfortable and controversial: what does it mean when a woman kills? These cases, each gruesome in its own way, have lit up national media and exploded across social platforms — often not with empathy or nuance, but with mockery, memes, and a healthy dose of misogyny. 'Sonam Bewafa Hai' memes made a grim comeback. Instagram reels made villains of wives and martyrs of husbands. But behind the noise is a deeper truth, experts say — a story of gender, power, suppression, and a society in denial. Breaking the mold — with blood Let's start with Sonam Raghuvanshi — now a household name. The Indore woman allegedly plotted her husband Raja's murder during their honeymoon in Meghalaya, in cahoots with her ex-boyfriend and three hired assassins. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Unlock The Benefits of Membrane Bioreactors with Solutions in Luxembourg (See The List) Membrane Bioreactor | Search Ads Undo Raja's body was discovered in a gorge. Before that came Muskan Rastogi of Meerut, who allegedly killed her husband with the help of her lover, hid the body in a cement-filled drum, and tried to disappear. Shivani from Bijnor faked a heart attack as her husband's cause of death, only for police to find ligature marks. YouTuber Ravina, too, allegedly conspired to kill her husband over his disapproval of her online persona. And Radhika, barely weeks into marriage, reportedly killed her husband in Sangli. All of them — except Ravina, who is 32 — are women in their 20s. Doubly deviant, doubly punished "Women aren't expected to do this. When they do, society doesn't just see a criminal — it sees a woman who's 'failed' at being a woman," says Professor G S Bajpai, vice chancellor at National Law University, Delhi. He references British criminologist Frances Heidensohn's 'double deviance' theory: a woman criminal not only breaks the law, but breaks gender norms. And that makes society recoil harder. "She is doubly deviant and hence must be doubly punished," Bajpai explains to PTI. Unlike men, who are often painted as impulsive or power-driven, women who kill are branded unnatural, even monstrous. They're dissected under a harsher spotlight — their outfits, lovers, social media habits, even smiles are scrutinised. Not just the act — but the reaction India recorded over 4.45 lakh crimes against women in 2022, according to the National Crime Records Bureau. But crimes by women? There's no standalone category, mainly because they're statistically rare. Yet rare doesn't mean irrelevant. 'Crimes committed by women make a disproportionate impact precisely because they upset our cultural expectations,' says Deepti Puranik, a criminal psychologist. 'We've taught women to suppress, sacrifice, and stay silent. But pressure creates cracks. Sometimes, it erupts.' She believes early marriage, emotional immaturity, lack of agency, and forced relationships can all brew a psychological storm. Activist Yogita Bhayana agrees: 'It became easier for Sonam to plan a murder than to admit she loved someone else. That says a lot more about our society than about her alone.' Are these crimes of power — or powerlessness? Here lies the paradox: are these women demonstrating a twisted form of empowerment — or are these acts born of deep disempowerment? For Bajpai, the answer is layered. 'Men often kill for power. Women's motivations are frequently rooted in victimisation, manipulation, or emotional trauma. When a caregiver turns killer, the world doesn't know how to compute it.' He adds, 'Let's not forget — intimate partner violence largely moves in the opposite direction. Husbands killing wives is far more common. But those cases don't dominate headlines in the same way.' Data backs him. Globally and in India, over half of all female homicides are committed by current or former partners. Criminal, yes — but still a woman The portrayal of these accused women has followed a familiar pattern: the "wife with a lover", the "influencer who went too far", the "manipulative seductress". It's not just lazy — it's dangerous. Kulpreet Yadav, co-author of Queens of Crime, points out that policing, criminology, and media coverage have always been male-focused. 'We don't truly understand how women with criminal intent think. And that gap leads to oversimplified narratives.' So, should justice be gender-neutral? Bajpai disagrees. 'A blind, one-size-fits-all approach will fail. Context matters. Gender, power dynamics, emotional and social triggers — all of it must be weighed to arrive at fair justice.' The women behind the headlines Beneath the lurid details, under the trending hashtags, there are still human stories — shaped by broken relationships, desperation, suppressed rage, or maybe something darker. No one is defending murder. But understanding it? That's a societal responsibility. These women didn't just defy the law. They defied expectations. And that's what makes their crimes not just shocking — but revelatory.

Who wins the GOAT debate in 2025? Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, John Cena or Lebron James
Who wins the GOAT debate in 2025? Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, John Cena or Lebron James

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Who wins the GOAT debate in 2025? Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, John Cena or Lebron James

Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi (via Getty Images) The "GOAT" debate is still very much alive in 2025, with Lionel Messi , Cristiano Ronaldo , LeBron James , and John Cena just a few of those putting forward their cases across different sports. Fans, critics, and spectators from all the different sports realms argue and engage in constant debate—who among these names is the Greatest Of All Time? Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo reign over football's GOAT debate in 2025 In football, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo remain unmatched as both keep breaking records and scooping awards. Lionel Messi, fresh from winning the Club World Cup with Inter Miami, has continued the trend with more silverware added to a trophy room that already boasts a FIFA World Cup, several Champions League titles, and Ballon d'Or awards. Cristiano Ronaldo continues rewriting the record books. He is still the men's football all-time leading scorer, a position no player has ever surpassed, according to Welch College. His recent performances in Saudi Arabia are proof of his sporting longevity and worldwide fame. LeBron James keeps testing basketball's GOAT title in Year 22 In the NBA , meanwhile, LeBron James is in his 22nd year and still playing at a superlative level. The star of the Los Angeles Lakers and his career durability and consistency keep him very much in the discussion with Michael Jordan. His ongoing domination, even in his 40s. Who is the World's No.1 Famous Sports Icon Right Now?😲#ytshorts #ronaldo #messi John Cena's wrestling legacy is solid, but his GOAT argument is contested A 16-time WWE Champion, John Cena's legacy is secure, especially with his work during the PG era and crossover success in Hollywood. But the "GOAT" of wrestling is a more difficult crown to crown. John Cena is invariably mentioned in the discussion, but there are also debates about names such as Ric Flair, The Undertaker, and Stone Cold Steve Austin, each with different individual eras of superiority and cultural impact. Final word: Who takes the GOAT crown? The names listed—Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, John Cena, and LeBron James—are all highly recognizable and successful figures, each achieving global fame in their respective fields. Also read: 'Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi...': Google CEO Sundar Pichai picks his favourite Though a lot of sports enthusiasts online would put Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi forward given their excellent contributions in football, this is not just a matter of one winner—it's a matter of enjoying once-in-a-lifetime greatness from various eras and sports. Therefore, the answer is that there isn't one GOAT in this debate. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store