
Canada's Leylah Fernandez advances to second round of Nottingham Open
NOTTINGHAM – Canada's Leylah Fernandez advanced to the second round of the Lexus Nottingham Open grass-court tennis tournament with a 6-3, 4-6, 7-5 win over Suzan Lamens of the Netherlands on Monday.
Fernandez, the fifth seed from Laval, Que., had the edge on serve. She out-aced Lamens 3-2 and had just two double-faults, five fewer than her opponent.
Both players had trouble holding serve, however, as Fernandez was broken five times on 10 chances and Lamens was broken six times on 13 chances.
The 22-year-old Canadian ended a four-match losing streak and improved her record this season to 13-14 with her first grass-court victory since the opening round of Wimbledon last year.
Thursdays
Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter.
Fernandez will next face the winner of Tuesday's match between Ukrainian qualifier Yuliia Starodubtseva and Spanish lucky loser Cristina Bucsa at the WTA 250 event.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 16, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
2 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
U of M pool closing adds to training headaches for athletes, swim clubs
The University of Manitoba has permanently closed its pool and must replace it, creating a ripple effect that swimmers say will further limit the number of spaces to train. Joyce Fromson Pool was closed in April because of a leak. Repairs were attempted but were ultimately unsuccessful and the university has made the decision to replace the facility, U of M chief risk officer Raman Dhaliwal said. 'The last time we had a new pool was 60 years ago,' she said. 'Obviously, shutting it down was an inconvenience, but we'll provide regular updates about what the plan is for the pool.' The new pool is slated to open in spring 2026. Dhaliwal didn't say how much the project will cost, but said it'll only replace the existing pool, not any other infrastructure, including the change rooms. The university's swim team will still look for other pools to practice in, Dhaliwal said, but she didn't give details about which facilities. Former Canadian Olympian Kelsey Wog's dream to become an elite-level swimmer started at the pool, named for the director of sport in 2002, a year after her death. Wog started swimming there when she was seven years old. Now 26, she's since retired, after competing in Women's Breaststroke during the Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games, to focus on her master's degree at U of M. 'It wasn't a massive aquatic centre, and it wasn't really a place you would think a high-performance athlete would come out of,' Wog told the Free Press. 'I made it special and good for me.' Wog said she's glad the pool is being replaced because it's 'definitely needed,' but she said it'll make training difficult for the university's athletes who will have to leave campus to train at different pools while balancing classes. 'You need stability to be able to know your routine and put forth your best effort every day,' she said. The St. James Seals Swim Club was sharing its space with U of M's team since the April pool closure, said team vice-president Melissa Grenkow. But the more than 60-person team is now also without a pool after its home at St. James Civic Centre shut down Friday for year-long renovations. The team will now train at St. James Assiniboia Centennial Pool and Pan Am Pool, Grenkow said. Bonivital Pool, on Archibald Street, also closed for renovations in May and is expected to reopen in late summer or fall this year, according to the city's website. 'As more pools close and we have to fight for space, we won't be able to have as many kids, and they will miss out on the opportunity to learn to be part of such a great sport,' Grenkow said Monday. The scramble to find temporary spaces for their kids' swimming has left many parents frustrated, she said. Pan Am Pool is already the main training space for the Manitoba Marlins Swim Club and Manta Swim Club. With many teams swimming out of the same space, proper training can't happen because not everyone is at similar skill levels while practising and it can create frustrating traffic jams in the water, Grenkow said. She said it's an oversight for the city to close multiple pools at the same time, and it will eventually impact how competitive Manitoba will be for producing top-quality athletes. Weekday Mornings A quick glance at the news for the upcoming day. 'They (the city) would never close this many hockey arenas at the same time. That just wouldn't happen,' she said. Meanwhile the RM of Springfield is building its first indoor community pool with the help of $150,000 in funding from three Manitoba Co-ops — Red River, Beausejour and Pembina — as part of the chain's Community Spaces program. The facility in Dugald, 23 kilometres east of Winnipeg, is being built as part of a new assisted-living space in the town, and is expected to open in fall 2026. Wog said the U of M construction could provide an opportunity to increase the pool size in line with competition-ready facilities, such as Pan Am Pool. Olympic-sized pools are 50 metres long with 10 lanes, while U of M's is just 25 metres with six lanes. 'There's no room for growth,' she said. 'If we can do that, I think it'll open up a lot of opportunity for the pool in terms of competitions and inviting other clubs to compete and train. That would be really special.'


Winnipeg Free Press
2 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Canada's Beauchemin-Pinard wins silver medal at judo world championships
BUDAPEST – Canada's Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard took the silver medal in the under-63-kilogram weight class at the world judo championships Monday after losing the final bout in extra time. Japan's Haruka Kaju, unbeaten since her World Judo Tour debut last year, withstood Beauchemin-Pinard's ground game and scored a pin for ippon — or full point — in 'golden score' sudden death. It was the second world championship silver for Beauchemin-Pinard, who also finished runner-up in 2022. The 30-year-old from Montreal also won bronze in the weight class at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and gold at the 2022 Commonwealth Games and the 2019 and 2020 Pan American championships. Beauchemin-Pinard, who had a bye in the first round, beat South Africa's Jasmine Martin, Slovenia's Kaja Kajzer, Mongolia's Enkhriilen Lkhagvatogoo and Brazil's Rafaela Silva en route to the final. Three of her four wins came by ippon, but she couldn't continue her dominance against the Japanese rising star. 'It's still really fresh and I think it's going to take me a few more days to digest this defeat, because I felt I could have beaten (Kaju),' Beauchemin-Pinard said. Still, Beauchemin-Pinard said she was proud to reach the podium. 'I'm thrilled with my result,' she said. 'Obviously, immediately after the fight, I was disappointed because the gold medal was well within reach. I felt like I'd lost the gold rather than won silver, but as the day went on, I realized that I had put in a great day's fighting.' In other action, François Gauthier-Drapeau of Alma, Que., lost his first bout in the under-81 kg category to Zaur Dvalashvili of Georgia. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 16, 2025.


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
Canada's Leylah Fernandez advances to second round of Nottingham Open
Canada's Leylah Fernandez in action against Suzan Lamens on Day 1 of Lexus Nottingham Open in Nottingham, England, Monday, June 16, 2025. (Bradley Collyer/PA via AP) NOTTINGHAM — Canada's Leylah Fernandez advanced to the second round of the Lexus Nottingham Open grass-court tennis tournament with a 6-3, 4-6, 7-5 win over Suzan Lamens of the Netherlands on Monday. Fernandez, the fifth seed from Laval, Que., had the edge on serve. She out-aced Lamens 3-2 and had just two double-faults, five fewer than her opponent. Both players had trouble holding serve, however, as Fernandez was broken five times on 10 chances and Lamens was broken six times on 13 chances. The 22-year-old Canadian ended a four-match losing streak and improved her record this season to 13-14 with her first grass-court victory since the opening round of Wimbledon last year. Fernandez will next face the winner of Tuesday's match between Ukrainian qualifier Yuliia Starodubtseva and Spanish lucky loser Cristina Bucsa at the WTA 250 event. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 16, 2025.