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Taylor Fritz overcomes medical timeout to reach Wimbledon semis

Taylor Fritz overcomes medical timeout to reach Wimbledon semis

The American will face either back-to-back champion Carlos Alcaraz or Britain's Cameron Norrie for a place in Sunday's final.
'I'm feeling great to get through it,' Fritz said in his on-court interview.
'The match was going so well for me for two sets. I've never had a match really just flip so quickly, so I'm really happy with how I came back in the fourth set and got it done.
'I felt I couldn't miss and then all of sudden I'm making a ton of mistakes.
'Momentum was definitely not going to be on my side going into a fifth.'
In another embarrassing episode for tournament organisers, Wimbledon's faltering electronic line calling system suffered a further malfunction during the quarter-final.
Karen Khachanov threatened to force a fifth set (John Walton/PA)
'Fault' was incorrectly called by the technology in the opening game of the fourth set when a Fritz backhand landed well inside the baseline.
With the system still tracking the initial serve, chair umpire Louise Azemar-Engzell ordered the point be replayed.
Khachanov had won the previous two meetings between the pair but those victories came three months apart more than five years ago when he was the higher-ranked player.
Fritz has been a US Open finalist since then and demonstrated his prowess on grass with three Eastbourne titles.
A break of serve in game two paved the way for the Californian to cruise to the opening set in 33 minutes.
"I'm really happy with how I've turned my career around."
After losing in the #Wimbledon QF twice, Taylor Fritz is now in his first semi-final at SW19 👏 pic.twitter.com/x5OZbeNrGu
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 8, 2025
Khachanov barely had sniff on his opponent's serve and, after surviving four break points earlier in the set, he crucially failed to hold in game nine as Fritz won 12 points in a row to move 2-0 in front.
With the finish line coming into view, Fritz began to waver.
Underdog Khachanov finally broke in game two of set three and then sparked hope of a fightback by promptly repeating the feat en route to emphatically halving his deficit.
Fritz underwent treatment on his right foot ahead of the fourth set, which began in farcical fashion due to the inaccurate line call.
A decider then looked on the cards when Khachanov broke immediately as his rival continued to make mistakes.
Taylor's Triumphant 😤
Fritz wins in four and awaits the winner of Alcaraz and Norrie in the SF 👀#Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/W1Sunqie0E
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 8, 2025
But Fritz regained his poise to hit back in game four before holding his nerve in the tie-break, which he secured with a smash, leading to a roar of delight, mixed with relief.
'Having played the quarter-finals here twice and lost in five (sets) twice, I don't think I could've taken another one,' he said.
The 27-year-old also allayed fears about the severity of his foot issue.
'It's totally fine, it's pretty common, a lot of players do this tape job so your foot doesn't get irritated,' he said.
'I think I ripped it off at some point in the second so I just needed to get it re-done.'
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Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse
Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse

The National

time33 minutes ago

  • The National

Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse

Last summer, Scotland's champions came under pressure to smash the piggy bank with a hammer. Criticised for a lack of signings in the January window, chairman Peter Lawwell acknowledged the 'inherent inefficiencies' of hoarding £67.3million in savings. It made more sense to spend the money on players than it did to hand a chunk over to HMRC in corporation tax. To that end the Parkhead board started throwing money at players. They broke their transfer record once to sign Adam Idah from Norwich for a fee close to £9m. They repeated the trick when they took an £11m punt on Belgian midfielder Arne Engels. By the time they'd added American defender Auston Trusty for £5.5m, Brendan Rodgers looked like a man who'd rolled the dice and won a fiscal power struggle with the people who think the club should stick to buying cheap, selling big and stockpiling punts like Gustaf Lagerbielke and Yang Hyun-jun in the hope of peeling away the wrapper one day and finding a Matt O'Riley underneath. How different it all looks now. Despite a respectable tally of 21 goals, Idah is no one's idea of a first-choice starting striker. Given a full pre-season Engels may yet deliver a decent return on the sizeable investment in his services, but has still to scale the heights. If an English club offered Celtic their money back on Trusty, you suspect they'd snap their hand off. If Dermot Desmond has made up his mind that Celtic are simply no good at spending large sums of money then the solution shouldn't be a return to the days of raking around the bargain bin for players of £3million or less. In a market turbo-charged by middle eastern oil money that doesn't buy you much, and it makes more sense to fine-tune the recruitment process until they master the art of spending their Champions League windfalls wisely. It's not as if they're running out of cash. Celtic could feasibly became the first Scottish club to store up bank reserves of £100m in the near future. And, while UEFA's financial sustainability rules will limit spending on player wages, transfer fees and agent fees to 70 per cent of a club's revenue, the champions are in no danger of landing an expensive slap on the wrists from Europe's governing body. They're too cautious for that. Read more from Stephen McGowan: Infantino's latest vanity project is ridiculous – enough is enough Is Dermot Desmond absentee landlord or Celtic mastermind? The spending hasn't dried up completely. They've completed a £20m upgrade of their Barrowfield training centre. The wages committed to Kieran Tierney's return, meanwhile, represent a significant financial commitment for a team in the Scottish Premiership. Throw in the signings of Swedish attacker Benjamin Nygren, Fulham prospect Calum Osman, back-up keeper Ross Doohan and Japanese defender Hoyata Inamura, and they've gone earlier than usual. Rodgers claims there is still plenty going on in the background and perceptions of a window can change quickly. By the end of August they could add another three or four marquee signings and supporters could be cock-a-hoop over with the business done. Given the lack of trust fans have in the board, few are getting their hopes up. Over the years Celtic's fear of missing out on Champions League money has fostered a level of caution which makes that very scenario more likely. Hoarding millions in the bank further risks nudging Rodgers towards the door next summer. The current window is likely to have a bearing on his decision and they're hardly going the extra mile to keep him. Financially secure, he doesn't need the job or the pressure. Family factors and the familiarity of six years in Glasgow will be other considerations and, while he deliberates, Celtic might be reluctant to hand millions and millions of pounds to a manager yet to commit. Ironically, that reluctance to give him the backing he needs to sign the players that he wants makes it more likely that he'll leave. He did it once before. And the longer this situation rumbles on, the more Rodgers' words, soundbites and body language will be studied with forensic intensity for evidence of a clue to his innermost thoughts. When Inamura, a 23-year-old defender from Japan, pitched up before the pre-season friendly against Queen's Park, the manager gave the impression that his input into the signing had been limited. Asked if Inamura would be ready to go straight into the first team Rodgers replied: 'No, he won't be. He's a part of the investment of the club.' While he softened his comments after a promising debut for the Japanese defender against Cork City, the episode felt like a flashback to Marian Shved the Ukrainian winger who came, saw, and left after three appearances. While Tierney and Nygren should improve the team which finished the Scottish Cup final defeat to Aberdeen with Jonny Kenny up front, Greg Taylor in midfield and Yang shanking cross after cross off the pitch, it's hard to say for certain that the starting XI is significantly better. Online, fans are already bickering over the area where the need to strengthen is most great. Some say attack, some say defence. Despite winning a double last season, there's a case for saying they're both right. Two wingers, a central defender, a contingency for the potential departure of Reo Hatate and a proper goal scorer is baked in. Depending on how Inamura shapes up, they could still bring in another left-back with reports in Belgium linking Flavio Nazinho of Cercle Brugge. Do all that for less than the £17m they've raked in for Kuhn and fiscal caution will start to look like a high-risk gamble. In the summer of 2014, Celtic lost a Champions League qualifier to Maribor of Slovenia and 200 angry supporters gathered in the car park. Frustrated by a perceived lack of spending on players, Lawwell was forced to address the frustration by making a commitment. In a question-and-answer session, the current chairman pledged that every penny Celtic earned would be reinvested. 'In terms of investment our policy, our commitment, is that every penny that comes into the club will be reinvested, it will go back into the club,' said the then CEO. 'I do not think we can be clearer than that. There is no pile of cash sitting there that we can look at, watch, feel and touch. It doesn't exist.' Fast-forward 11 years and Celtic's rainy day fund could insulate them from the impact of a tsunami. While cash in the bank dropped to £65.4m at December 31 last year, they've since raked in tens of millions from the Champions League. They've sold their top striker Kyogo Furuhashi to Rennes for £10m, Kuhn to Como, and cashed in a hefty £5m sell-on clause from Jeremie Frimpong's move to Liverpool. That's a lot of money to reinvest in the club. If keeping the manager is the name of the game, they really should get cracking.

Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse
Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse

The Herald Scotland

time38 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Celtic are spending like a club in the throes of buyer's remorse

Criticised for a lack of signings in the January window, chairman Peter Lawwell acknowledged the 'inherent inefficiencies' of hoarding £67.3million in savings. It made more sense to spend the money on players than it did to hand a chunk over to HMRC in corporation tax. To that end the Parkhead board started throwing money at players. They broke their transfer record once to sign Adam Idah from Norwich for a fee close to £9m. They repeated the trick when they took an £11m punt on Belgian midfielder Arne Engels. By the time they'd added American defender Auston Trusty for £5.5m, Brendan Rodgers looked like a man who'd rolled the dice and won a fiscal power struggle with the people who think the club should stick to buying cheap, selling big and stockpiling punts like Gustaf Lagerbielke and Yang Hyun-jun in the hope of peeling away the wrapper one day and finding a Matt O'Riley underneath. How different it all looks now. Despite a respectable tally of 21 goals, Idah is no one's idea of a first-choice starting striker. Given a full pre-season Engels may yet deliver a decent return on the sizeable investment in his services, but has still to scale the heights. If an English club offered Celtic their money back on Trusty, you suspect they'd snap their hand off. If Dermot Desmond has made up his mind that Celtic are simply no good at spending large sums of money then the solution shouldn't be a return to the days of raking around the bargain bin for players of £3million or less. In a market turbo-charged by middle eastern oil money that doesn't buy you much, and it makes more sense to fine-tune the recruitment process until they master the art of spending their Champions League windfalls wisely. It's not as if they're running out of cash. Celtic could feasibly became the first Scottish club to store up bank reserves of £100m in the near future. And, while UEFA's financial sustainability rules will limit spending on player wages, transfer fees and agent fees to 70 per cent of a club's revenue, the champions are in no danger of landing an expensive slap on the wrists from Europe's governing body. They're too cautious for that. Read more from Stephen McGowan: Infantino's latest vanity project is ridiculous – enough is enough Is Dermot Desmond absentee landlord or Celtic mastermind? The spending hasn't dried up completely. They've completed a £20m upgrade of their Barrowfield training centre. The wages committed to Kieran Tierney's return, meanwhile, represent a significant financial commitment for a team in the Scottish Premiership. Throw in the signings of Swedish attacker Benjamin Nygren, Fulham prospect Calum Osman, back-up keeper Ross Doohan and Japanese defender Hoyata Inamura, and they've gone earlier than usual. Rodgers claims there is still plenty going on in the background and perceptions of a window can change quickly. By the end of August they could add another three or four marquee signings and supporters could be cock-a-hoop over with the business done. Given the lack of trust fans have in the board, few are getting their hopes up. Over the years Celtic's fear of missing out on Champions League money has fostered a level of caution which makes that very scenario more likely. Hoarding millions in the bank further risks nudging Rodgers towards the door next summer. The current window is likely to have a bearing on his decision and they're hardly going the extra mile to keep him. Financially secure, he doesn't need the job or the pressure. Family factors and the familiarity of six years in Glasgow will be other considerations and, while he deliberates, Celtic might be reluctant to hand millions and millions of pounds to a manager yet to commit. Ironically, that reluctance to give him the backing he needs to sign the players that he wants makes it more likely that he'll leave. He did it once before. And the longer this situation rumbles on, the more Rodgers' words, soundbites and body language will be studied with forensic intensity for evidence of a clue to his innermost thoughts. When Inamura, a 23-year-old defender from Japan, pitched up before the pre-season friendly against Queen's Park, the manager gave the impression that his input into the signing had been limited. Asked if Inamura would be ready to go straight into the first team Rodgers replied: 'No, he won't be. He's a part of the investment of the club.' While he softened his comments after a promising debut for the Japanese defender against Cork City, the episode felt like a flashback to Marian Shved the Ukrainian winger who came, saw, and left after three appearances. While Tierney and Nygren should improve the team which finished the Scottish Cup final defeat to Aberdeen with Jonny Kenny up front, Greg Taylor in midfield and Yang shanking cross after cross off the pitch, it's hard to say for certain that the starting XI is significantly better. Online, fans are already bickering over the area where the need to strengthen is most great. Some say attack, some say defence. Despite winning a double last season, there's a case for saying they're both right. Two wingers, a central defender, a contingency for the potential departure of Reo Hatate and a proper goal scorer is baked in. Depending on how Inamura shapes up, they could still bring in another left-back with reports in Belgium linking Flavio Nazinho of Cercle Brugge. Do all that for less than the £17m they've raked in for Kuhn and fiscal caution will start to look like a high-risk gamble. In the summer of 2014, Celtic lost a Champions League qualifier to Maribor of Slovenia and 200 angry supporters gathered in the car park. Frustrated by a perceived lack of spending on players, Lawwell was forced to address the frustration by making a commitment. In a question-and-answer session, the current chairman pledged that every penny Celtic earned would be reinvested. 'In terms of investment our policy, our commitment, is that every penny that comes into the club will be reinvested, it will go back into the club,' said the then CEO. 'I do not think we can be clearer than that. There is no pile of cash sitting there that we can look at, watch, feel and touch. It doesn't exist.' Fast-forward 11 years and Celtic's rainy day fund could insulate them from the impact of a tsunami. While cash in the bank dropped to £65.4m at December 31 last year, they've since raked in tens of millions from the Champions League. They've sold their top striker Kyogo Furuhashi to Rennes for £10m, Kuhn to Como, and cashed in a hefty £5m sell-on clause from Jeremie Frimpong's move to Liverpool. That's a lot of money to reinvest in the club. If keeping the manager is the name of the game, they really should get cracking.

Bob MacIntyre 'has the balls' to win The Open as Kiwi pal insists Scottish star is in the world class category
Bob MacIntyre 'has the balls' to win The Open as Kiwi pal insists Scottish star is in the world class category

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Bob MacIntyre 'has the balls' to win The Open as Kiwi pal insists Scottish star is in the world class category

Kiwi star Fox believes the Scot can take home the Claret Jug next weekend Ryan Fox is adamant pal Bob MacIntyre has the balls to win The Open. The Scottish star heads to Royal Portrush aiming to burst into the elite Major club. MacIntyre almost made the jump last month when runner-up at the US Open and has now set his sights on going one better at the 153rd Championship. ‌ Fox, who played alongside the Oban hero at Oakmont and also when he made the PGA Tour win breakthrough in Canada, was again at his side during the final round of the Genesis Scottish Open. ‌ The Kiwi reckons MacIntyre's exploits helped him in following suit of grabbing two PGA Tour wins this term and believes the Tartan star has shown he's got both the game and the bottle to get his talented hands around the Claret Jug. Fox said: 'There's no flaws in this game. I saw that on the Saturday US Open. He played fantastic. Obviously he played great on the Sunday and JJ [Spaun] did something incredible to beat him. 'If you're Bob sitting in the clubhouse with two to play and you're tied for the lead, you'd probably think in worst case: I'm in a play-off here. Fair play to him, he was a great sport about it seeing JJ finish birdie, birdie and what else can you do? 'He did everything, he can control well and the other thing that Bob is very, very good at is, when he gets in the mix, he hits all the shots that you need to hit. He's proven that over here, in the US, in the Ryder Cup and you can't really teach that trait. 'You've got that deep down inside you that, when the pressure comes on, you actually stand up and 'balls-up' for want of a better term. And Bob is really really good at that. "He does everything really well without anything sort of jumping out at you going: He's phenomenal at this. But when you actually break it down he drives it really good, he gets really good on shots, his short game's really solid, he holes a lot of putts. ‌ 'You put that together you've got a world-class golfer. I don't want to speak for Bob, it's almost but when you live it a little bit, it's easier to believe it and I think winning in Canada last year, winning here, playing on the Ryder Cup, he's living it. 'I think it just gave him that confidence of I am one of the best players in the world. He always kind of had it, but I feel the same way. Some people can talk themselves into it. Obviously that six, eight week period I just had, I mean it was life-changing basically. Unbelievable. ‌ 'Winning once on the PGA Tour was a dream come true. Doing it twice still feels like a dream to be honest and it looked great to follow in Bob's footsteps. 'Seeing him do what he did last year I think kind of proved to all the guys out here that our guys can compete over there. Matt Pavon earlier that year as well. It was nice to copy those guys this year.' Fox is building his own bid for The Open and said: 'I was in Portrush trying to play a practise round, although the weather was not very kind to us. If we have a couple of days like that for the Open, I think it might rival Carnoustie if it's like that again. 'But it was good to be back. A fantastic golf course, fantastic part of the world and it's great to play a couple of weeks of links. I think we all want some wind to make it interesting, but two weeks of sunshine and no rain and some warm temperatures will be pretty nice.'

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