logo
'You'll never make it' - Sabalenka slams 'brutal' youth coaches

'You'll never make it' - Sabalenka slams 'brutal' youth coaches

France 242 days ago

On Friday, top-seeded Sabalenka eased into the French Open last 16 with a 6-2, 6-3 win over Serbia's Olga Danilovic on Court Philippe Chatrier.
And the 27-year-old Miami-based played spoke of the cultural difference of the coaching system in Eastern Europe.
"I've always been quite motivated and they didn't have to push me," Sabalenka said.
"But I have heard a lot saying I'm not smart enough, that I'm stupid, and I'll never make it, and I don't have anything to make it to the top.
"I guess I want to send a quick message to them to quit their job, because honestly, I think they know nothing and they better quit just to save other players."
The Minsk native won back-to-back Australian Open titles in 2023 and 2024 and the US Open last year.
She brushed aside 34th-ranked Danilovic in 79 minutes and next plays 16th-seeded American Amanda Anisimova for a place in the quarter-finals at Roland Garros.
The Belarusian said she felt lucky with her coaching team.
"Off court it is important to surround yourself with the right people and have fun with your crew and that's what I'm doing," she said.
"I am really grateful to have all of them on my team, we are like family.
"When I am on court, I am a completely different person, very focused, very aggressive. On the court it is about dreams and I give my all on court."
'Healthier environment'
Madrid Open winner Sabalenka has spoken this week of how "the environment and in the history of European countries, we are much tougher".
"I definitely think that the environment we have in our countries, which is like very tough and coaches are very brutal, you know, there is nothing nice about the way they work with their players, they (are) quite rude.
"I think that's why maybe our mentality is much stronger, but also, the same time, they kind of like broke so many players because of that aggressive mindset.
"I think in Europe and the States, the environment is much healthier."
In Paris, Sabalenka refuses to consider herself a favourite in a tournament where she has never advanced past the semi-finals.
"Let's just leave it (the pressure) on Iga (Swiatek) since she won it, what, three times in a row, really, right? Let's just... I will just leave it for her."
Anisimova leads Sabalenka 5-2 in previous meetings.
Anisimova is competing in her seventh French Open, having an impressive run to the semi-finals six years ago. She beat Sabalenka in straight sets in the second round in 2019.
"When I first got here, I was getting some flashbacks and good memories," said the American who got past 22nd-seeded Dane Clara Tauson 7-6 (7/4), 6-4 in the third round.
"Obviously (she's) one of the best right now. She's No. 1. I really enjoy the fight and the challenge that she brings on," said the 23-year-old.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sweden's Maja Stark wins 80th US Women's Open
Sweden's Maja Stark wins 80th US Women's Open

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

Sweden's Maja Stark wins 80th US Women's Open

Sweden's Stark put on a clinical display on the imposing Erin Hills course in Wisconsin, where back-to-back bogeys to finish her round proved inconsequential as her seven-under total of 281 gave her the victory with room to spare. She became the third player from Sweden to lift the trophy and the first since Annika Sorenstam won her third in 2006. "I started shaking a little bit more than I did yesterday, so it was more of a challenge today for sure," Stark said, adding that she was "so tired" after a classic US Open grind. Leading by one to start the day, Stark opened with five straight pars, benefitting from a lucky break at the fifth when her tee shot scooted through the left rough and settled in the fairway. She then pushed her lead to two strokes with her first birdie of the day at the par-three sixth, where she rolled in a 21-foot putt. She gave a stroke back at the seventh, where her tee shot found a fairway bunker, and was clinging to a one-stroke lead when she arrived at the 11th. That changed in moments however, Stark rattling in a 14-foot birdie putt at 11 shortly after Korda's three-putt bogey at the 13th dropped the American star to five-under, the sequence of events leaving Stark with a three-stroke cushion. Korda, who started the day three shots adrift, applied pressure with back to back birdies at the seventh and eighth. After her bogey at 13 she pulled a stroke back at the par-five 14th, where she had a look at eagle but settled for a birdie. Japan's Hinako Shibuno and Takeda also reached six-under with birdies at the 14th. But Stark held her nerve and extended her lead with a birdie of her own at 14, where her second shot from the fairway caught the slope of the green and rolled to a stop 11 feet below the pin. She left her eagle putt short, but tapped in for a birdie that pushed her lead to three strokes. Her rivals had already faltered -- Shibuno with a double-bogey at 15, Takeda with a bogey at 17 and Korda with a bogey at the last. Korda posted a one-under-par 71 and was joined on 283 by Takeda, who had three birdies to balance her bogey and a front-nine double bogey in a 72. 'Very complicated' Stark's nerves were finally showing when she went left off the tee at both the 17th and 18th. But she limited the damage to bogeys at both -- an impressive effort at the treacherous 18th where playing partner Julia Lopez Ramirez took a triple bogey eight that included a shot into the scoring tent. It was a disappointing day for the 22-year-old Spaniard, who trailed by one to start the day and carded a seven-over 79. Korda, owner of two major titles, notched her best finish in the US Open, improving on her tie for eighth in 2022. "Still very complicated," she said of her relationship with the championship. "It's just an absolute heartbreaker. Korda, 26, remains in search of a first victory since November, when she claimed the seventh LPGA title of her record-setting 2024 campaign. "Hopefully (I) can kind of build off of this, puting myself in contention at a major and obviously just slipping just short," Korda said. "Hurts a little, but I'm happy with the progress and hopefully I can continue like this."

'Sky's the limit' for Tiafoe at French Open
'Sky's the limit' for Tiafoe at French Open

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

'Sky's the limit' for Tiafoe at French Open

The American downed German world number 66 Daniel Altmaier 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (7/4) in the last 16 to set up a match with Lorenzo Musetti for a semi-final place. It will be Tiafoe's first ATP quarter-final since finishing runner-up at a low-key event in Houston in March. "It's been horrible. I've been travelling around, and it hasn't been fun at all," he said. "Kind of faced it. After that it gave me space to just play. You know, when I can play, I can play. This is not really something that's like a shock. "When I'm playing well, I'm there and present and having fun, I think the sky's the limit for me." The 27-year-old, who has reached at least the quarters at the last three US Opens, is yet to drop a set in Paris and is confident he can go even further. "I've been the super dark horse. I don't think anyone is really thinking that I was going to even be in this position," added Tiafoe. "But at the same time, I don't really look at it like house money. "Now that I'm here, I'm like, 'Let's win'. I was having dinner yesterday. I'm like, 'Yeah, feeling great, but let's keep winning'. There's nothing more fun than winning. "Once I get my feet going and matches under me, I'm dangerous. Then I'm feeling really good, and I'll play anybody." Tiafoe, seeded 15th at Roland Garros, has five wins over top-10 players at Grand Slam events. "If you look at the guys in front of me, I'm much more comfortable playing the guys around me and ahead of me than the other guys," said Tiafoe, who is yet to drop a set in the tournament. "I'm much more reliable, and week to week -- I don't lose to those guys week to week. I lose to everybody else. "That's not really my concern, playing the best guys in the world. I don't fear them. I don't really feel like their level is so much better than mine." © 2025 AFP

No.1 Scheffler holds off Griffin to defend PGA Memorial title
No.1 Scheffler holds off Griffin to defend PGA Memorial title

France 24

time2 hours ago

  • France 24

No.1 Scheffler holds off Griffin to defend PGA Memorial title

The 28-year-old American took his third triumph in a month, firing a two-under par 70 to finish 72 holes on 10-under 278 at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio. American Ben Griffin, coming off a victory last week at Colonial, was four strokes back in second on 282 after shooting 73 with Austrian Sepp Straka third on 283, one stroke better than Canada's Nick Taylor. "It's always a hard week to play this tournament," Scheffler said. "I battled really hard over the weekend and Ben made things interesting down the stretch." The triumph marked the ninth consecutive time Scheffler has turned a 54-hole lead into a victory, this one coming at the event hosted by 18-time major winner Jack Nicklaus. "Overall it was a great week and definitely proud to be shaking Mr. Nicklaus's hand at the end of another good week," Scheffler said. Scheffler won last month's PGA Championship at Quail Hollow for his third major crown after taking the CJ Cup Byron Nelson two weeks earlier. By winning his first 16 PGA titles in just under 3.5 years, Scheffler became the fourth-fastest to go from his first to 16th tour wins after Sam Snead, Nicklaus and Woods, a 15-time major winner who took the Memorial from 1999-2001. The victory marked the first defended title among the nine crowns Scheffler won worldwide last year, having edged compatriot Collin Morikawa by a stroke at the 2024 Memorial. It also ensured Scheffler will be seen as the man to beat in two weeks at the US Open at Oakmont, where Scheffler seeks a fourth career major victory and second in a row. "This is definitely a golf course that's going to expose your weaknesses," Scheffler said of Muirfield Village. "I've got a few things I can practice on next week. Overall, it was a really solid week, did some really good battling." Scheffler sank a par putt from just inside 10 feet at the 14th hole and reached 10-under with a tap-in birdie at the par-five 15th. Griffin, however, reached the 15th green in two and sank a 12-foot eagle putt to pull within three strokes with three holes to play. Griffin then followed with a 27-foot birdie putt at the par-three 16th to pull within two of the lead. Scheffler responded by dropping his approach at 17 just inside 20 feet on the way to a routine par while Griffin needed four shots to reach the 17th green on his way to a double bogey, falling four adrift. Scheffler closed out matters with a seven-foot birdie putt at 18. Scheffler solid early Scheffler, who began the day with a one-stroke lead, birdied the first six holes to keep his one stroke lead while Griffin stayed on his heels by answering bogeys at the first and par-three fourth holes with birdies at the second and par-five fifth. Scheffler left his third shot at the par-five seventh within four feet of the hole and sank the birdie putt to reach nine-under. Scheffler curled in a par putt at the ninth from just inside nine feet to make the turn with a two-stroke lead, but missed a 12-footer for par at the 10th for a bogey that dropped his advantage to one shot once more. At the par-five 11th, Scheffler responded by blasting out of the rough to 14 feet and curling in the birdie putt to restore a two-stroke edge on nine-under. Griffin found a bunker on the way to a bogey at the par-three 12th and never found the fairway at 13 on the way to another bogey that left Scheffler ahead by four with five holes remaining.

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