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How to watch Roland Garros Thursday: TV coverage, streaming live, match times and more June 5

How to watch Roland Garros Thursday: TV coverage, streaming live, match times and more June 5

USA Today2 days ago

How to watch Roland Garros Thursday: TV coverage, streaming live, match times and more June 5
The schedule at the Roland Garros on June 5 includes two matches in the semifinals, among them Aryna Sabalenka (ranked No. 1) versus Iga Swiatek (No. 5). How to watch, you ask? Check out Tennis Channel for the live stream.
Roland Garros key details
Tournament: The Roland Garros
The Roland Garros Round: Semifinals
Semifinals Date: June 5
June 5 TV: Tennis Channel
Tennis Channel Live Stream: Fubo (regional restrictions may apply)
Fubo Live Stream: https://imp.i305175.net/MmRB5M
https://imp.i305175.net/MmRB5M Venue: Stade Roland Garros
Stade Roland Garros Location: Paris, France
Paris, France Court Surface: Clay
Watch the Tennis Channel and more sports on Fubo!
Match of the day: Aryna Sabalenka vs. Iga Swiatek
Start time: 9:00 AM ET
9:00 AM ET Round: Semifinal
Semifinal Sabalenka has won two tournaments so far this year, with an overall record of 30-6.
Swiatek, who holds a 23-8 record in eight tournaments this year, has yet to secure a tournament win.
Roland Garros schedule today
Aryna Sabalenka vs. Iga Swiatek, 9:00 AM ET (Semifinal)
Lois Boisson vs. Coco Gauff, 9:00 AM ET (Semifinal)
Roland Garros results yesterday
Coco Gauff def. Madison Keys 6-7, 6-4, 6-1 (Quarterfinal)
Lois Boisson def. Mirra Andreeva 7-6, 6-3 (Quarterfinal)
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USA Today

time20 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Auburn baseball vs. Coastal Carolina: How to watch game one of the Auburn Super Regional

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New York Times

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  • New York Times

Rafael Nadal's first French Open title, according to Toni Nadal, his opponents, and Rafa himself

ROLAND GARROS, PARIS — Twenty years ago this weekend, a 19-year-old Spanish tennis player named Rafael Nadal won the French Open for the first time, at the first attempt. By the time his career ended almost two decades later, Nadal had amassed 14 French Open titles, posting a Roland Garros record of 112 wins and four defeats. The tournament organisers built a statue of him before he had finished winning titles there. And at the start of this year's French Open, 15,000 people gathered on Court Philippe-Chatrier to celebrate one of the greatest achievements in sport. Advertisement But in June 2005, Nadal was a richly talented teenager, with the promise of a successful career but not yet an all-time stint that would help define men's tennis in the 2000s. This is the story of how, across two weeks, Nadal went from hopeful to champion, setting in motion his unprecedented dominance. 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I thought Rafa was a slight favorite based on what we'd seen already and the beast that you could tell he was going to be. Roger was very matter-of-fact about Rafa, and he talked about him as if he was describing some kind of natural phenomenon. He would call him 'it' and said things like: 'Quite impressive, isn't it? He's already bigger than me, and he's five years younger. Imagine how he looks in five years.' As well as Nadal was playing, Federer was also cruising — he hadn't lost a set and had thrashed Nadal's good friend Moya, a former Roland Garros champion, in the fourth round. He had come to Paris early to get extra practice time on Chatrier, having struggled with its huge dimensions in the past. The very first point of the match, the opening of arguably the best Grand Slam rivalry in men's tennis history, was a beauty. 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Mats Wilander: My main memory of that was that I couldn't hit one forehand in the court because there was so much topspin. My backhand was OK, because I've got two hands, but it was really difficult to play against him — I'd never seen that much spin before in my life. Advertisement You can see it, but it's different when you actually play against it. There's a huge difference. And then, obviously, he got more and more spin and more and power the older he got. But in the beginning, it was mainly spin, and it was ridiculous. I was expecting him to win (Roland Garros), maybe not that year necessarily, but you could see straight away that this guy was. Perez-Barbadillo: There was tension the day before the final but also we were playing a football game on the PlayStation in his room. It turned out to be good preparation. Nadal picked up an early break in the first set, but Puerta's level lifted after he received treatment for a thigh injury. Puerta recovered to take the first set, playing a daring brand of tennis, full of darts to the net and big swings with his forehand. Nadal rallied to take the next two sets, but found himself down 5-4 in the fourth, with Puerta serving to take the match into a decider and up two set points at 40-15. When a diving Puerta netted a volley to lose the second, Nadal leapt child-like into the air, a rare reminder of how young he was. He saved a third set point with an absurd reflex volley, and Puerta knew the moment had gone. Two games later, Nadal was on his back in what would become his trademark celebration, winning 6-7(6), 6-1, 6-3, 7-5. Covered in clay, he clambered up to his box, and shared a warm embrace with his family, including his uncle Toni, who had guided him to this point. He even shook hands with King Juan Carlos of Spain, who was in attendance. 'People say he dreams with his feet on the ground,' said Mary Carillo in her commentary on NBC. 'He knows he belongs out here.' Toni Nadal: I was very, very happy because I knew that for the big players, for the people who want to be very good, they all want to win a slam. And Rafael was 19 and he had one, and this is what I said to him that day. At least we know that we have one Grand Slam. Advertisement It was a very close match. Puerta played really well and made it difficult. Rafael played a little better in the key moments. If Puerta had won the set points he had in the fourth set, maybe we cannot win the match from there. Mary Carillo: I forgot how good Puerta played but what what strikes me most watching it back was how fast Nadal was, and how incredible his defences were. He was so damn young, the scissor kicks he did when he won big points and the fact that he was so fast, he wasn't using what became a great shot in and of itself, his backhand, he was quick enough to run around and hit his big forehands. The three set points he saved when Puerta had a chance to take it into a fourth. Just, wow, it was fun stuff. The king, by the way, gave Nadal a standing ovation, along with a lot of other people, when he got it to 5-5 in the fourth. Carlos Moya: It was a roller-coaster of a match, so open and Puerta was playing amazing. We all thought Rafa could do it but until you win one, you don't know mentally if someone is going to be ready. And if they got to the fifth set, you never know what can happen, because Puerta physically was a beast. Clarey: A lot of the things that made 14 possible are there in that final. The point-to-point focus, the resistance to hype, the resistance to other people labeling him and creating his own scenario for himself. And the enjoyment and embrace of adversity. Toni Nadal: I thought he could win more Roland Garros titles because I am a logical man. When you win at 19, then I thought, 'OK, if we win with 19, we can win when we're 20,' and so on. Every year, I thought the next year he could win, but I never thought he could win 14 titles. After the match, I wrote Rafael a note that said, 'Puerta played better than you, but you won the match. If next year you play exactly the same, you cannot repeat the title, so we have to improve.' Clarey: I got invited to the celebrations that night at the Café de l'Homme, which has a trillion-dollar view of the Eiffel Tower terrace. That's where Rafa had his early victory parties, and the whole family was there. And I thought I would sort of go into a scene similar to what we saw in the Carlos Alcaraz documentary, you know, big celebrations kind of vibe. But it wasn't that at all. It was very sober and dignified. Rafa was wearing an open shirt, no tie, looking nothing at all like the beast that he had been a few hours before, who had jumped around and was covered in clay. It was a little bit like Clark Kent and Superman. Nadal sees that version of himself in simpler terms, and the final word belongs to the man himself. Rafael Nadal: What I remember is a guy with plenty of energy, with an amazing passion and motivation for what I was doing. (Top photos: Getty Images; Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic)

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