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No stopping ruthless Sinner in Cincinnati Open

No stopping ruthless Sinner in Cincinnati Open

Perth Now21 hours ago
When Jannik Sinner is hot he's hot as Felix Auger-Aliassime found out at the Cincinnati Open quarter-finals.
The world No.1 extended his winning run on hard courts to 25 matches on Thursday with a ruthless dismissal of the Canadian to reach the tournament semi-finals.
Playing in his first tournament since lifting his fourth grand slam title at Wimbledon, the defending champion powered to a 6-0 6-2 victory over Auger-Aliassime.
Auger-Aliassime had won both his previous matches against Sinner but could offer little resistance here, with the Italian beginning and ending the contest with runs of six games in a row.
Sinner has not been beaten on his favourite surface since a loss to Carlos Alcaraz in Beijing in early October last year.
He will now face the winner of giant-killer Terence Atmane and No.7 seed Holger Rune for a place in the final.
French qualifier Atmane earned the biggest win of his career by stunning American fourth seed Fritz 3-6 7-5 6- to earn his first Masters 1000 quarter-final berth.
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'Lucky' PSG stun Spurs late in UEFA Super Cup
'Lucky' PSG stun Spurs late in UEFA Super Cup

The Advertiser

time9 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

'Lucky' PSG stun Spurs late in UEFA Super Cup

Paris Saint-Germain have beaten Tottenham 4-3 on penalties to win the UEFA Super Cup, completing a remarkable rally after scoring two late goals to take the match to a shootout. It secured a fifth trophy of 2025 for the French club. Lee Kang-in scored in the 85th minute for PSG and fellow substitute Goncalo Ramos grabbed an equaliser in the fourth minute of added time to make it 2-2 in regulation on Wednesday night in Udine, Italy. Nuno Mendes converted the clinching penalty in the shootout. "Sometimes football is unfair," PSG coach Luis Enrique said. "I have to say we were very lucky in the last 10 minutes that we could score two goals ... My players had faith until the last minute, like our supporters." The Super Cup is an annual early-season match between the most recent winners of the Champions League (PSG) and Europa League (Tottenham), and it was hardly going to script when the English club took a 2-0 lead early in the second half. Defenders popped up with Spurs' goals, with Micky van de Ven showing quick reactions to prod home the opener in the 39th minute after new PSG goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier tipped Joao Palhinha's shot onto the crossbar. Chevalier — playing ahead of Gianluigi Donnarumma, who announced on Tuesday he was leaving PSG — might have been unlucky with the first goal but was to blame for the second after failing to keep out a header from newly appointed Tottenham captain Cristian Romero in the 48th. PSG, who were involved in the Club World Cup until mid-July, finished strongly at Stadio Friuli, though, and hit Tottenham with late goals as Lee smashed in a low shot from the edge of the area and Ramos headed home Ousmane Dembele's right-wing cross. In the shootout, Vitinha missed PSG's first attempt but the French team then converted four in a row. Van de Ven and Mathys Tel failed to score for Tottenham, whose manager Thomas Frank was taking charge of his first competitive match with the Premier League team. "There are lots of things to be happy with. That needs to be the foundation going forward," the Spurs boss said. "The single result, 2-2, is good. If you look into the performance, the shift the players put in ... wow, what a mentality." Frank took over in the off-season following the firing of Australian Ange Postecoglou, who led Tottenham to their first trophy in 17 years with a victory over Manchester United in the Europa League final in May. PSG completed the Champions League-Ligue 1-Coupe de France treble last season, also winning the Trophee des Champions in January. They lost the Club World Cup final to Chelsea. Paris Saint-Germain have beaten Tottenham 4-3 on penalties to win the UEFA Super Cup, completing a remarkable rally after scoring two late goals to take the match to a shootout. It secured a fifth trophy of 2025 for the French club. Lee Kang-in scored in the 85th minute for PSG and fellow substitute Goncalo Ramos grabbed an equaliser in the fourth minute of added time to make it 2-2 in regulation on Wednesday night in Udine, Italy. Nuno Mendes converted the clinching penalty in the shootout. "Sometimes football is unfair," PSG coach Luis Enrique said. "I have to say we were very lucky in the last 10 minutes that we could score two goals ... My players had faith until the last minute, like our supporters." The Super Cup is an annual early-season match between the most recent winners of the Champions League (PSG) and Europa League (Tottenham), and it was hardly going to script when the English club took a 2-0 lead early in the second half. Defenders popped up with Spurs' goals, with Micky van de Ven showing quick reactions to prod home the opener in the 39th minute after new PSG goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier tipped Joao Palhinha's shot onto the crossbar. Chevalier — playing ahead of Gianluigi Donnarumma, who announced on Tuesday he was leaving PSG — might have been unlucky with the first goal but was to blame for the second after failing to keep out a header from newly appointed Tottenham captain Cristian Romero in the 48th. PSG, who were involved in the Club World Cup until mid-July, finished strongly at Stadio Friuli, though, and hit Tottenham with late goals as Lee smashed in a low shot from the edge of the area and Ramos headed home Ousmane Dembele's right-wing cross. In the shootout, Vitinha missed PSG's first attempt but the French team then converted four in a row. Van de Ven and Mathys Tel failed to score for Tottenham, whose manager Thomas Frank was taking charge of his first competitive match with the Premier League team. "There are lots of things to be happy with. That needs to be the foundation going forward," the Spurs boss said. "The single result, 2-2, is good. If you look into the performance, the shift the players put in ... wow, what a mentality." Frank took over in the off-season following the firing of Australian Ange Postecoglou, who led Tottenham to their first trophy in 17 years with a victory over Manchester United in the Europa League final in May. PSG completed the Champions League-Ligue 1-Coupe de France treble last season, also winning the Trophee des Champions in January. They lost the Club World Cup final to Chelsea. Paris Saint-Germain have beaten Tottenham 4-3 on penalties to win the UEFA Super Cup, completing a remarkable rally after scoring two late goals to take the match to a shootout. It secured a fifth trophy of 2025 for the French club. Lee Kang-in scored in the 85th minute for PSG and fellow substitute Goncalo Ramos grabbed an equaliser in the fourth minute of added time to make it 2-2 in regulation on Wednesday night in Udine, Italy. Nuno Mendes converted the clinching penalty in the shootout. "Sometimes football is unfair," PSG coach Luis Enrique said. "I have to say we were very lucky in the last 10 minutes that we could score two goals ... My players had faith until the last minute, like our supporters." The Super Cup is an annual early-season match between the most recent winners of the Champions League (PSG) and Europa League (Tottenham), and it was hardly going to script when the English club took a 2-0 lead early in the second half. Defenders popped up with Spurs' goals, with Micky van de Ven showing quick reactions to prod home the opener in the 39th minute after new PSG goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier tipped Joao Palhinha's shot onto the crossbar. Chevalier — playing ahead of Gianluigi Donnarumma, who announced on Tuesday he was leaving PSG — might have been unlucky with the first goal but was to blame for the second after failing to keep out a header from newly appointed Tottenham captain Cristian Romero in the 48th. PSG, who were involved in the Club World Cup until mid-July, finished strongly at Stadio Friuli, though, and hit Tottenham with late goals as Lee smashed in a low shot from the edge of the area and Ramos headed home Ousmane Dembele's right-wing cross. In the shootout, Vitinha missed PSG's first attempt but the French team then converted four in a row. Van de Ven and Mathys Tel failed to score for Tottenham, whose manager Thomas Frank was taking charge of his first competitive match with the Premier League team. "There are lots of things to be happy with. That needs to be the foundation going forward," the Spurs boss said. "The single result, 2-2, is good. If you look into the performance, the shift the players put in ... wow, what a mentality." Frank took over in the off-season following the firing of Australian Ange Postecoglou, who led Tottenham to their first trophy in 17 years with a victory over Manchester United in the Europa League final in May. PSG completed the Champions League-Ligue 1-Coupe de France treble last season, also winning the Trophee des Champions in January. They lost the Club World Cup final to Chelsea.

Ruffels leads Australia charge at Portland Classic
Ruffels leads Australia charge at Portland Classic

Perth Now

time14 hours ago

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Ruffels leads Australia charge at Portland Classic

French rookie Adela Cernousek is the surprise first-round leader of the LPGA Tour's Portland Classic after firing an eight-under 64 to lead some of the game's best players. The 22-year-old turned in an exceptional second nine on Thursday at Columbia Edgewater Country Club, leaving her one stroke ahead of Gurleen Kaur, Miranda Wang, two-time Portland champion Brooke M. Henderson and South Korean duo Jeongeun Lee5 and Sung Hyun Park. After starting on the back nine and making one birdie and eight pars, Cernousek stormed home. She charged up the leaderboard by making birdies on the first, fourth, fifth and sixth before eagling the seventh. Cernousek then added a birdie on the last for good measure. "No, I was just trying to do the same thing," Cernousek said when asked if she played more aggressively closer to the greens on the back nine. "Like hit the fairways, get close to the pin and try to make the putts, like have good speed on the putts. "I think I was hitting the ball very well. My caddie really helped me with distances. I think I always had like very close putts for birdie. I was able to make a lot of them, so it was great. I felt very good with my whole game, yeah." The 2024 individual NCAA champion for Texas A&M, Cernousek is making only her 13th LPGA start. She has made just three cuts as a pro, never ending up in the top 20. South Africa's Ashleigh Buhai, Sweden's Linn Grant, South Korea's Haeran Ryu, Thailand's Arpichaya Yubol and France's Perrine Delacour are two strokes back at 66. Eight players, including past Portland winner Jin Young Ko of South Korea, amateur Kiara Romero and Australian Gabriela Ruffels, are tied for 12th at 67. Ruffels made birdies on the second and fourth, sandwiched by a bogey on three, before another bogey on six was rubbed out by a birdie on the seventh for a one-under 35. But she steadied in the second nine, making four birdies including the last, without any bogeys to be tied 12th. At five under, Ruffels is just three behind leader Cernousek and one better than compatriot and newly crowned major champion Grace Kim. The 2025 winner of the Evian Championship, Kim's four-under total included seven birdies and three bogeys. Kim made 33 on the back nine that included a bogey on the very last hole. Henderson, the Portland champion in 2015 and 2016 at ages 17 and 18, opened and closed her round effectively. Starting on the back nine, she birdied her first four holes, and she concluded her bogey-free rounds with birdies on three of the final five holes. "It was a really awesome start, four birdies in a row," Henderson said. "I mean, that's an ideal start any week, especially here. I love coming back to this place. I do have a lot of the great memories. A lot of good things happened to me here. "So just tried to keep it rolling after that great start and was able to capitalise with three birdies on the back nine to get a little bit closer to the top of the leaderboard." Defending champion Moriya Jutanugarn of Thailand is tied for 97th at 73, along with Hannah Green, the 2019 US Women's PGA champion from Perth. with AAP

‘I don't want to be remembered': Pep Guardiola on Man City, his legacy and Ange
‘I don't want to be remembered': Pep Guardiola on Man City, his legacy and Ange

Sydney Morning Herald

time17 hours ago

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‘I don't want to be remembered': Pep Guardiola on Man City, his legacy and Ange

There's no reason why they shouldn't be up there in the title race, snapping back into contention like a rubber band. Though it will be different without the great Kevin De Bruyne, they have retooled on the transfer market, splashing out more than $320 million on the likes of French international Rayan Cherki and Dutch midfielder Tijjani Reijnders. But their rivals have spent big, too, as Guardiola gleefully (and slightly combatively) points out. 'Finally, it's not [only] Man City spending money, right?' he says. 'It's good. It's normal. That is what's allowed.' This is the beginning of the end for Guardiola, at least at this club. He signed a new two-year contract in November, which keeps him tied to City through to the 2026-27 season, and says it will be his last one with them. It wouldn't be surprising, should they win the title this season, if he walks off into the sunset a year early. There were times last season when the pressures of top-level management had him in a permanent state of what kids these days call 'headloss'. As the defeats piled up, so too did genuine concern for Guardiola's mental well-being. After blowing a 3-0 lead over Feyenoord in the UEFA Champions League, he presented to his post-match interviews with scratches on his face, some of which had drawn blood, and joked that it was self-harm. He struggled to sleep or digest food properly, and spoke about his struggles with stress, anxiety and loneliness – a timely reminder that beneath the brilliance, he's still just another human. But Guardiola seems to have successfully recharged his batteries. His off-season break was short because of the FIFA Club World Cup, where City were knocked out in the round of 16 by Saudi club Al Hilal – although he believes the 'foundation' for future success was laid at that tournament. 'After that, I went to Barcelona with my family,' he says. 'And basically I eat, drink, and slept. That's what I've done. And I came [back] with four or five kilos more. I try to make a diet, reduce my kilos. That is our plan.' In a long interview with GQ earlier this month, timed to promote a clinic he has opened with a therapist in Barcelona that specialises in 'longevity and personalised medicine', Guardiola confirmed his intention to take a break from football when he's done with City, of anywhere between one to 15 years, to focus on himself for once. The grind of modern-day coaching is proving relentless to the point where the big dogs risk total burnout unless they take a longer sabbatical at some point. Ange Postecoglou is living his best life in Greece, eating prime steak off the knives of TikTok celebrity chefs, making the most of his first substantial period of downtime in over a decade. An exhausted Jurgen Klopp acknowledged that he was 'running out of energy' – so he stepped down as Liverpool boss last year and travelled the world on a cruise ship, washing up in Adelaide of all places. That's something Guardiola would like to do, but he's more of a Melbourne guy. 'I've been in Melbourne years ago with my family for five days, six days. And I would love it,' he says. 'Maybe Australian Open ... I would travel a lot, I'm pretty sure of that. And I would love to spend not just a few days, [but] a month. That's what I mean I take care of myself. I would take care of my body, but my mind ... to travel to places I've not been. That is the way, right? Everyone in the sofa at home, watching Instagram – it doesn't make you better.' Perhaps there'll be time then, when he's not working, for a quiet beer with Postecoglou, a sort of kindred spirit, someone Guardiola once described as a person who 'makes football a better place' – high praise, from one of the highest imaginable sources. Guardiola is famously effusive in his compliments for rival managers, but he does not seem to be laying it on thick when it comes to the former Tottenham Hotspur coach, whose commitment to attacking football and deft handling of the media he admires greatly. He said the two of them had exchanged messages about catching up over dinner and a bottle of good red wine from Australia. 'The way he plays, alongside the amount of titles he won ... always try to attack, always be positive,' he says. 'When you find two teams that want to score goals and attack, it's a beautiful game. I'm pretty sure that the new generation of managers, they are more courageous. Before, they said, 'Oh, we're going to play against [Sergio] Agüero, Man City. I'm going to defend, defend.' Now, no, it doesn't matter. 'I don't care. I go to try to win.' And when this happens, football is nice. And I think always his teams have [had] that courage to do it.' Guardiola stopped short of weighing in on Spurs' decision to sack Postecoglou, but suggested he wouldn't be surprised if he ends up back in the Premier League with another club. 'What happened in Spurs, the injuries they had and the situation, I don't know, because I've not been there,' he says. 'At the end, OK, it was not a good season, I would say. Right? But at the end, they won [their first] silverware for many, many, years. And maybe that helps to break that barrier that is not winning the title. Maybe it will help in the future for Spurs, mentally-wise, for everyone. I'm pretty sure he leaves something for the club, for the players, for the future ... a big legacy.' That word – legacy – comes up a lot when people talk about Guardiola. After more two decades of bending football to his will, his legacy will be the stuff of history books. So how does he feel about the way he has inspired a generation of coaches around the world, Postecoglou included, with the magical teams he has put together? Surprisingly blasé. He says he doesn't really care if people consider him a genius, or if cynics say that he's mainly successful because of the money he's been able to spend and the calibre of players at his disposal. He is 'more than grateful' for what the game has allowed him to experience – and he still wants more, or else he wouldn't be there – but he does not seem to think his work will live on in any meaningful way. 'I don't care. Don't remember me,' Guardiola says. 'Because when we die, when I am out of football, after one, two, three days, I will be forgotten. In our life, our familiars, [when] they pass away, we are so sad. [But after] one day, two days, three days, one week ... [we] have good memories, we smile, and we continue. We live. Football is the same. I'm here, I will remember that we managed Man City – but I leave, it's over. It's gone. Another [coach] is coming. And I'm over. Everyone is replaceable. 'So, the people saying, I want a [legacy] for the history: bullshit. I want to live my history. I want to be happy living. I don't want to be remembered, in good and bad. So if people say nice things, it's fine. People don't say, it's fine too.' Guardiola insists he is a 'much, much better' manager today than he was in 2009, when he guided Barcelona to a then-unprecedented sextuple of trophies. He has collected more than 40 major titles throughout his career, but that is not how he defines himself or where he derives his happiness from. Accolades aren't what make him feel special; the same ideas, work ethic and methods that delivered those successes were there last season, when nothing was won. Loading 'My curriculum vitae is so good,' he says. 'I was so happy doing that. But it [hasn't] changed me. Still, I have fear to lose a game. I don't pay my attention for the compliments ... there are many reasons, not just me. I've been at three huge clubs. Huge: Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Man City. Good resources in the academies and the money spending to buy incredible top players, incredible top facilities. I put [the credit for] that with everyone.' What matters to Guardiola is seeing his team improve - a training session that clicks, a tactical tweak that works, the gradual progress from one match to the next. The process of pursuing excellence together, and the memories made along the way. 'That motivates me. That is my job. This is what I like,' he says. Loading 'When I remember all the incredible players that we had for many, many years, always I remember their huge smile. The memories that belong to us, that we have with us, will stay forever. It has been so nice. Even the bad moments – the disappointments in the last minutes or the titles that we didn't win for many reasons - always belong to us.' Trophies, he says, are fleeting, and their absence doesn't diminish the work. 'If we win, incredible. If we don't, we try again. [If] the boss will say, 'You don't win? I sack you.' OK, it's fine. We'll find another job, maybe. Or maybe not,' he says. 'I want to live my life, and be satisfied as much as possible. And the rest, believe me, is not important.'

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