logo
#

Latest news with #NaomiBroady

BBC tennis pundit ‘bombarded with messages from stalker who targeted sister with bizarre paintings & gifts'
BBC tennis pundit ‘bombarded with messages from stalker who targeted sister with bizarre paintings & gifts'

The Sun

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Sun

BBC tennis pundit ‘bombarded with messages from stalker who targeted sister with bizarre paintings & gifts'

A BBC tennis pundit was bombarded with messages from a stalker after he'd also targeted her sister with bizarre paintings and gifts. Ex-player turned TV star Naomi Broady - sister of Brit tennis ace Liam Broady - was flooded with social media messages between January and December 2023 by creep David Richardson. 5 5 5 Richardson, 39, pleaded guilty to harassment of mum-of-two Naomi, 35, and the stalking of her sibling Emma Broady, 37, over a three-year period at Manchester Magistrates' Court last month. He is said to have sent "multiple unwanted messages via Facebook and sending unwanted gifts, cards and paintings". Court papers add the ordeal caused Naomi "serious harm and distress", reports The Mirror. The newspaper approached Richardson at his home in Stockport, Greater Manchester, and he told them he had gone to school with Emma and wanted to make a "positive impact" before asking her out. However, when she rejected him, he turned his attentions to Naomi. "I wanted to try to win her over - I wanted to ask her out," he said. Richardson explained he was "a bit out of practice with the girls... I've not been in a relationship". He had bought Selfridges vouchers and flowers for Emma on her birthday, Valentine's Day and Christmas in a bid to win her over. The stalker is banned from contacting either sister or visiting their homes ahead of sentencing on August 18. A source told The Mirror: "It was terrifying. They were pleased the police took it seriously. Action has now been taken." The court papers state Richardson had pursued Naomi - who was involved in the Beeb's Wimbledon coverage this summer, and appears on Radio 5 Live, "which amounted to harassment". It adds he "sent various unwanted messages on Facebook" between January 18 and December 4 2023. Naomi had begun playing tennis at the age of seven and competed in the junior circuit of the International Tennis Federation (ITF) between 2004 and 2008, including reaching the quarter finals of a Wimbledon girls tournament. She made her debut at the senior Wimbledon championships in 2008 but was beaten by Rika Fujiwara in the qualifying rounds. The following year, Naomi won her first senior title in Grenoble, France, defeating top seed Youlia Fedossova. In 2014 he was given a wildcard entry into Wimbledon and beat Timea Babos before being knocked out in the second round. She also made it through to the second round of the US Open in 2016. The same year, Naomi reached the third round of the Wimbledon doubles, and later made it to the quarter finals in the mixed doubles in 2014 and 2021. She began working as a BBC commentator for Radio 5 Live at the US Open in 2021. Naomi is not the first tennis star targeted by a stalker, with British number one Emma Raducanu, 22, left in tears last year at the Dubai Tennis Championships after seeing a man follow her to four successive tournaments. The same man, who was removed, had given the player a letter and asked for her photo in a coffee shop the previous day. He was given a restraining order by local cops. Raducanu had previously been the victim of stalker Amrit Magar who was slapped with a five-year restraining order in 2022 after he walked 23 miles to her home. 5 5

BBC tennis pundit was stalked by obsessed man who had previously targeted her sister
BBC tennis pundit was stalked by obsessed man who had previously targeted her sister

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

BBC tennis pundit was stalked by obsessed man who had previously targeted her sister

A BBC tennis pundit has revealed the terrifying ordeal she endured at the hands of a crazed stalker who targeted her for almost a year after first pursuing her sister. The former British tennis pro, Naomi Broady, whose brother is tennis star Liam Broady, was subjected to a relentless barrage of Facebook messages between January and December 2023, in what prosecutors described as a deeply disturbing harassment campaign. David Richardson, 39, from Stockport, appeared before Manchester magistrates' court last month where he admitted stalking Naomi's sister, Emma, 37, for three years and harassing Naomi over a 12-month period. Court documents reveal how Richardson sent 'multiple unwanted images and messages' via Facebook, as well as gifts, cards, and paintings. The campaign, it said, caused Naomi 'serious harm and distress'. Naomi, 35, who was part of the BBC's Wimbledon coverage last month and works as a commentator for BBC Radio 5 Live, is the latest in a growing list of female sports stars targeted by obsessive fans. When confronted at his home by The Mirror, Richardson admitted the offences. He claimed he had first tried to strike up a relationship with Naomi's sister Emma before asking her out. Naomi, 35, who was part of the BBC's Wimbledon coverage last month and works as a commentator for BBC Radio 5 Live Richardson had gone to school with Emma, but after she rebuffed him, he began targeting Naomi. He told reporters: 'I wanted to try to win her over. I wanted to ask her out... I was a bit out of practice with the girls... I've not been in a relationship'. The stalker confessed he had bought her a Selfridges voucher and some flowers for her birthday, but didn't ask her out. Then when Valentines Day and Christmas Day came around he sent her the same gifts. He claimed she thanked him and said it 'really cheered her up'. Richardson has now been banned from contacting either woman or approaching their homes ahead of sentencing at Manchester Crown Court on August 18. A source close to the sisters said: 'It was terrifying. They were pleased the police took it seriously. Action has now been taken'. Court documents on Richardson state he: 'Between 13/9/2020 and 4/12/2023 at Stockport pursued a course of conduct, by sending multiple unwanted images and messages via Facebook and sending unwanted gifts, cards and paintings, which amounted to stalking causing Emma Broady serious alarm or distress, which had a substantial adverse effect on her usual day-to-day activities when you knew or ought to have known that your course of conduct would cause alarm or distress.' They add: 'Between 18/1/2023 and 4/12/2023 at Stockport, pursued a course of conduct which amounted to the harassment of Naomi Broady, and which you knew or ought to have known amounted to the harassment of her in that you sent various unwanted messages on Facebook.' The ordeal mirrors the experiences of other high-profile tennis stars, including British Katie Boulter and US Open champion Emma Raducanu, who have both spoken of being stalked and threatened in recent years. Boulter revealed she had been followed in a car and sent menacing social media messages, while Raducanu was left in tears after a man trailed her to four tournaments, prompting a restraining order. Naomi, a former Wimbledon quarter-finalist in mixed doubles and a mother to twin boys born last December, began working as a BBC commentator in 2021. She had a celebrated career on court, reaching the second round at both Wimbledon and the US Open, and winning her first senior title in France in 2009.

'It'll be a chess match' - where Wimbledon final will be won
'It'll be a chess match' - where Wimbledon final will be won

BBC News

time12-07-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

'It'll be a chess match' - where Wimbledon final will be won

In her latest Wimbledon column, BBC Sport analyst Naomi Broady - a former top-60 player on the WTA Tour - analyses where Saturday's women's final between Iga Swiatek and Amanda Anisimova will be won and lost. On one side, we have a five-time Grand Slam champion who has always had an uneasy relationship with the the other is a former teenage prodigy who is fulfilling her potential after taking a significant break from the sport to protect her mental Iga Swiatek and Amanda Anisimova have fascinating stories to tell as they each prepare for their first Wimbledon is how I think Saturday's history-making match will be decided. Managing the occasion is key Both players are understandably going to be nervous coming into the match - it's the Wimbledon final! The outcome will likely come down to who manages the occasion was pretty nervous in her quarter-final win against Anastasia Pavyluchenkova, to the point where she kept dropping to the floor on her haunches in the last couple of games - even when it wasn't match was an illustration of the feeling of desperation she was facing as she edged closer to saw similar reactions a few times early on in the semi-final against Aryna Sabalenka too but she managed to settle more as the match went having won majors and having been the world number one for such a long time, has the edge in terms of experience - that absolutely counts for a Anisimova has nothing to lose. Of course she is desperate to win the Wimbledon final, but at the start of the fortnight she would never have thought she would actually be here in the championship can close her eyes in the final and have a swing - which fits best into what she does. This circumstances allows her to be more she can go out there and play freely, whereas I think Swiatek might feel extra has never won the singles title here, she's the higher ranked and many people will expect her to lift the trophy.I think being the underdog favours Anisimova and it fits in well with her aggressive game style. Settling down quickly Swiatek and Anisimova are only three months apart in age but they are yet to play each other at tour will still know each other very well, though. They played once in the juniors - back in 2016 - and they have of course seen each other play a ton, and probably hit together through the years won't be the same as going out there and knowing absolutely nothing about their you're in the same year group as someone, it's kind of like you're old school friends and you'll have known them since you were young - especially if you're one of the top juniors in your country, which Swiatek and Anisimova both won't be scrapping for information before they walk only they will be getting detailed analysis from their teams, they will already have a rough idea of what's coming at you have never played someone before, you will mix up a few different shots up in the warm-up to gauge how your opponent feels - but I don't think that will be the case for the final. For the eighth time in eight years, there will be a first-time Wimbledon women's does Wimbledon throw up so many different winners? I think mainly just because it's such a short grass-court swing and a quick turnaround from the French Open on the players who go deep in the Slams don't want to play in the week before a major but you don't always have a choice in the run-up to Wimbledon.A lot of players rock up to Wimbledon feeling quite unsettled, and those who have lost earlier at Roland Garros almost have a bit of an they are playing two or three tournaments coming into Wimbledon, they are feeling far more settled and have figured out the changes in bounces a little you first change surfaces, you are actively thinking about movement, court positions and taking the ball you're playing well, you're on autopilot and not actively thinking much at I think both Swiatek and Anisimova getting on the grass earlier this year has worked in their favour at Wimbledon. Anisimova's backhand versus Swiatek's forehand This will be a battle between Anisimova's big backhand and Swiatek's big forehand - it's going to be a real chess the first strike is key for is going to look to control the rally early on - and Swiatek doesn't like to play reactive has often struggled against the bigger, flatter hitters - just look at Jelena Ostapenko's win record over needs to be really brave. Even when she is feeling the nerves and just wants to find the court, that is what she has to do above anything is tall and can get over the ball and hit down on her strokes - that's what Aryna Sabalenka struggled to counteract in their backhand was especially they were in cross-court backhand exchanges, Sabalenka had to hit a lower risk shot to try to change direction down the line to get it out of Anisimova's strike Swiatek, it is going to be about who is able to find the right ball first to change direction down the line and get the cross-court rally on the wing they prefer. By her own lofty standards, Swiatek's season has been below par up to now and there had been some uncertainty in her she has settled down in the grass court season - on her least favourite surface - and has been finding her form at seen the best of her over the past fortnight. She might struggle at the start of a match but when she finds her rhythm and gets into her stride, there is no stopping her.I think she has moved a little further back behind the baseline, giving herself a fraction more time on the has allowed Swiatek to wind up the top-spin forehand which is fundamental to her clay-court success, and get the ball out of the strike zone of her previous is looking more tactically mature and using the angles - hammering opponents with the forehand cross to leave the ad court (each player's left-sided service court) wide open - to her it will be really interesting to see if that works as effectively against Anisimova's backhand. Naomi Broady was speaking to BBC Sport's Jonathan Jurejko at Wimbledon.

All Britons out of Wimbledon singles - what did we learn?
All Britons out of Wimbledon singles - what did we learn?

BBC News

time09-07-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

All Britons out of Wimbledon singles - what did we learn?

In her latest Wimbledon column BBC Sport analyst Naomi Broady - a former top-60 player on the WTA Tour - analyses the performances of the leading British singles players and what they can learn. It is no secret that British players often feel a lot of pressure at Wimbledon. As I well know from my appearances here, you can feel a desperation to perform well because it is the part of the year when a lot of the non-tennis-watching British public watch our wonderful big tennis fans watch the whole year round, but those who don't form strong opinions from what they see at want to show how good you can all of the 23 Britons are out of the Wimbledon singles, let's examine how five of the leading names fared. Jack Draper - early exit but has game for grass How far he went: Suffered a second-round exit, losing to 2017 finalist Marin we learned: Draper still needs a little more time to develop on the into Wimbledon, all the talk was about whether the British men's number one was a contender - he is not an unfair statement to make. It would have been disrespectful if he was not put in that bracket seeing as he is ranked fourth in the world with a big left-handed serve and a big game, plus he was junior runner-up in could not have had a worse draw, though. It was tricky from the start and to play someone with the serve of Cilic on this surface is incredibly bad he can take going forward: The season overall has not gone how Draper would have expected - but in a good Indian Wells on a hard court, then reaching the Madrid Open final on clay, showed the level we have long known he game can naturally fit on grass, but it is tough to expect what we have seen on other surfaces to happen immediately on how short the season is, many people feel quite unsettled at wanted to bring that return position back closer to the baseline. He was aggressive at Queens; we saw him coming forward more. That will benefit his game in the future. Emma Raducanu - showed she can return to top 10 How far she went: Pushed world number one Aryna Sabalenka before losing their third-round we learned: For Raducanu, it was an incredible tournament. Coming into the tournament, she had regained the British women's number one ranking and produced some of her best tennis, beating 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova and playing even better when she went toe-to-toe with Sabalenka in a narrow Vondrousova is one of the few players to win a grass-court tournament this season, Raducanu pushing Sabalenka was the most impressive.I almost felt the winner of Raducanu-Sabalenka could be the winner of the title because the quality of the tennis was some of the best we have seen in the women's she can take going forward: The knowledge she has the game to trouble the said in her Centre Court interview that she thought Raducanu would be back in the top 10 soon - I don't think that was simply a platitude to get the crowd on her in the locker room knows how good Raducanu's game is. They can feel the strength of her shots.I agree with Sabalenka - she will be back in the top 10 soon. Katie Boulter - slipped on banana skin How far she went: Knocked out in the second round with a shock loss to Argentine qualifier Solana we learned: Boulter came through a tough first-round draw against ninth seed Paula Badosa, but faced a banana skin next in against somebody who has nothing to lose and has won so many matches through qualifying - they are floating through the air, feeling light and hitting the ball well - is really you had a ranking by surface, Boulter would be one of the best players in the world on thrives on this surface and nobody is more gutted than her at she can take going forward: Boulter can still reach the second week of a Grand Slam for the first movement has vastly improved and so has her mentality - she is digging in and I don't think she has imposter syndrome as her ranking has moved best results will come on the quick, hard courts, so maybe it is a US Open - where the balls sit up and she can get on top of it, and her serve will still be effective - or on the much of it comes to luck of the draw - if you are seeded and can avoid the big names and someone feeling good. Sonay Kartal - became a crowd favourite How far she went: Reached the fourth round for the first time before losing to Anastasia we learned: While Kartal says clay is her favourite surface, I am not surprised to see her do well on the women's game you often see the players who like the clay do well on the grass because both surfaces react well to spin, albeit opposite types of players who enjoy heavy top-spin on their forehands - like Kartal - often also enjoy hitting their slice can look at Jasmine Paolini and Ons Jabeur, who have both reached Wimbledon finals in recent years, as good examples of players who like variety and lean into their spin more on the she can take going forward: There is still room for improvement. When you look at the recent women who have reached the top 10, you think 'why couldn't Kartal do that?'She is such a sponge. That is why she is moving quickly through the rankings. She is able to be sharp to the pace of the ball and the change of intensity as she starts to play women ranked at the year she has a great opportunity to capitalise on people not knowing the ins and outs of her game she can stay one step ahead when the girls start to find out those weaknesses, and how to counteract that, then she can go much higher. Cameron Norrie - regaining confidence can have trampoline effect How far he went: Made the quarter-finals but came unstuck against defending champion Carlos we learned: Norrie has struggled with his form but I love how he stayed with his team when he was going through a rough many people would point fingers, looking for an easy fix, instead of taking that consistent team shows his mindset and has been a big part of his level has skyrocketed back to where it was and, although Alcaraz was a cut above, Norrie will be proud of proving he can still go deep at the he can take going forward: Even more belief from his runs at the French Open and will always have confidence in his physicality - it is his bread and butter. Now the confidence is coming back into his shots, he can jump back up really game suits hard court more than grass - we saw that when he won Indian Wells in 2021 - and this run could have a trampoline effect for him.

Exact Wimbledon dress code rules for players - and why women had to go braless
Exact Wimbledon dress code rules for players - and why women had to go braless

Daily Mirror

time02-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Daily Mirror

Exact Wimbledon dress code rules for players - and why women had to go braless

The All England Lawn Tennis Club hosts one of the world's most prestigious tournaments and sometimes the players that compete in it have fallen foul of its strict guidelines Wimbledon is in full swing, with the top tier tournament known for its strawberries and cream, the Royal Box and tennis whites. The contest's dress code regulations date back to the 1880s, with the strictly white outfits intended to minimise the visibility of sweat marks. Controversy occurred in 2014, when female players were reportedly instructed to discard bras that violated the strict dress code. Wimbledon 's rules stated that any visible undergarments must be entirely white, with just a single trim of colour no broader than one centimetre allowed. ‌ Several female players that year were said to have been asked to remove bras that didn't meet the strict guidelines. During her second-round match against Caroline Wozniacki, Great Britain's Naomi Broady was reportedly without a bra - although it wasn't clear whether she had been asked to remove it. ‌ In 2017, Venus Williams seemed to swap her bright-pink bra when her match was interrupted by rain, refusing to discuss what happened afterwards. Pat Cash, the 1987 Wimbledon men's champion, wasn't impressed. "Some of the girls have been told to go back and change their bras and tops because they had slight colour on them," he said. "I believe some of the girls didn't have suitable sports bras and had to go without them. It has absolutely gone ridiculous." The veteran champ revealed it wasn't just women who could fall foul of the dress code - men also had to ensure their underwear was white. "One of the players was called into the referees' office because he had blue underwear that showed through when he got sweaty," said Pat. "So he was told not to wear dark underwear." As well as a backlash from players and commentators, a protest group was formed called Address The Dress Code, voicing worries about female players who are menstruating. And in 2022, Wimbledon relaxed its rules to allow women to wear dark-coloured undershorts. Solid, mid or dark-coloured undershorts were allowed as long as they weren't longer than the skirts or shorts worn over them. Sally Bolton, the All England Lawn Tennis Club's chief executive, said the move was intended to alleviate "a potential source of anxiety". "We are committed to supporting the players and listening to their feedback as to how they can perform at their best," she added. "It is our hope that this rule adjustment will help players focus purely on their performance." This year, the 2021 US Open champion Emma Raducanu sparked controversy when she "rocked up in a pink outfit" for a practice training session at Wimbledon, the Daily Mail reports. The All England Club rules state players must wear "suitable tennis attire that is almost entirely white" while on the courts. Other stars falling foul of the dress code include Aussie bad boy Nick Kyrgios, who arrived on court in a pair of red Nike Jordan shoes and matching cap in 2022 before changing into white attire. And Wimbledon legend Roger Federer was once told off for wearing orange-soled shoes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store