Sabalenka fights off Raducanu, Alcaraz marches on, Keys and Osaka crash at Wimbledon

Sabalenka fights off Raducanu, Alcaraz marches on, Keys and Osaka crash at Wimbledon
Aryna Sabalenka, left, shakes hands with Emma Raducanu at the end of their women’s singles third round t on the fifth day of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships on Friday. (AFP)
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Updated 05 July 2025

Sabalenka fights off Raducanu, Alcaraz marches on, Keys and Osaka crash at Wimbledon

Sabalenka fights off Raducanu, Alcaraz marches on, Keys and Osaka crash at Wimbledon
  • A record 36 seeds in the men’s and women’s singles failed to reach round three and the upsets continued Friday as women’s sixth seed Madison Keys and four-time major winner Naomi Osaka departed

LONDON: Women’s top seed Aryna Sabalenka fought off inspired home favorite Emma Raducanu in a cauldron-like Center Court atmosphere to keep her Wimbledon quest on track but it was the end of the road for two other Grand Slam champions on Friday.

Sabalenka edged a ferocious contest under the roof after requiring eight set points in the opening set and then roaring back from a 4-1 deficit in a sizzling second.

“Wow! What an atmosphere, my ears are still hurting, it was super loud,” a relieved Sabalenka said on court after wrapping up the win on her third match point.

Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz, chasing a third successive Wimbledon title, was also put through the wringer by Germany’s Jan-Lennard Struff before sealing a last-16 spot with a 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 win.

A record 36 seeds in the men’s and women’s singles failed to reach round three and the upsets continued on Friday as women’s sixth seed Madison Keys, the Australian Open champion, and four-time major winner Naomi Osaka departed.

Japan’s Osaka looked every bit the Grand Slam great for a set before losing 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 to Russia’s Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova. American Keys racked up 31 unforced errors in a 6-3, 6-3 loss to Germany’s Laura Siegemund, at 37 the oldest woman left in the singles draw.

Sabalenka is the only top-10 seed left in the top half of the draw and, with only three remaining in the bottom, she might be starting to think this could be her year.

If she does win the trophy to add to her two Australian Opens and one US Open, she will look back on Friday night under the Center Court roof as perhaps the turning point.

Had she lost the opening set the partisan crowd might well have roared former US Open champion Raducanu to victory.

Even after clinching the first set with a deft volley, Sabalenka found herself in trouble as 40th-ranked Raducanu blazed ahead and had a point for a 5-1 lead. But she then switched on the after burners to overwhelm the flagging Briton.

“Emma played such incredible tennis and she pushed me really hard to get this win,” said the 27-year-old Belarusian. “I had to fight for every point to get this win.”

Home hopes

Raducanu’s loss ended hope of a British hat-trick on day five after Sonay Kartal and Cameron Norrie sailed through to the last 16 in impressive fashion.

Local favorite Kartal moved on with a remarkable display against French qualifier Diane Parry, claiming nine games in a row to come from 1-4 down to win 6-4, 6-2.

Norrie kept the home flag flying in the men’s singles by beating Italian Mattia Bellucci 7-6(5), 6-4, 6-3 to set up a meeting with Chilean qualifier Nicolas Jarry, who overcame Brazilian wonder kid Joao Fonseca 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 7-6(4).

Kartal had earlier reeled off nine games in a row after a slow start to beat French qualifier Diane Parry 6-4, 6-2 and set up a clash with Russian Pavlyuchenkova.

French Open winner Alcaraz extended his winning run to 21 matches by beating Struff but it was a Jekyll and Hyde performance as he again showed vulnerability.

“I was suffering in every service game... 0-30s and breakpoints down. It was stressful. Every time he could push me, he did. I was trying to survive,” Alcaraz said.

The 22-year-old will face Russian 14th seed next after he beat French qualifier Adrian Mannarino 7-5, 6-2, 6-3.

Taylor Fritz, Ben Shelton and Amanda Anisimova ensured there would be some Fourth of July celebrations for Americans.

After being taken the distance in his first two matches, fifth seed Fritz had a slightly easier ride as he beat Spain’s Alejandro Davidovich Fokina 6-4, 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-1 to reach the last 16 where he will face unseeded Australian Jordan Thompson.

Despite spending more than nine hours on court, Fritz said he felt fresh ahead of his Sunday assignment with Thompson.

“This is going to sound crazy,” said Fritz, who has been suffering tendinitis in his knee and had to deal with a bruised arm after a fall. “My body is actually feeling better after each match. I feel like somehow it felt the worst after my first round but now it’s getting better.”

Anisimova, the 13th seed, also reached the fourth round with a 6-3, 5-7, 6-3 win over Hungarian Dalma Galfi.

Shelton, who was left seething after his second-round clash with Rinky Hijikata was suspended late on Thursday with him about to serve for the match, needed around one minute to finish the job on Friday, hitting three aces and an unreturned second serve to take his place in the last 32.

French showman Gael Monfils also had to resume his match but the 38-year-old could not prevent a 6-4, 1-6, 4-6, 7-6(5) 6-4 defeat by Hungary’s Marton Fucsovics.

“I don’t really know. I wish I could win this match today but that’s sport. I’m going to rest a couple of days and go back on court and try to be ready for the US tour.”

It was the end of the road for Monfils’s wife Elina Svitolina too as the Ukrainian 14th seed fell 6-1 7-6(4) against 24th seed Elize Mertens.


Abhishek fires India to win over Pakistan in Dubai but no handshakes again

Abhishek fires India to win over Pakistan in Dubai but no handshakes again
Updated 1 min 14 sec ago

Abhishek fires India to win over Pakistan in Dubai but no handshakes again

Abhishek fires India to win over Pakistan in Dubai but no handshakes again
DUBAI: Opener Abhishek Sharma hit a blazing 74 as India beat Pakistan by six wickets and again refused to shake hands with their opponents in the Super Four clash of the Asia Cup on Sunday.
Chasing 172 for victory, India rode on a 105-run opening stand between the left-handed Abhishek and Shubman Gill, who made 47, to achieve their target with seven balls to spare in Dubai.
The rivals came into the contest of the regional tournament with tensions high after India angered Pakistan by also refusing to shake hands when the pair met in the group stage.
Tempers flared on the field when Gill and Shaheen Afridi exchanged simmering glances after the batter hit the pace bowler for a boundary.
Both Abhishek and Gill came out roaring with a flurry of boundaries to unsettle the Pakistan attack as they raced to 101-0 in 9 overs.
Abhishek and Haris Rauf kept up the spice with a fiery exchange.
“Today was pretty simple, the way they were coming out to us without any reason, I did not like it at all,” Abhishek said after being named player of the match.
“That’s why I went after them. I wanted to deliver for the team.”
Medium-pace bowler Faheen Ashraf bowled Gill, and Rauf in the next over took down skipper Suryakumar Yadav for a duck to check India’s surge.
Abhishek fell to Abrar Ahmed’s leg spin after his 35-ball blitz laced with six fours and five sixes.
Rauf took one more wicket but Tilak Varma, with his unbeaten 30 off 19 balls, steered the team home off a six and a four.
The Indian batters quickly left the field while Pakistan players shook hands among themselves.
“We are yet to play a perfect game, but we are getting there,” said Pakistan captain Salman Agha. “A great game but in the powerplay (first six overs) they took the game away from us.”

- Gun celebration -

India won the toss and fielded first, but Pakistan came out attacking as Sahibzada Farhan, who hit 58, and Saim Ayub, who made 21, put on 72 runs for the second wicket, to help their team reach 171-5.
Fakhar Zaman opened with Farhan and started aggressively in his nine-ball 15 before being caught behind.
Farhan kept up the charge as he hit five fours and three sixes in his 45-ball knock as he reached his fifty with a six and celebrated by using his bat to mimmick a gun.
India hit back with three wickets, including Farhan who was dismissed by medium-pace bowler Shivam Dube, as Pakistan slipped to 115-4.
Mohammad Nawaz made 21 before he was run out.
Agha, on 17, and Faheem Ashraf, with 20 off eight balls, struck 22 between them to boost the total.
Dube stood out with figures of 2-33, but Indian fielders had a day to forget as they dropped four catches.
India beat Pakistan in their group match, which was the first cricketing clash between the rival nations since a four-day cross-border conflict in May left more than 70 people dead.
Andy Pycroft turned out as match referee for the Super Four match in spite of Pakistan lodging a protest with the International Cricket Council, alleging that the Zimbabwean had told Agha not to approach Suryakumar for a handshake.
The Pakistan Cricket Board demanded that Pycroft be removed from their matches and threatened to withdraw from the eight-team T20 competition.
Because of fraught political ties, nuclear-armed neighbors India and Pakistan only meet at neutral venues during multi-team tournaments.
Sri Lanka and Bangladesh are the other teams in the Super Four. The top two will move into the final on September 28.

Newcastle held to third straight away draw

Newcastle held to third straight away draw
Updated 9 min 23 sec ago

Newcastle held to third straight away draw

Newcastle held to third straight away draw

BOURNEMOUTH: Newcastle United were held to a 0-0 draw at Bournemouth in the Premier League on Sunday in a dull game of few chances as the visitors remain winless on the road.

Although Newcastle kept a third straight clean sheet on the road, it was also a third consecutive goalless draw that left Eddie Howe’s side 13th in the standings with six points while Bournemouth moved provisionally up to third on 10.

Howe made several changes to his lineup in search of his first league win against his former side, but despite a lively start from both teams, the first half lost momentum with injury stoppages and ended with few clear chances.

Newcastle had a penalty appeal waved away when Nick Woltemade had his shirt tugged, and Justin Kluivert nearly won it for Bournemouth with a free kick in added time, only for Nick Pope make a fine save.

Elsewhere, in Italian football, Lorenzo Pellegrini fired Roma to victory in the derby with Lazio on Sunday, the former captain coming in from the cold with the only goal in a 1-0 win at a boisterous Stadio Olimpico.

Roman-born Pellegrini lost the captaincy of his boyhood club and was placed on the transfer list over the summer, but he was decisive against Lazio in his first appearance of the season and put Roma fourth in Serie A on nine points.

Ahead of kick-off fans unfurled a banner which read “welcome back, captain” for Pellegrini who also had to have surgery for an injury to his right thigh in May.

“I never doubted their affection for me and I have a lot of love for them too,” said Pellegrini to DAZN.

“The one constant is that I love Roma, and as long as I’m here there will never be a day in which I won’t give everything for the shirt.

“I don’t know what will happen in the future because life is unpredictable ... I was close to leaving and I had no idea in what condition I would be after my injury, but I come back in the derby and scored the winning goal.”

Sunday’s 38th-minute strike was Pellegrini’s fourth in a Rome derby and repaid the faith shown in him by new coach Gian Piero Gasperini, who started the 29-year-old in one of Roma’s biggest games of the season.

Gasperini seemed to have frozen out Pellegrini who has 36 caps for Italy but on Saturday hinted at a place in the derby, while making it clear the player was on borrowed time unless he “becomes an athlete and starts running.”

And after the derby win he doubled down on Pellegrini needing to improve physically as Roma prepare to begin their Europa League campaign at Nice on Wednesday.

Lazio are stuck on three points from their first four matches of the season but could have easily come away with a point from a typically tense derby, even after losing Reda Belahyane to a straight red card.

Matteo Guendouzi made matters worse for 13th-placed Lazio when he was sent off for a rant at officials after the final whistle.

The only serious efforts before Pellegrini’s winner were from distance by Pedro and Mattia Zaccagni, the latter tipped over by Mile Svilar just before the half hour.

Lazio’s Nicolo Rovella burst down the right and sent across a teasing low cross which dribbled in front of the Roma goal but was too far away from his onrushing teammates.

Pellegrini stroked home his first goal since January after Devyne Rensch robbed a dozing Nuno Tavares and Matias Soule perfectly fed the Italy international for a first-time finish.

Roma pressed high in the hope of forcing mistakes from Lazio but it was the nominal away team who left a huge gap through which Boulaye Dia charged in the 54th minute only to blast over when one-on-one with Svilar.

Dia’s replacement Valentin Castellanos then whizzed a deflected effort just wide, before Danilo Cataldi came within millimeters of snatching a draw in stoppage time when his curling effort struck the outside of the post.


Max Verstappen wins in Baku as Piastri crashes out, Sainz hails podium as career best

Max Verstappen wins in Baku as Piastri crashes out, Sainz hails podium as career best
Updated 21 September 2025

Max Verstappen wins in Baku as Piastri crashes out, Sainz hails podium as career best

Max Verstappen wins in Baku as Piastri crashes out, Sainz hails podium as career best
  • Verstappen leads every lap to win in Baku, Piastri crashes on opening lap, lead slashed to 25 points
  • Norris starts and finishes seventh with Russell second, Sainz third
  • McLaren kept waiting for 10th constructors’ title

BAKU: Red Bull’s Max Verstappen cruised to a dominant Azerbaijan Grand Prix victory while Oscar Piastri crashed on the opening lap and had his Formula One lead over McLaren teammate Lando Norris slashed to 25 points.

McLaren had hoped to secure their 10th Formula One constructors’ title, and second in a row, on Sunday with a record seven rounds remaining but must now wait until Singapore on October 5 after their lowest scoring weekend of the season.

George Russell finished second for Mercedes, who moved up to second place and 333 points behind McLaren with 346 still to be won, and Carlos Sainz third for Williams’s first podium finish since 2021.

Norris started and finished seventh in what will rank as a missed opportunity, with six points gained on his rival but his chances of more scuppered by a slow 4.1-second pitstop for the second successive race.

VERSTAPPEN WINS SECOND RACE IN A ROW

The win was Verstappen’s second in a row and he led every lap from pole to flag, also setting the fastest lap for a “Grand Slam” that revived his slim title hopes with the reigning champion now 69 points behind Piastri.

He took the chequered flag 14.609 seconds clear of Russell, after being more than 32 seconds clear before taking his pitstop.

“I think this weekend has been incredible for us,” said Verstappen after his 67th career win, fourth of the season and second in Baku after a 2022 victory. “For us to win here again is just fantastic.

“We had clean air all the time and you could then look after your tires. And yeah, it was pretty straightforward.”

Russell, recovering from sickness and starting fifth on the grid, was happy to see a rough weekend finish strongly while Sainz — voted driver of the day — was the happiest man on the podium.

“I cannot describe how happy I am and how good this feels. It tastes even better than my first ever podium,” said the Spaniard, a four-times race winner with Ferrari who had started on the front row.

The big story came on the opening lap when Piastri, who crashed in qualifying and started ninth, jumped the start and went to the back of the field before plowing into the wall at turn five.

The uncharacteristic errors ended the Australian’s record of being the only driver to score in every race this season and also put the brakes on a run of 34 races in the points.

He had not failed to finish a race since his 2023 rookie season.

“Certainly not my finest moment,” the 24-year-old told Sky Sports. “I just anticipated the start too much and yeah...silly simple error really.”

CAREER HIGH RESULT FOR LAWSON

Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli was fourth for Mercedes, redeeming himself after a poor home race weekend at Monza, with New Zealander Liam Lawson enjoying a career-high fifth for Racing Bulls.

Yuki Tsunoda was sixth for Red Bull with Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc following Norris home in eighth and ninth, with the pair swapping places on team orders because Hamilton had fresher tires.

French rookie Isack Hadjar made it a double points finish for Racing Bulls in 10th.

Piastri’s crash brought out the safety car, a regular feature of races in Baku, and provided the main drama of the 51- lap race around the windy city streets where the threat of a downpour failed to materialize.

Norris lost a place to Hadjar and was then passed by Leclerc when the race re-started after the safety car period.

The Briton followed Leclerc past Hadjar, whose car had suffered an hydraulics problem before the start, and could have passed both Leclerc and Lawson had his pitstop not cost him critical seconds.

He ultimately passed Leclerc with 10 laps remaining but was unable to find a way past Tsunoda.

“I did the best I could yesterday, the best I could today,” said Norris.

“Every race I didn’t win was an opportunity missed, so of course today I wanted more. It was not a good result, but I couldn’t do anything more today.”


India again refuse handshake with Pakistan at Asia Cup

India again refuse handshake with Pakistan at Asia Cup
Updated 21 September 2025

India again refuse handshake with Pakistan at Asia Cup

India again refuse handshake with Pakistan at Asia Cup
  • India won the toss, opted to field first in the Super Four match at the Dubai International Stadium
  • India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have qualified for the Super Four stage of the Asia Cup

DUBAI: India captain Suryakumar Yadav once again chose not to shake hands with Pakistan skipper Salman Ali Agha at the toss ahead of their Asia Cup match on Sunday, as animosity between the bitter rivals rumbled on at the eight-team tournament.

The Asia Cup has been dominated by headlines about India and Pakistan’s first meetings on the pitch since the military conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May this year.

India won the politically-charged Group A match by seven wickets last week, and their players refused to shake hands with their Pakistan opponents after the match.

Suryakumar dedicated India’s victory to their armed forces, while several of his teammates took to social media to express similar thoughts.

Furious Pakistan considered withdrawing from the tournament to protest against match referee Andy Pycroft, who they say condoned unsportsmanlike behavior by India.

They delayed their match against United Arab Emirates by an hour on Wednesday and only went ahead with the game after an apology from Pycroft and the assurance of an inquiry by the International Cricket Council (ICC).

India won the toss and opted to field first in the Super Four match at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium in the United Arab Emirates.

India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have qualified for the Super Four stage of the Asia Cup. The final will be played on September 28.


All you need to know about the DP World ILT20 Season 4 Player Auction    

 All you need to know about the DP World ILT20 Season 4 Player Auction     
Updated 21 September 2025

All you need to know about the DP World ILT20 Season 4 Player Auction    

 All you need to know about the DP World ILT20 Season 4 Player Auction     
  • Franchises can spend between $1.5m and $2m to build their squads, with a minimum purse of $800,000 available on the day 
  • Auction is in Dubai on Oct. 1 at the Four Seasons Hotel, Jumeirah Beach

DUBAI: The much-anticipated DP World ILT20 Season 4 Player Auction will be held in Dubai on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025, at the Four Seasons Hotel, Jumeriah Beach.

The auction will bring together all six franchises as they look to complete their squads for the upcoming season, following their retention picks that were announced in July. The season will kick off on Dec. 2, 2025 and conclude on Jan. 4, 2026.

The event will be the DP World ILT20’s first player auction, a landmark moment in the league’s journey.  

Auction rules  

Each franchise will have a purse of $800,000 to spend at the auction plus whatever spend remains unused from the $1.2 million that was available for direct signings and retentions.  

At the end of the auction, each franchise must have spent a minimum of $1.5m and a maximum of $2m. They may also spend an additional $250,000 on as many as two wildcard players outside the auction. 

All franchises must have a minimum of 19 players and a maximum of 21 players by the end of the auction (excluding wildcards). Within this there must be a minimum of 11 players from ICC Full Member countries, four from the UAE, one from Kuwait, one from and two from other ICC Associate Nations.  

Player registration  

The minimum base price for all players is $10,000. Players may also have a base price of $40,000 or $80,000.  

The DP World ILT20 player registrations were completed between July and September. 

The final list of available players will be circulated to franchises before the auction. 

If a player is injured, receives an international call-up or does not receive a no-objection certificate, they may be replaced at any time until the end of the league phase of DP World ILT20 Season 4. Replacement players do not need to have been featured in the player auction. 

Auction mechanics  

Players will be allocated sets on account of status (i.e. full member/associate player/UAE player/Kuwait player/ player) and specialisation. DP World ILT20 may at its discretion determine to group players by whether they are capped or uncapped and may include a marquee set(s). Full member players will be drawn first.  

Within the sets, players will be drawn at random, and the auctioneer will read out the player’s name and his base price. The auctioneer will then invite bids until there are no further bids. Following the conclusion of all sets, if franchises still have room in their squad, they may request players who have not been signed to return to the auction (accelerated rounds).  

Once all franchises have spent their minimum total spend and have fulfilled their minimum quotas for each type of player and do not wish to sign any more players, the auction will be concluded.  

UAE player Right to Match  

Franchises can exercise one Right to Match option for a UAE player that has been in their development squad or has played for them in DP World ILT20 Season 3. 

This can only be used once in the auction. Only UAE players are eligible for the Right to Match option.