
LIVE: Djokovic vs Sinner – Wimbledon semifinal; Alcaraz vs Fritz
The match on Centre Court begins at 1:30pm (12:30 GMT).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Qatar Tribune
11 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Sinner's coach expects ‘amazing' Alcaraz rivalry to ‘get better'
PA Media/DPA London The best of the rivalry between Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz is yet to come, according to the Italian's coach. Sinner triumphed in the latest instalment of the new battle at the top of men's tennis, gaining revenge for his heartbreaking loss in the French Open final five weeks ago by claiming a first Wimbledon title. The world number one fought back from a set down to defeat Alcaraz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 on Centre Court, ending the Spaniard's 24-match winning run and hopes of claiming a third straight Wimbledon title. They have shared the last seven grand slam trophies between them, with Sinner now boasting four major titles to his rival's five. Australian Darren Cahill, who has worked with Sinner for three years and previously coached Lleyton Hewitt, Andre Agassi and Simona Halep, said: 'The quality of Roland Garros I think was one of the best matches I've ever seen in the 25 years I've been a coach and a player. 'The rivalry I think is amazing already, and I think it can get better with both these players pushing each other. 'I do think there's some other younger players coming through that will punch their way through the door, so it won't just be a two-man show. Which we look forward to as well and are excited about. 'I have fingers crossed that they're going to have a great 10 or 15 years to go, and they'll have some more amazing matches.' Six of the top 10 are aged 23 or under, with Britain's Jack Draper, American Ben Shelton, Dane Holger Rune and Italian Lorenzo Musetti all looking to challenge Sinner and Alcaraz, while 18-year-old Brazilian Joao Fonseca broke into the top 50 for the first time on Monday. But there is no doubt the top two are currently a significant level above their rivals - Sinner has almost twice the ranking points of Alexander Zverev in third despite serving a three-month doping ban this year - and both put a special focus on each other. 'I would say that we are preparing him for the field, not just for one player,' added Cahill. 'But Carlos is a big focus, and both of those guys are pushing each other. 'I would say that Jannik watches more Carlos matches than he does anybody else because he's fascinated with the improvements that are coming in his game, and he's pushing us as coaches to make sure that he's improving also as a tennis player.' A potential blow to Sinner could yet be averted, meanwhile, with the 23-year-old telling Italian media that, by winning the final, he won a bet with Cahill allowing him to decide whether the Australian should reverse his decision to retire at the end of the season. Sinner and Alcaraz will now take a well-earned break before turning their attention to the North American hard-court swing, culminating in the US Open at the end of August, where Sinner will be the one bidding to retain his title. By winning Wimbledon and ending a five-match losing streak against Alcaraz, Sinner has cemented his position as number one and now holds three of the four major titles. Alcaraz retains a healthy lead at the top of the Race to Turin, which only counts points from 2025, and he must look to avoid the sort of letdown that affected him following his loss to Novak Djokovic in the Olympic final last summer. 'It's a different feeling,' said the 22-year-old, who suffered his first grand slam final loss. 'Last year in the Olympics I was really bad emotionally after the match. In the last year I've been through different situations (and) I learned from them. I just lost a final in a grand slam, but I'm really proud about being in a final.' Sinner, meanwhile, expects his rival to take a leaf out of his book and bounce back strongly. 'Even (in the final) I felt like he was doing a couple of things better than I did,' said the Italian. 'So that's something we will work on and prepare ourselves because he's going to come for us again. There is not only Carlos, but everyone. We have a big target on us, so we have to be prepared.'


Al Jazeera
16 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Cricket: England win dramatic Lord's Test against India by 22 runs
England beat India by 22 runs on a final day of simmering tension and high drama in the third Test at Lord's to move 2-1 up in the best-of-five series. Shoaib Bashir bowled Mohammed Siraj for four to seal victory, India's number 11 playing a defensive stroke before the ball trickled down the face of his bat and rolled on to the stumps as he watched on in disbelief. As the England players celebrated wildly late on Monday, Ravindra Jadeja trudged off the field after making a valiant unbeaten 61 to take India to the brink of an extraordinary win. The hosts had looked on course for a far more comfortable victory when they reduced India to 112-8 at lunch, but Jadeja and Jasprit Bumrah battled for nearly two hours to inch their team towards a target of 193. Jadeja was given out leg before wicket to Chris Woakes by the umpire. But the decision was overturned on review, and the left-hander heaved the next delivery over mid-wicket for six, prompting loud cheers from the Indian fans. England finally made the breakthrough when Bumrah, on five, skied an attempted pull off Ben Stokes and was caught by substitute fielder Sam Cook. The majority of the crowd erupted with a mixture of joy and relief, but Jadeja continued to frustrate England, reaching his 50, off 150 balls, by edging Stokes over the slips for four. Siraj survived 30 deliveries for his four runs as Jadeja farmed the bowling and took a succession of singles off the fourth ball of the over to dominate the strike. Siraj suffered a painful blow to his shoulder after being struck by a Jofra Archer delivery and shortly afterwards his resistance was finally broken. A good morning for England England had claimed four wickets in the morning to take charge of the match after India resumed on 58-4. Rishabh Pant played an extraordinary one-handed straight drive for four off Archer to move to nine, but the fast bowler responded two balls later with an excellent delivery which uprooted his off stump. Stokes snared KL Rahul lbw for 39, the England captain dropping to his knees and imploring the umpire to give him out. He refused to do so, but England called for a review and the decision was overturned to huge cheers from the crowd. Washington Sundar was next to fall for a duck, Archer leaping to his right to take a superb one-handed catch off his own bowling. Jadeja and Nitish Kumar Reddy frustrated England with solid defence in a partnership of 30 until Woakes found the edge of Reddy's bat just before lunch to give the hosts a huge lift as they left the field to warm applause from a packed crowd. The fourth Test will begin on July 23 at Old Trafford in Manchester.


Qatar Tribune
a day ago
- Qatar Tribune
Sinner new Wimbledon champion
Revenge proved a dish best served on grass for Jannik Sinner as he put his Paris heartbreak behind him to claim a first Wimbledon title on Sunday. Only five weeks have passed since Carlos Alcaraz stunningly saved three match points in a French Open final fightback for the ages but his hopes of a third straight victory at the All England Club were dashed by his great rival. This time it was world number one Sinner, who becomes the first Italian to win a Wimbledon singles title, that came from behind, claiming a 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 victory in three hours and four minutes – nearly two-and-a-half hours quicker than their Roland Garros epic. (DPA) page 12