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Yahoo
29 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Canadian teenager Mboko stuns Gauff in Montreal
Teenager Victoria Mboko produced the shock of the tournament as she defeated top seed Coco Gauff to reach the quarter-finals of the Canadian Open in Montreal. The 18-year-old Canadian, who was handed a wildcard entry into the main draw, needed just 62 minutes to defeat the two-time Grand Slam champion 6-1 6-4 and continue her meteoric rise up the rankings. Mboko converted four of five break points against Gauff and has now dropped just one set in four matches at the tournament. "Coming into the match, I was so locked in," Mboko said. "I tried to keep my composure as much as I could, especially playing in front of so many people. This is a very special experience for me." She began the year ranked 333rd in the world, and proceeded to win 22 successive matches without dropping a set on her way to securing five titles on the second-tier ITF Tour. Mboko entered the tournament ranked 85th, but victory against Gauff will move her up to 53rd, and in the quarter-finals she will face Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, ranked just two places higher. Gauff once again struggled with her serve, committing six double faults to take her tournament total to 43 in three matches. "I think she's going to have a lot of success on tour. I'm sure we're going to have many more battles in the future," Gauff said. Meanwhile, second seed Iga Swiatek cruised into the last 16 with a 6-2 6-2 victory against Eva Lys. In Toronto Casper Ruud suffered a 6-4 7-5 defeat against Karen Khachanov, before top seed Alexander Zverev advanced to the quarter-finals with a walkover victory against Francisco Cerundolo. Fifth seed Holger Rune threw away an early lead to lose 6-4 2-6 3-6 to Australian Alexei Popyrin. Live scores, results and order of play Get tennis news sent straight to your phone


Fox News
31 minutes ago
- Fox News
The Quiz #486 - The Sultan Of Sweat
Who was the first Major League Baseball player to hit 60 home runs in a season? Play. Share. Listen with host of FOX Across America and FOX News Saturday Night, Jimmy Failla.


Forbes
31 minutes ago
- Forbes
As Thomas Müller, Son Heung-Min Eye MLS, ‘Messi Effect' Is Irrelevant
Of all of the potential summer moves that could materialize in MLS, two of the likeliest and presumably closest to completion involve former Bayern Munich star Thomas Müller and former Tottenham Hotspur standout Son Heung-Min. Müller has reportedly all but completed an agreement to join the Vancouver Whitecaps, according to GiveMeSport's Tom Bogert, the MLS' unofficial transfer authority. He also reports with colleague Ben Jacobs that Son is close to a pact to become LAFC's newest signing. While the city of Müller's final destination is a bit of a surprise, his move to MLS was widely expected after he was not extended at Bayern. Son's departure from Spurs is a bit more sudden, but it was fairly expected that LAFC would make a high-profile signing of some sort in the summer window. Yet there is a rush in some corners of the MLS fan landscape to give Lionel Messi's presence in the league credit for drawing each player's interest. Any cursory review of MLS history prior to Messi reveals such a notion is absurd, of course. But it's worth dignifying with a response in part because it illustrates one of the downsides of welcoming a figure as dominant as Messi who the face of your league. Messi is obviously the most-important signing in MLS history: There's only two players during the entire lifespan of the league who have had as lofty a reputation in the global game – Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo – and Messi's reputation has grown above Ronaldo's since helping Argentina win the 2022 World Cup. The Stars Before Messi At the same time, while Messi has succeeded in convincing other stars to join him as a Miami teammate – i.e. Jordi Alba, Sergio Busquets, Luis Suarez and now Rodrigo de Paul – there's no evidence his presence has played a major role in 29 other clubs pursuing big stars. Provided their deals become final, Müller and Son are likely to be very good MLS players. But so were many other similar former European stars who came to MLS before Messi's 2023 arrival, who had similar profiles. As a reminder, he is a partial list of 20 such players, which doesn't include any big-name American or Mexican stars who returned from European endeavors: All but two of these players arrived in the last 20 years, and most of them arrived in the last 10. If anything, the addition of Müller and Son should be seen as rescuing what could've felt like a disappointing window, in which potential MLS targets like Kevin de Bruyne, Antoine Griezmann and Paul Pogba chose other options. But for a large segment of those who currently follow MLS, it may feel like Messi is actually having an influence when it's just what MLS and the U.S. have to offer that actually makes the league attractive. And that's a problem for the post-Messi era of MLS. Because for this whole experiment to work, at some point the league needs to reap the benefits of the Argentine star while also establishing an independent identity. Reminders Of Pelé And The NASL This was arguably part of what the old NASL's problem ran into in the years following Pelé's New York Cosmos tenure. Just like Messi today, Pelé was 1 of 1 during the late 1970s in terms of the attention he could capture. Even if the league had been doing the work of building itself for a decade before Pelé's arrival, once he played from 1975 to 1977, he was the league. The NASL never really found a coherent post-Pelé identity, which may have been one reason it collapsed under the weight of its own ambition (and unwise spending) by 1984. Looking at MLS now, you can imagine why. If normal-level MLS star signings are suddenly attributed to Messi's influence, what is to stop Messi being credited for investment in MLS academies, or future stadium projects, possible MLS expansion, or other initiatives that have far deeper roots than his relatively short salvo in Miami? Fair or not, a chunk of the public assumes that Messi's presence represents a moment that is being uniquely siezed. And MLS can respond to that expectation by taking brave new risks, or by going about business as usual and seeing it called brave and new. The reaction to Müller and Son suggests the latter is occuring. And while that may feel risk-averse, the danger is that it results in a regression of standards and expectations when the Messi era comes to an end. That would be the exact opposite outcome of what his MLS tenure was supposed to bring.