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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Wimbledon men's final between Sinner and Alcaraz on ESPN draws most viewers since 2019
Jannik Sinner 's victory over Carlos Alcaraz was the most-viewed Wimbledon men's final since Novak Djokovic edged Roger Federer in a five-set thriller in 2019. ESPN said Sunday's match averaged 2.9 million viewers, a 31% increase over last year's final and its best performance since about 3.8 million watched Djokovic win a fifth-set tiebreaker in a match between two of tennis' greatest champions. The network also said Tuesday that ratings were up for the both the men's and women's semifinals. The women's semis, which included American Amanda Anisimova upsetting No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, averaged 897,000 viewers, the most since 2015, when Serena Williams was part of the final four. The men's average of 1.31 million was the highest since 2019. ___ AP tennis:


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Crystal Palace fans launch fierce protest against UEFA's decision to kick them from the Europa League - as they march with flares and GRAFFITI Selhurst Park
Crystal Palace fans launched a flare-fuelled rebellion outside Selhurst Park to denounce their exile from the Europa League - and their favourite chant was 'f*** UEFA'. Hundreds of irate supporters marched through the south London streets on Tuesday waving banners, chanting, and turning the air smoky and red with pyrotechnics. Palace qualified for the Europa League after winning the FA Cup in May but have been 'demoted' due to UEFA's multi-club ownership rules. The issue was that John Textor owned stakes in Palace and French club Lyon, who also earned their place in the tournament. Textor has since sold his 43 per cent stake in Palace in a desperate bid to rectify the issue, but that came months after UEFA's deadline of March 1 to show proof of multi-club ownership restructuring. Eagles fans held aloft a banner which read 'UEFA. Morally bankrupt. Revoke the ruling now.' They even graffitied the exterior of the stadium, with a message on one wall reading 'UEFA mafia'. Palace are appealing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport - the highest authority possible - in a bid to overturn the ruling. Their only ever European venture has been in the 1998 Intertoto Cup, so a Europa Conference League campaign would still be exciting for Palace fans. But the chance to play in the Europa League - and through that have a decent shot of qualifying for the Champions League - is an opportunity they feel they fully merit. As things stand, it appears as if Nottingham Forest, who qualified for the Conference League via the Premier League, will take their place in Europe's second-tier competition. As Mail Sport revealed, Palace officials jetted to UEFA headquarters last month to plead their case. Competition rules mean that, in instances where one person has control over multiple clubs which qualify for the same European tournament, the one which finished higher in its domestic league takes the slot. Palace's issue was that Textor, the US businessman whose Eagle Football Holdings has the majority stake in the club, also had the majority share of Lyon. And because Lyon finished sixth compared to Palace's 12th, they took the slot. Some fans branded UEFA the 'mafia' as they graffitied their own stadium, Selhurst Park Palace had argued that Textor, who subsequently sold his 43 per cent stake for £190million to Woody Johnson, had no say in the running of the club. However, the failure to take action to separate Textor from the club before UEFA's March 1 deadline landed them in an administrative nightmare. A very reasonable argument is that, before that date, Palace would have had little inkling that they would make European competition. At the end of February, Palace were 12th in the Premier League and were awaiting a last-16 FA Cup clash with Millwall in the FA Cup on March 1. Oliver Glasner's men had to get through Millwall, Fulham, Aston Villa, and Manchester City to win their first major trophy and qualify for Europe. Chairman Steve Parish told Sky Sports: 'We're devastated. It's a bad day for football. It's a terrible injustice. I do believe nobody want to see this. I don't think Uefa wants to see this. 'We've been locked out of a European competition on the most ridiculous technicality. Supporters of all clubs should be devastated for us. 'Everyone knows we're not part of a multi-club set-up," added Parish. 'We don't share any staff. We're caught up in a rule that wasn't put there for us. I don't understand why the panel has come to the conclusion they have done. I think we've shown John had no influence over our club. 'This is a ludicrous decision. We will ask the appeal court to listen to our argument. 'In 15 years I've never had an email from UEFA, not one. They sent a notification that this rule change was coming to info@ Nobody saw it so they kept sending it again and again and again. This was in January.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Williamson ready to put Arsenal friendship aside for Blackstenius and Sweden test
Leah Williamson has described Arsenal teammate Stina Blackstenius as an 'incredibly powerful footballer' as the pair prepare to go head-to-head in the Euro 2025 quarter-final between England and Sweden. 'She's a great player and she has been for many years now,' said the England captain. 'Her experience speaks for itself. We were celebrating her success at Arsenal, but not so much now. We'll see. Stina is an incredibly powerful footballer and very intelligent with her runs. She's a hard player to play against in that respect.' The two players were on the same Arsenal side in May when Blackstenius scored the winner against Barcelona in the Champions League final. And trying to separate the friendship they have when they step on to the pitch in Zurich on Thursday can be challenging. 'It's different because playing each other in training comes with restrictions, it's rare that I get to play against Stina in this setting. I enjoy it, I like Stina,' Williamson said with a grin. 'It's tough to remove all of that to just go at it, you don't want to focus on it too much, there's lots of things that come into play when you play against a teammate, but I think I've known Stina long enough now that I know who she is and it's time to focus on us.' As a centre-back, Williamson will be directly up against her club colleague, but she is wary of pinpointing Blackstenius's threat alone. 'When you have a team who work for each other like Sweden, then you don't need to necessarily have a crazy standout threat because everyone plays their roles,' she said. 'They are hard to prepare for in that sense. The discipline for them all to complete their jobs on the pitch makes them a dangerous side.' Williamson's focus in this tournament is staying present, replicating her mantra of the 2022 Euros. 'I want to enjoy it and spend time with my teammates,' she said. 'It's a great environment and I love being around them all. Beth Mead was laughing at me the other day because I did the day in the life of her, which meant I didn't go back to my room and I was very sociable. By the end of the day I slept good. 'I said to her: 'I don't know how you do this every day,' and she said: 'This is my every day'. I said: 'Yes, it's crazy to me, I'm not that type of person'. But it's little things like that, just trying to be around more. In 2022 I slept most of the time that I wasn't on a pitch so yes, a bit different this time.' Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion There is also praise for Jill Scott's presence, with the influential character having retired after the 2022 Euros. 'We can't get rid of her,' joked Williamson. 'I've already had a couple of conversations this tournament with Jill, one-to-one. She's a funny character, but she can be serious and she has so many experiences of her own and an incredible perspective, she does actually help us out. When she retired we were begging for somebody to employ her within the FA just to bring her along. I'm glad that she is here and she's found a way to be here. It's only ever a positive thing for the team. She's one of the greatest teammates I've ever had.'