
Sabalenka irked by two moments in her semi-final defeat
London
Aryna Sabalenka made a conscious effort to be a gracious loser at Wimbledon, but still took a swipe at new finalist Amanda Anisimova.
World number one and title favourite Sabalenka was beaten 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 by the 23-year-old American Anisimova in a dramatic Centre Court semi-final.
The top seed from Belarus came in for a lot of criticism for her sour grapes reaction following her defeat by Coco Gauff at last month's French Open final.
So she breezed into Wimbledon's media theatre giggling and said: 'You're not going to see a Roland Garros press conference, so anyone who was waiting for that, you can leave right now!' She added: 'I just don't want to face that hate again. I mean, we're all people. We all can lose control over our emotions. It's absolutely normal.
'Even right now I took a bit more time before doing my media just so I can be Aryna, not that crazy person that was on that media day at Roland Garros.'
Nevertheless, a couple of incidents did irk the 27-year-old. The first was a point at 2-3 in the second set when Anisimova seemed to loudly celebrate a winner before the ball was past Sabalenka, which could have been called hindrance by the umpire.
'I was just trying to chase the ball. Yeah, she was already celebrating it. I was, like, I mean, that's a bit too early,' she said.
'Then she kind of p****d me off saying that, 'oh, that's what she does all the time'.'
Anisimova, who will face Iga Swiatek in Saturday's final, responded: 'I don't really know what was the deal there, to be honest, because I didn't feel like it was that interfering. But yeah, I tried to not do it again.'
Then, with Sabalenka 2-4 down in the third, the 13th seed did not apologise after a groundstroke, which may have been floating wide, clipped the net cord and landed in. Sabalenka added: 'I just looked at her and, I mean, for sure she didn't hear me. I was like, 'you don't want to say sorry?' She just wanted, I guess, badly to win this match.'
'It's on her. If she doesn't feel like saying sorry, like she barely got that point and she didn't feel like saying sorry for that tricky situation, that's on her.'
But it is hard to paint Anisimova, who is a keen artist, as the villain of the piece.
Anisimova, who reached her only other grand slam semi-final six years ago in Paris as a 17-year-old, took an eight-month break from the sport in 2023 to prioritise her mental health.
She said: 'I think that's a really special message that I think I've been able to show because when I took my break, a lot of people told me that you would never make it to the top again.'

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


Qatar Tribune
9 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.'


Qatar Tribune
9 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Healy takes yellow jersey as Yates wins stage
PA Media/DPA Paris Irishman Ben Healy rode himself into the yellow jersey with an outstanding display of grit and power as Simon Yates won stage 10 of the Tour de France from a breakaway on the Puy de Sancy on Monday. A monster Bastille Day stage through the Massif Central delivered the fireworks as Healy put in a huge shift in the break to maintain a sizeable gap over the chasing peloton, fighting his way to third on the stage and then counting the seconds until Tadej Pogacar finished. Pogacar put in a late dig as he traded blows with rival Jonas Vingegaard, but when the world champion came in four minutes 51 seconds behind Yates, 4:20 behind Healy, the yellow jersey swapped shoulders with Healy 29 seconds better off going into Tuesday's rest day. Yates profited as he followed Healy's lead for most of the last 20 kilometres, then distanced him on the climb to the finish, but the biggest grin was on the face of the 24-year-old EF Education-EasyPost man who became the fourth Irishman to wear yellow and the first since Stephen Roche in 1987. 'It was insanely tough, it was a battle against myself really,' Healy said. 'I just had to dig deep. My team-mates put in so much work today, Harry (Sweeny) and Alex (Baudin), I really, really wanted to pay them back and I'm happy I could do that in the end. 'I kind of gambled a bit. I had the stage win in the bank and how often do you get the opportunity to put yourself into yellow so I felt I had to take that and really go for it.' With the peloton made to wait an extra 24 hours for their first rest day, race organizers put a monster challenge in their way with eight categorised climbs and 4,500 metres of elevation on the 165km stage from Ennezat - ideal territory for a breakaway. A group of 29 eventually got away but were given little rope until they were whittled down to a more focused group of 17 midway through the stage, with the gap growing sufficiently to give Healy a hope of yellow. He got the message, abandoning the ambition of doubling up on his stage six victory and putting all of his efforts into powering on what became a group of just six riders, maintaining the gap to the peloton at more than five-and-a-half minutes almost until the foot of the 3.3kilometres climb to the finish. That was the moment for Yates, the Giro d'Italia winner who came to the Tour to support Vingegaard, to launch attack, quickly distancing Healy and holding off Thymen Arensman to win his third career Tour stage.


Qatar Tribune
9 hours ago
- Qatar Tribune
Barca sign Swedish teen Bardghji from Copenhagen
PA Media/dpa London Barcelona have completed a deal for exciting Swedish teenager Roony Bardghji. The 19-year-old Kuwait-born winger joins the Spanish champions from FC Copenhagen and has signed until June 2029. Bardghji joined Copenhagen from Malmö in 2020 and went on to play 84 games and score 15 goals for the Danish club. He rose to prominence in the 2023-24 season, scoring a dramatic late Champions League winner against Manchester United in a 4-3 victory. Bardghji subsequently suffered a serious knee injury that left him on the sidelines for nearly a year. Barcelona said on the club website: 'As a wide player, Bardghji is known for his one-on-one skills, his ability to dribble past opponents and his effectiveness in front of goal. 'His presence on the right wing can, therefore, make the difference and provide more dynamism.'