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EXCLUSIVE Emma Raducanu admits she was 'BURNED' by the fame after historic US Open run as Briton opens up on her 'smaller than ever' circle as she reveals plan to get back to her best

EXCLUSIVE Emma Raducanu admits she was 'BURNED' by the fame after historic US Open run as Briton opens up on her 'smaller than ever' circle as she reveals plan to get back to her best

Daily Mail​06-05-2025

It sometimes feels as though ever since the 2021 US Open, Emma Raducanu has been trying to recapture the spirit of that schoolgirl who swept to the title. Perhaps it should come as no surprise, then, that the 22-year-old version of that kid has a yearning to dust off her textbooks.
'I'm going to start studying more,' says Raducanu, in a joint interview with Mail Sport and the Guardian at the Italian Open. 'I think I need that. I've missed it for the last few years. I need something to stimulate and engage my brain so my entire life isn't just tennis.'
Will this be formal study? 'I haven't decided yet. I think so. Whether I take my third A level, whether I go into a degree, I feel like I need some sort of pressure and adrenaline in that area of my life.
'Growing up, I always had tennis as an escape from studying and studying as an escape from tennis. So it wasn't just my entire life, my entire personality dependent on this one thing.
'I loved studying and I still do. I love those moments on my own, quiet reading in the library, figuring things out myself.
'In this life, where it's so busy and there's so many people around, as you see (she gestures around the buzzing terrace of the Foro Italico) it's nice to have that little retreat.
'Solving problems, getting a certain grade on an exam… your self esteem isn't just reliant on a win or a loss.'
What would that third A Level be (to go with maths and economics)? Raducanu considers. 'English, politics or physics,' she says.
The subject arose from a question about Carlos Alcaraz's new documentary. The Spaniard said his greatest fear is for tennis to become an obligation - has the sport ever felt like that for Raducanu since her title in New York?
'Yeah, I would say there have been times I felt that,' she says. 'The last few years of my career have been a big, big learning curve.
'I don't have all the answers now but I feel like I'm starting fresh. I want to do things in a different way. I'm working to see what I can do to bridge the gap between where I am now and the top of the game.
'I'm working on a few things, in my game and off the court, setting up my life in different ways.'
It is no wonder Raducanu, a naturally curious and introspective soul, has been thinking things over recently.
A lot has happened this year. A back spasm which ruined her pre-season. The departure of trusted coach Nick Cavaday for health reasons. The terror of being stalked across four countries. A coaching trial with Vlado Platenik which ended after just two weeks.
The upshot of that abrupt parting from Platenik in Miami was an on-the-hoof partnership with Mark Petchey.
What began as a stop-gap has become a more permanent, if informal, arrangement, and Raducanu talks for the first time about how that alliance came about.
'It happened completely by chance,' she says. 'It was almost fate. I was working with Vlado and I just knew it had to come to an end. Mark was already in Miami, commentating, and I bumped into him in one of the corridors. He's someone that I trust so we were just talking. It was a bit of both: it was me being scared to ask, can you help? And it was him not wanting to push himself.'
Once again, Raducanu has reverted to someone who has known her before her Grand Slam triumph. Also in Rome is Jane O'Donoghue, her childhood coach turned financier. Raducanu reveals that O'Donoghue has taken a couple of months off her job in the city to be here for the clay court swing and into the grass. She has previously only done a week here and there.
Raducanu knows her own mind and is fiercely loyal to those who knew her before fame and fortune.
'I am very independent and that definitely comes from my mum,' she says. 'She's the strongest person I know, has gone through so much in life and she's always taught me to rely on people as little as possible.
'But sometimes you do need to lean on people. I have become less afraid to do that.
'It takes a lot for me to open up. I haven't truly opened up to many people in my life.
'Once I let someone in, I let them in fully, and I care for them so much. I have been burned a few times, a few people who I've really trusted have surprised me.
'It's very difficult for me to trust new people. I find myself gravitating towards those people I've known before the US Open. My circle is smaller than ever.
'Up until I won the US Open, I was so sheltered. Up to 18, I was just with my parents. It was like nothing could touch me. And then all of a sudden everyone came and I got burned quite a lot of times, whether that's professionally or personally. Now I'm very Fort Knox with who I let in.'
Raducanu's path of self discovery continues as she grows up under the beam of a most intent spotlight. She begins her Italian Open campaign on Wednesday against a qualifier.

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Ciao Venice! Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's guests bid goodbye to Italian city the morning after final party of 72-hour wedding extravaganza
Ciao Venice! Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's guests bid goodbye to Italian city the morning after final party of 72-hour wedding extravaganza

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ciao Venice! Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's guests bid goodbye to Italian city the morning after final party of 72-hour wedding extravaganza

Oprah Winfrey and Kris Jenner led the star-studded departures from Venice on Sunday morning, following the final party on Saturday night of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez 's three-day wedding extravaganza. Described as the 'wedding of a century,' the 61-year-old Amazon founder and the former journalist, 55, exchanged vows in front of nearly 200 VIPs on San Giorgio Maggiore island in Venice, Italy, on Friday. The nuptials began on Thursday with the first of three days of parties in Venice, followed by the intimate ceremony on Friday and then a star-studded rave. Around 200 of the world's wealthiest people were gathering for a final night's fun, before bidding their goodbyes to the Italian city the following morning. Kris, 69, and Oprah, 71, walked arm-in-arm down the dock, alongside Gayle King and Kris' boyfriend Corey Gamble. Described as the 'wedding of a century,' the 61-year-old Amazon founder and the former journalist, 55, (pictured) exchanged vows in front of nearly 200 VIPs on San Giorgio Maggiore island in Venice, Italy , on Friday Bezos, worth £177billion, has taken over the Italian city for a wedding estimated to have cost up to £40million, small change for the world's third richest man. But 700 demonstrators gathered at Santa Lucia railway station carrying protest banners and waving inflatable crocodiles. The demo was organised by the No Space For Bezos group, with some carrying Amazon boxes with the words: 'Ordered, Shipped, Delivered, Rejected.' But Bezos and Sanchez cared not a jot. It was the second marriage for both and they have seven children between them. Earlier, they blew kisses on a visit to Harry's Bar – and give a first glimpse of their understated wedding rings. Sanchez's simple wedding band was in stark contrast to the 30-carat $3million pink diamond she sported after Bezos asked her to marry him two years ago. In the run-up to Friday's ceremony, that sparkler was switched to her right to make way for an upgrade – an even larger, brilliant-white diamond, estimated at 35 carats and worth $10million. But impeccable sources reveal that the billionaire were already legally married, with a source closely connected to the organisation of the week's events saying: 'They have been married for at least a month, more than a month. 'The marriage is fully legal and took place in America under American law.' The source adds: 'When they were planning the wedding, they were clear about the fact that they were already secretly married. There is no application for a wedding license from the couple because it was not required. 'Whatever happens at the wedding on Friday, it will not be a wedding. Under Italian law, it will not be a wedding celebration, any vows said or rings exchanged will have no legal meaning.' The source added that Bezos had personally confirmed that he and Sanchez – who met when both were married to other people – are already legally married, and that they had also signed a pre-nuptial agreement to protect his $244 billion fortune. Vogue later released a set of pictures with a braless Sanchez posing in her new husband's unbuttoned wedding shirt. The Dolce & Gabbana tuxedo shirt was similar to the one he wore at Friday's ceremony. The photoshoot took place earlier this month, the day after Sánchez and Bezos were at the Dolce & Gabbana atelier in central Milan for their final fittings. She revealed her wedding dress was inspired by the high-necked lace wedding dress Sophia Loren wore to marry Cary Grant in the 1958 film Houseboat. She told the magazine that a few conventions were to be honoured, including the groom not seeing the bride just before the wedding day. Her Dolce & Gabbana Alta Gioielleria Miracolo earrings, four diamonds cut from a single stone and inlaid in white gold, were her something borrowed. Her something blue was from Blue Origin, the spaceflight she took with five other women, including the singer Katy Perry, that was arranged by Bezos. Sánchez said she carried a secret souvenir up in the rocket so she could bring it back for Bezos 'because it was one of the most profound experiences I've had in my life.' She credited her new husband for 'transforming my life'.

‘Jack Draper will win big, big titles': Jannik Sinner on bromance with British No1
‘Jack Draper will win big, big titles': Jannik Sinner on bromance with British No1

Telegraph

time40 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

‘Jack Draper will win big, big titles': Jannik Sinner on bromance with British No1

Jannik Sinner was in a snoozy mood. He must have yawned three or four times while I was interviewing him, which does not say much for the originality of my questions. But one subject sparked his interest. Asked about his friendship with Jack Draper – the latest British hero to enter the labyrinth of Wimbledon – Sinner perked up noticeably and leaned forward. From the beady look in his eye, he could have been preparing to return serve. 'You're lucky to have a player like him,' said Sinner, the top seed and world No 1. 'After Andy [Murray], they need someone big. He [Draper] is someone big, and he's someone who is going to stay there for a very, very long time.' It was an unusually emphatic statement from Sinner, a low pulse-rate sort of fellow who is as understated as the young Bjorn Borg. But then his relationship with Draper is clearly heartfelt. 'One of the best friends I have on the tour,' he explained of Draper, a man he once taught to cook pasta during a moment of downtime on the Challenger circuit. 'We are quite similar in the way we make a lot of sacrifices to be the best we can. 'He came also, when I was banned. He came to Monaco to practise there and everything was great. But now things are … are a bit different, because, you know, he's No 4 in the world.' 'Aha,' I said, sensing a possible grey area in Sinner's neatly organised world. 'Does that mean you can't practise with him any more?' 'OK, it's harder to practise with him all the time,' Sinner acknowledged. 'You share less things on court, I guess. You don't want to show him much, you know, in the practice sessions. And he's not gonna show me the real tennis either. It is a bit complicated. 'But it doesn't mean that the friendship goes away completely. It's maybe the opposite. We talk about playing doubles in the future, and we grab dinner at times. 'Jack has grown so much,' Sinner concludes. 'Physically, he's strong. Mentally, he's very, very good. I truly believe he is going to win some big, big titles.' Sinner's enthusiasm stems from a long association with Draper on the junior tour, as well as a shared sense of humour. A mutual friend explains that 'You don't see the real Jannik unless you really know him, but he's actually very funny in private and has a mickey-taking side that British people appreciate.' Delving into the archives, Telegraph Sport found photographic evidence of this childhood connection. A group shot from the 2013 Nike Junior World Tour shows an 11-year-old Draper grinning broadly in the front row. Meanwhile Sinner stands in a patch of shadow, peering through a gap between two other boys, and rocking a bushy red mullet. Their positioning in that photo feels deliberate. Sinner was a literal backmarker at the time, having only recently taken up tennis at the expense of skiing (a sport where he once finished second in the national giant-slalom for juniors). Progress was slow at first, and Draper recently described a teenage doubles encounter where 'we were saying 'Hit to him [Sinner, who was 15 at the time], because he's not the best player on the court!'' But as Sinner whizzed through the rankings like a snowboarder on a black run, the two men developed a close bond. 'We send each other messages in good moments, bad moments,' Draper explained last year. 'You're on the road, you're playing such a relentlessly intense sport, and we haven't got many friends. So to have the support of someone who's going through it themselves is really big.' How very wholesome. For better or for worse, the relationships at the top of modern tennis seem positively collegiate these days, especially by comparison with the vitriolic rivalries of the 1980s and 90s. Remember McEnroe versus Connors? Or how about Sampras v Agassi? During this week's interview, Sinner revealed that he had also sat down with Novak Djokovic after their initial competitive encounter – which came in Monaco in 2021 – to ask for a detailed assessment of his own game. As Sinner recalled, 'Novak said, 'Yeah, good player, but you were too predictable at times.'' It was generous of Djokovic to offer such assistance, and arguably he has paid the price, with Sinner now leading their head-to-head by five wins to four. As Sinner's coach Darren Cahill put it in a recent interview, 'it [the meeting] left a big impression on a young player. For Jannik, it was 'Let's start doing these changes.'' When you combine the unrivalled depth and pace of Sinner's bread-and-butter groundstrokes with the additional grace notes he has developed in recent years – touch volleys, drop shots and slices – you come away with a kind of tennis Terminator: a T1000 who just keeps rumbling forward, no matter what you throw at him. There is only one other player who can stand up to such relentless bombardment. Three weeks ago, in the French Open final, Sinner's fast-twitch style collided with the wizardly improvisations of his greatest rival Carlos Alcaraz. They battled for almost six hours, and although Sinner lost, the margin of victory was just a single inch: the overlap between Alcaraz's forehand and the baseline on one of Sinner's three unconverted match points. 'I went home with my parents, with my friends,' said Sinner, when asked how he had processed that gigantic let-down. 'We had barbecues, played some ping pong, you know, trying to forget. But it was a very special match. The audience need rivals. It's part of history now, and I'm very happy that I was part of it.' We were speaking on the Wimbledon terrace, high above Court No 3. As I fired off questions, Sinner lounged in a comfy chair, his long body stretched almost parallel to the ground like human spaghetti. All elbows and angles on the court, he is contrastingly languid off it: a man saving his energy for when he needs it most. Sinner is an unusual Italian, with his red hair and pale skin, but then he grew up in South Tyrol – the Alpine skiing paradise where German is the first language. The last time we met, during 2023's World Tour Finals, I asked him whether he empathised with Andy Murray in the sense of being an outsider in his own country. But he shot me down quickly, pointing out that he had left home aged 13 to train with coaching savant Riccardo Piatti at an Italian academy near Monaco. 'I had all Italian people surround me,' he insisted, 'so I feel now fully Italian.' As we chatted this week, three members of the Lavazza team looked on. The Italian coffee brand is proud to have had an association with Sinner since 2018, when he was just another teenage wannabe. And the Lavazza family were more than happy to assist him directly in February, at the start of his three-month doping ban. The family house in Monaco happened to boast a 'backyard clay court' – in Cahill's words – which was one of the few places where Sinner was allowed to train. Only in April did the terms of his suspension relax, whereupon Draper's arrival for a training block coincided with an upgrade to the famous Monte Carlo Country Club. 'We asked Jack if he could come,' Sinner recalled of that week, 'because I needed some feedback from the best players in the world. And it was good for me to see I was still quite rusty. Day by day, we tried to work on things, trying to go to Rome with certain feelings. After some time, we found it.' Sinner's clean-cut image was undoubtedly damaged by his two positive tests for the banned steroid clostebol, which he justified by explaining that his physical trainer had contaminated him during a massage. After initially being cleared of all charges, he later accepted a three-month ban from the World Anti-Doping Agency on the grounds of 'strict liability'. The convenient timing of the ban, which did not affect Sinner's participation in any grand-slam events, caused disquiet among certain members of his peer group, even if others – including Draper – defended him staunchly. The public response was also mixed, although fortunately Sinner says that 'I am not the kind of person who is on social media for an hour every day… There are weeks when I am zero on it.' When I asked him about the abusive online messages that disappointed gamblers send to players after each defeat, he looked unmoved. For one thing, the world No 1 doesn't lose many matches. For another, he is not a great one for screens, unless he is playing Fifa on his PlayStation. He is more interested in his cars and his kitchen, where he indulges a very Italian passion for cooking – his signature dish is tiramisu. 'I don't think we can stop this social-media thing,' Sinner said, 'because it's so big and it's very difficult. But yeah, my advice is always to just take the phone away. I have the most important people on WhatsApp, and that's all I need.' Jack Draper, we can assume, is one of them.

‘You don't feel intimidated walking into a padel club': can British tennis embrace its upstart cousin?
‘You don't feel intimidated walking into a padel club': can British tennis embrace its upstart cousin?

The Guardian

time42 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘You don't feel intimidated walking into a padel club': can British tennis embrace its upstart cousin?

Wimbledon, a fortnight of tennis, all-white dress codes, strawberries, Pimm's, royals and its famous queue all awaits. What will probably be absent at the All England Lawn Tennis Club, however, is any mention of tennis's upstart cousin, padel. Unlike Roland Garros in Paris, which set aside a court for this cross between tennis and squash, there is no planned promotion of padel in SW19, something which may seem curious given that the racket sport is one of the fastest growing in the world. But then again, tennis has not exactly embraced the newcomer. Take the grumblings of seven-time Wimbledon champion Novak Djokovic, for example, who has voiced fears that club tennis is 'endangered' by venues converting tennis courts into smaller padel, or pickleball, courts, because it's more economical. Easier than tennis, with no overarm serve required, and fans including Andy Murray, Rafael Nadal, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, the UK has seen a trebling of people playing over the last year, with 400,000 taking to about 893 courts across 300 venues. Eight million Britons expressed a desire to try it, according to a recent survey by the LTA (Lawn Tennis Association). Padel organisers are hoping Wimbledon will see an even greater boom, as those inspired by the tennis but too intimidated to try, pick up a perforated padel racket instead. In anticipation, Plymouth city council has a pop-up court next to its big screen showing Wimbledon. Londoners can head to Tower Hill, where pop-up padel runs until October. At St Paul's Cathedral, padel courts open from 4 August. So why can't the two sports get along? Fears that padel's popularity is to the detriment of tennis were highlighted with news this week that the indoor courts at the Olympic tennis centre are be replaced by padel. It had, the Times reported, prompted backlash from 'extremely livid' users and wheelchair tennis players. The Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis Centre in east London said the conversions were to 'grow participation across all ages', but within two days 650 people had signed a petition calling for a reversal of the decision, a decision that was labelled 'disappointing' by the LTA, the national governing body for both sports in the UK. Padel, usually played in doubles, was invented in Mexico in the 1960s, and requires a walled court 25% smaller than tennis. Tennis, though, remains the bigger sport. About 9.5 million people in the UK played tennis at least once last year, with roughly 2.6 million adults and 1.6 million children playing it monthly. Compared to the 150,000 said to play it monthly, padel has a way to go. Both sports are seeing 'significant growth', said Olly Scadgell, the LTA's managing director of tennis and padel development. 'Padel is smaller, but growing quickly.' Despite Djokovic's doom mongering, most tennis clubs are investing in padel where they have spare land, underutilised tennis courts or courts that require refurbishment, he said. 'What we're not seeing is padel cannibalising tennis participation.' The new audience was good for tennis clubs, said Scadgell. What the LTA is keen to avoid is the conversion of indoor tennis courts, of which there is a lack in the UK, five times fewer than in France. It is aware that the financial returns padel can drive means a number of facilities may be considering this, and 'we're having open dialogue about what the options might be for them'. It is working with local authorities to find the most appropriate spaces for padel. The LTA wants to 'grow padel in a controlled way' to avoid a wild west scenario, and not to repeat Sweden's example 'where the growth of padel was exponential, with too many padel facilities built too closely together, and what you're seeing now is a number of them closing,' said Scadgell. Mark Hewlett, chief executive at Soul Padel, which builds and operates padel centres and venues, believes 'evolution, not revolution' is required. By integrating padel, tennis clubs can diversify revenue stream and widen their demographic, with no jeopardy to tennis. 'I think tennis and padel can live as mutual bedfellows.' 'Padel is like the cool, surfy, skateboarding version of tennis. You haven't got that elitism, exclusive feel to padel.' He added: 'You don't feel intimidated walking into a padel club, whereas you can in certain tennis clubs.' 'In Italy and Spain, where padel is probably most popular, you've got the world's two best tennis players, in [Jannick] Sinner and [Carlos] Alcaraz. So there's something going very right for tennis and padel in those two countries. I don't think one needs to exist to the detriment of the other.' Neil Percival, director of UK Padel, the largest provider of padel tournaments in the UK and which owns several clubs, believes organisations and venues will use Wimbledon 'to showcase padel as a fun form of tennis'. 'Most people still haven't tried padel. Now they are at a point where they are thinking about trying it,' he said. 'What padel will do for tennis, it will allow people who have never been interested in tennis to play padel, a form of tennis. That is already happening. If it attracts people to tennis clubs as well, that's an enormously positive thing for the overall game of tennis.'

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