logo
Keys open to rare double but Sabalenka lies in wait

Keys open to rare double but Sabalenka lies in wait

Yahoo2 days ago
Madison Keys' Australian Open victory in January was hailed as a breakthrough success for a player who had long been touted for a grand slam triumph but never realised it.
At 30, the American is young enough to build on that win, but not so young that she can take her time, and she wasted little in beating Olga Danilovic 6-4 6-2 to reach the Wimbledon third round on day three of the championships.
The 37th-ranked Danilovic battled hard, saving five break points in one game in Wednesday's second set, but Keys always looked in control.
After declaring the record-breaking opening day heat "quite toasty" the Florida resident said of the cooler conditions: "I definitely felt a little more comfortable today, it's the cloudy, rainy England we know and love so I felt a little more normal."
The third round awaits 💪Madison Keys defeats Olga Danilovic 6-4, 6-2 to continue a confident start on return to #Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/nQ53AJnrt0
— Wimbledon (@Wimbledon) July 2, 2025
Keys is seeking to emulate her teenage inspiration, Serena Williams, in achieving the relatively rare AO-Wimbledon double.
Williams did this four times, but only three other players have won both events in the same calendar year since the Australian Open moved from grass to hard courts in 1988.
Of those only Amelie Mauresmo, in 2006, has done so in the 21st century.
Steffi Graf (1988 & 1989) and Martina Hingis (1997) are the others while most recently Ash Barty held both titles but won Wimbledon in 2021 and the Australian Open in 2022.
With three of the top five seeds eliminated on Tuesday Keys is a serious contender, though Aryna Sabalenka, the woman she defeated at Melbourne Park, lies on the horizon.
The pair are slated to meet in the quarter-finals after the No.1 seed beat Marie Bouzkova 7-6 (7-4) 6-4 on Centre Court.
Sabalenka looked at risk of a shock herself after her 48th-ranked French opponent broke her to serve for the first set at 6-5. But Sabalenka broke back, took the tiebreak, and was never threatened again.
Two more seeds were evicted, Paris Olympic silver medallist Donna Vekic and former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez.
Vekic, seeded 22 and a semi-finalist here last year, went down 6-1 6-3 to Spain's Cristina Busca while Canadian 29th-seed Fernandez was beaten by German Laura Siegemund 6-2 6-3.
Elsewhere rising Brit Sonay Kartal beat Bulgarian Viktoriya Tomova 6-2 6-2,
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan
The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan

Forbes

time9 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan

Sean Rhyan (75) started all 17 games at right guard for the Green Bay Packers last season. The Green Bay Packers went 11-6 last season, sweeping the NFC West and the AFC South along the way. Overall, though, no one in the building was happy. The Packers failed to build on their terrific finish to the 2023 campaign, settled for the No. 7 seed in the NFC playoffs, and lost a Wild Card game to eventual Super Bowl champion Philadelphia. Afterwards, general manager Brian Gutekunst turned up the heat on everybody in the building. 'We need to continue to ramp up our sense of urgency,' Gutekunst said. 'I think it's time we started competing for championships.' Those are fair expectations. The Packers return 20 of 22 starters, and appear to have upgraded the roster via free agency and the draft. With several third and fourth year players trending upward, Green Bay should be poised to make a move. 'I think they're ready,' Gutekunst said. Now, it's time for the Packers to prove their G.M. right. Green Bay's first training camp practice is July 23. Between now and then I will count down the '30 Most Important Packers' heading into the 2025 campaign. At No. 19 is right guard Sean 19 Sean Rhyan, RG Last season Rhyan started all 17 games at right guard and had a respectable season. Rhyan allowed four sacks, had six penalties, and allowed 24 pressures. Rhyan's pass blocking grade from Pro Football Focus was 69.4, which ranked 38th out of 136 guards. His run blocking grade was 58.4, which ranked 87th. Rhyan split time with 2024 first round draft pick Jordan Morgan the first two months. In early November, though, Morgan was placed on the injured reserve list with a shoulder injury and Rhyan played all but eight snaps in the final 10 to date Rhyan, a third round draft pick in 2022, was suspended the final six games of his rookie season for violating the NFL's policy on performance-enhancing substances. That ended a dismal rookie year in which Rhyan played just one snap, and that came on special teams. Rhyan started the 2023 season where he spent the 2022 campaign — on the bench. By midseason, though, he had impressed enough during practice and began platooning with former Packer Jon Runyan. From Week 9 on, Rhyan played 183 snaps at right guard, didn't allow a sack and didn't have a penalty. According to league data, the Packers averaged 0.78 more yards per rushing attempt with Rhyan on the field versus when he wasn't in the lineup. Rhyan (6-5, 325) has unique athleticism for a guard, impressive strength and is incredibly bright. Rhyan's vertical jump of 34-1/2' was No. 1 among all guards at the NFL Combine in 2022. He set shot put and discus records while attending San Juan Hills High School (Calif.) and qualified to play on the feeder team for the Olympic USA rugby team. Rhyan also posted a 29 on the 50-question Wonderlic test, which is eight points higher than the NFL average. Rhyan was a starter at left tackle from the day he arrived at UCLA, starting 31 games during an impressive career with the Bruins. Rhyan earned freshman all-American honors after starting 12 games in 2019, and was named first-team all-Pac 12 in 2021. While Rhyan's hands are extremely large (11 1/8'), his arm length (32 3/8') was in the bottom 10% of guards in his draft All indications are the Packers will give Morgan every chance to unseat Rasheed Walker at left tackle. That means Rhyan could have firm hold on the right guard position, for now anyhow. If Morgan loses out at left tackle, the Packers could let him battle with Rhyan again. Rookie second round draft pick Anthony Belton could also factor in. But Rhyan — a tough, physical, athletic player — will be tough to dislodge. Rhyan is also entering a contract year, as are fellow offensive linemen Zach Tom and Walker. The Packers could lock Tom up with a long term deal before the season begins, but Rhyan's future remains Said It … 'As the season's been progressing, he's just getting better and better. He's still got things to work on fundamentally, but he just seems more comfortable, more confident. In the run game, he's doing a really good job finishing his blocks and just being physical at the point of attack. So yeah, it's been fun to watch.' — Packers offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich on Rhyan last season'I'm a bigger guy. I know that they want me to move guys and I think being able to run the ball as good as you can pass the ball in this league I think is really an advantage. Some guys will just, ehhh, and then pass pro they're (expletive) All-Pro. But I think if you can do both as an O-line, I think that's great. And that's what I would like to be really good at, both run and pass as opposed to better at one than the other because I think running the ball is hugely important.' — Rhyan on his run blocking mentalityTHE TOP 30 • No. 30 — RB MarShawn Lloyd • No. 29 — WR Dontayvion Wicks • No. 28 — S Javon Bullard • No. 27 — WR Savion Williams • No. 26 — LB Isaiah McDuffie • No. 25 — OL Jordan Morgan • No. 24 — WR Matthew Golden • No. 23 — CB Carrington Valentine • No. 22 — WR Romeo Doubs • No. 21 — QB Malik Willis N0. 20 — DE Lukas Van Ness

Investor Deborah Meaden At Wimbledon: No Net Zero Without Nature
Investor Deborah Meaden At Wimbledon: No Net Zero Without Nature

Forbes

time9 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Investor Deborah Meaden At Wimbledon: No Net Zero Without Nature

Deborah Meaden in the Royal Box on day four of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships at the All England ... More Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London. Picture date: Thursday July 3, 2025. (Photo by John Walton/PA Images via Getty Images) 'Protect nature, and net zero kind of happens," was the message that renowned entrepreneur and investor Deborah Meaden shared during an environment-focussed session at the Wimbledon Championships yesterday. Meaden is known for her advocacy on sustainable investing and now only invests in organisations that both have a strong business case to be profitable, but also operate in someway to reduce planetary impact and create jobs. She shared her personal journey with nature, frustrations with current corporate approaches, and called businesses and sports leaders to action. In a climate discourse led by emissions targets and carbon accounting, Meaden wants nature to feature too. Deborah Meaden speaks during the environmental panel discussion event Nature Cannot Be Taken For Granted Just over half of global gross domestic profit or 58 trillion dollars, is moderately or highly dependent on nature. The Wimbledon environment session took place on day four of the grand slam, with climate and nature being front of mind, following the hottest opening day ever-recorded at the Championships. Extreme heat impacting both the performance and business of sport is something we are now seeing much more frequently. Nature has 'been so generous to us," Meaden shared. 'We're just sucking the life out of it and right now, we just need to pay it back a little bit.' Abbie Dewhurst, Deborah Meaden, Bear Grylls, and Rita Maria El Zaghloul take part in an ... More environmental panel discussion in the Parkside Suite in No.1 Court Meaden was joined on the panel by winner of The 2024 Earthshot Prize, director of High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People, Rita Maria El Zaghloul. Leading a coalition of countries calling for the protection of 30 percent of our land and ocean by 2030, she shared when talking with governments this isn't just an issue from an environmentalist perspective. 'It's really an issue that's it's across all the sectors, it's related to our food system, it's related to our economies.' This reflects thinking from other key business leaders. 'Today businesses treat nature as if it is free and unlimited. It is time for boards, under their director's duties, to dismiss current fake financial profits that take nature for granted," Earth on Board founder, Philippe Joubert recently told me. Sustainability Can't Sit in a Silo Meaden pulls no punches when it comes to corporate action, or inaction. While she sees promising work from startups who begin with sustainability at their core, she believes some businesses still treat sustainability as a side project. 'I don't believe a business is serious until I can walk into any department and they can explain what they're doing for the environment," she shared. 'Until sustainability is discussed in the boardroom, not as an 'any other business' item, I don't believe the business is serious,' she went on. 'In business, we make decisions all day. We need to slide nature into those filters.' What Has Nature Go To Do With Business and Sport? Business leaders and influencers came together to talk about nature at the tennis, but what has sport got to do with nature, environmental protection, investment and business? 'Sport has people's attention, you know, that's ultimately it, isn't it?' shared British adventurer, television presenter and former SAS trooper, Bear Grylls, who also spoke at the event. Wildflower bank on the Aorangi practice courts at Wimbledon 'If you care about the environment, you care about people. You, that's a solution the world needs, whether you're leading Wimbledon, whether we're leading our own lives, big businesses, inspiring young people, you know, I think it all comes back to leadership and the values we want to be known for in our lives.' Wimbledon Championships 'aspire to deliver a positive and sustainable impact on our economy, society and the environment in support of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals.' This is evident to attendees of the grand slam through visible signage across the venue encouraging environmentally friendly-behaviours. Reusable cups and recycling areas are ubiquitous, 100 free water refill stations are available, living walls and wildflower and nature areas that attract pollinators abound. Used tennis balls made into art to absorb sounds in the cafe, and in the shops new products made from upcycled leftover merchandise from previous years is available, bringing the circular economy to revenue streams. The All England Lawn Tennis Club plan to expand their site to include bring qualifying to the famous SW19 postcode, by converting a private golf course to a green space of which half would be open to the public. Thas been met by some local opposition. For investors and corporate leaders, embedding nature into core business strategy isn't just ethical, it's economically essential. As global markets wake up to the financial risks of biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse, forward-looking companies are already shifting toward nature-positive investing and climate-resilient models. Deborah Meaden's headline take away of 'protect nature, and net zero kind of happens'highlights a growing understanding that natural capital underpins financial capital. Whether you're allocating assets or shaping strategy, climate and nature risk are business risks, and the organisations that recognise this now will be the ones leading tomorrow.

Wimbledon: Naomi Osaka loses to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the 3rd round
Wimbledon: Naomi Osaka loses to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the 3rd round

San Francisco Chronicle​

time10 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Wimbledon: Naomi Osaka loses to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the 3rd round

LONDON (AP) — Naomi Osaka might be more comfortable on grass courts these days but she will once again leave Wimbledon in the third round after a 3-6, 6-4, 6-4 loss to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova on Friday. Osaka is a former No. 1 now ranked 50th and a four-time Grand Slam champion, all on hard courts — she won the U.S. Open and Australian Open twice apiece. Osaka arrived at the All England Club this year having lost three of her last four matches at the place and with a career record of 5-4 there. Her best showing was getting to the third round in 2017 and 2018; she missed the tournament in 2021, 2022 and 2023. From 4-all in the third set, Pavluchenkova grabbed eight of the match's last 10 points, holding at love, then breaking in the final game with the help of a trio of forehand unforced errors by Osaka. 'A majority of you were cheering for Naomi, but that's OK,' Pavlyuchenkova, who turned 34 on Thursday, told the crowd at Court No. 2. 'I'm mentally tough, so that didn't bother me at all. The opposite: It gave me energy.' Pavlyuchenkova, who is ranked 53rd, was the 2021 runner-up at the French Open, and Friday's victory moved her into the fourth round at Wimbledon for the first time since she was a quarterfinalist nine years ago.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store