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Novak Djokovic joins Roger Federer in exclusive Wimbledon men's club

Novak Djokovic joins Roger Federer in exclusive Wimbledon men's club

Independent05-07-2025
Novak Djokovic brought up a century of Wimbledon wins as he moved smoothly into the fourth round.
The 38-year-old eased past fellow Serbian Miomir Kecmanovic 6-3 6-0 6-4 on Centre Court.
Djokovic is now just five wins behind Wimbledon's only other male centurion, his great rival Roger Federer on 105 match victories.
'Very historic, it sounds very nice,' he said. ' Tennis made me who I am, it has given me incredible things in life so I try not to take anything for granted, especially at my age and trying to compete with the younger players.
'Wimbledon is a favourite tournament, not just for myself but for most players. Any history I make at my favourite tournament, I'm blessed.'
Apart from being broken when he served for the match, it was a pretty routine display for the seven-time champion, although one spectacular diving backhand volleyed winner after a lung-busting rally will make the highlights reel.
That shot thrilled the Saturday SW19 crowd and a host of sports glitterati in the Royal Box including Sir Geoff Hurst, Sir Steve Redgrave and Lord Botham.
The Centre Court punters could be forgiven for feeling a little short-changed, however, after three one-sided contests.
Certainly the 11pm curfew was never in danger after Jannik Sinner dropped just five games against Pedro Martinez and Iga Swiatek beat Danielle Collins in straight sets, before Djokovic disposed of his 25-year-old countryman in an hour and 47 minutes.
Djokovic, bidding for a record 25th grand slam title, will face Australian 11th seed Alex De Minaur in his 17th appearance in the last 16 at Wimbledon.
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Lee Westwood: European tour banned me then asked me to promote Ryder Cup
Lee Westwood: European tour banned me then asked me to promote Ryder Cup

Telegraph

time35 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Lee Westwood: European tour banned me then asked me to promote Ryder Cup

Lee Westwood's first visit to Royal Portrush was in 1993 when he was one of the favourites to win the Amateur Championship. His mother, Trish, stepped in as caddie. 'It peed down and she didn't keep the clubs dry,' Westwood recalls. 'I didn't qualify for the matchplay stages and I told Mum it was her fault. She told me that she had managed to keep my nappies dry for all those years. There is no arguing with that.' Two years later, Westwood played in his first Open Championship and on the 30th anniversary of his debut the memories are coming back to the 52-year-old. 'It was at St Andrews, the Home of Golf, so it was intimidating enough waiting to get on that first tee in front of the Royal and Ancient clubhouse and everything. 'We were in the group behind Arnold Palmer and he was playing with Ian Baker-Finch [the 1991 champion]. Well, Baker-Finch hit that hook that has become infamous. It's the widest fairway in golf and he hits 180 yards left over the first fairway, over the 18th fairway and out of bounds, where no pro had ever been before or since. 'There were a few gasps, then dead silence. It was eerie and I'm stood there saying to my caddie, 'for f--- sake, he won this a few years ago and if the pressure gets to him...'' Westwood 'bunted' his down the fairway, made his par and 'managed to suppress the vomit'. 'It was great after that. The Old Course invariably gets clogged up so every tee I'd be able to have a chat with Arnie. It was his last ever Open, so we had the best view of him waving goodbye on the Swilcan Bridge on the Friday. 'It was emotional, because I mean, what a guy. I can't remember what we talked about, but I do remember two years later when I should have won his tournament at Bay Hill [the PGA Invitational on the PGA Tour]. 'I think I finished double-bogey, bogey, double-bogey and, as tradition dictates in that event, I went over and shook Arnie's hand at the back of the green. Ernie [Els] ended up winning and afterwards I was with Ernie in the bar and Arnie walked in and joined is. After a few vodkas he clocks it was me and said: 'It's you – you finished terribly. But then you walked up the hill, smiling and shook my hand. If that was me, I'd have been chewing the f------ grass.' Quality.' Westwood in this mood is one of the best listens in the game and no doubt when he meets up his old friends at the Dunluce Links this week, the yarns will burst forth. Yet Westwood insists he will not be at Portrush simply to catch up with pals, or, as he puts it, 'to have one last whirl at the Open' after missing it for the last three years. 'That's definitely not why I entered qualifying for the first time since '95. I did it because I played well at Portrush in 2019 [when he finished fourth] and I loved the course. I don't look back, never have, and with myself anyway, don't get nostalgic. 'But I was proud of getting through at Dundonald. I'd flown there straight from the LIV event in Dallas, got there at 8pm, walked the course as I'd never seen it, had an hour's sleep, because of jetlag, then got up and played 36 holes and was the medallist. 'Helen [his wife, who caddied for him at the Ayrshire course] said I was talking some right rubbish. I was delirious, surviving on fumes. But it was worth it as I'm back at the tournament I always wanted to win above all others. The Open has always been the one. I loved the Masters, but playing in front of a home crowd at the Open... There is nothing like it. I came close in both.' Indeed, Westwood had three top-three placings in 27 Opens and three top-threes in 21 Masters. He does not like to trawl through the near misses – 'it's boring', he says – but acknowledges that 'the one that got away was definitely in 2009', when he bogeyed the last to finish a single shot out of a play-off in which Stewart Cink beat Tom Watson. 'Yeah, I'm always told I should have won a major, but so what? 'Should have,' means nothing. I have no regrets, I've had a good career. Go to world No 1. Not many have done that or played in 11 Ryder Cups. 'The way I see it is that I had a slump in 2001 going into 2002 and I was there, as a 27-year-old sat on the edge of my hotel bed somewhere in the world after yet another missed cut, saying to myself 'I've had it, I'm going to quit'. It happened a few times. I didn't, though. I've always believed this game is character-forming and quitting wouldn't have helped form my character, would it? 'So I don't fret about majors. I'm not Doug Sanders. I only think about the close calls when it gets mentioned to me. I've got bigger things to concentrate on. Things that I can actually have some control on.' Sanders, of course, famously said 20 years after missing a tiddler to win the Open: 'Do I always think about that putt? No. Sometimes it doesn't cross my mind for a full five minutes.' British Open, 12 juillet 1970. Le flamboyant Doug Sanders, amateur de playmates, de vodka tonic et de tenues flashy, rate le putt de la victoire avant de s'incliner face à Jack Nicklaus : Plus tard, il confiera : « Parfois, il peut se passer trente minutes sans que j'y pense » — Perdants magnifiques (@TousPoulidor) July 12, 2024 In terms of his career, Westwood denies that he has a plan to bring the curtain down anytime soon. 'Honestly, I don't. I haven't planned any further than August when the LIV season finishes.' It is understood that his three-year contract with the breakaway league is up and that positive discussions are ongoing as to a renewal. However, there are options regardless. 'I can go back to the DP World Tour, you know. LIV would pay my fines, which are ridiculously about £900,000 and I still have several exemptions to play on that circuit. LIV would already have paid my fines if I'd asked, but I didn't do it out of principle. It's a daft amount anyway.' Westwood is adamant he is not bitter about leaving the Tour on which he won the Order of Merit three times. 'I'm just worried for those who are still there and where the Tour is heading. They have basically been swallowed up by the PGA Tour and they were always our rivals. 'In Ponte Vedra, they don't care about the DP World Tour. Our Tour board has turned down a great deal from LIV and a lot of their players know. Lots of them ask me what they should do, but all they can do is ask questions at AGMs and maybe an EGM. Poults [Ian Poulter] and I tried to do that at Wentworth three years ago, but got talked to by the chief executive like schoolkids. He's gone, but nothing has changed. The Tour is very vulnerable.' It is interesting to hear that Westwood could envisage a pathway back to the Tour. Yet as far as the Ryder Cup captaincy or even assistant captaincy, he believes it is a hopeless case. 'I would have loved to be Ryder Cup captain, but they have closed that possibility because of LIV. It's funny in a way as I've heard the names of guys who are being lined up and am aware that the only reason they didn't join LIV is because their numbers were not met and they wanted too much. How does that work? 'Another thing that makes me laugh is that the Tour's video team were at the LIV event in Valderrama and asked me to do a bit of a motivational bit to camera. I'm banned! And they want me to help them out! I took the moral high ground and did it. But I ask you...' Westwood is mystified by much in the seemingly never-ending split. Currently he cannot imagine a peace deal being reached and smiles at the notion that the Saudi paymasters will walk away. 'HSBC has just done a deal with LIV and we [The Majesticks] are one of the teams the bank is backing. HSBC would not put in its money and reputation, if it even had the slightest fear of LIV shutting down. People need to wake up. And not just to this.' Westwood is sure that 'two-tier' splicing is alive and well on the DP World Tour and dismisses the claims that it is merely following its own rulebook. 'They don't believe that, not really. Jon [Rahm] and Tyrrell [Hatton] have had the red carpet rolled out since they joined LIV, so they can appear in this year's Ryder Cup, but they banged the door shut on us lot. They painted us as the villains and yeah, I had a few comments chucked at me. 'It doesn't bother me, because it's only a few, and I'm sure the galleries at this Open will be great. They always are. It's what makes me excited about Portrush, although I will not be burdening myself with any expectations on how I perform. So long as I enjoy it. Work hard, try your best and move on. It's served me OK this far. Helen will be on the bag. My mum 32 years ago and now my wife. I hope it doesn't rain.'

George Russell buys luxury £2.2million Pershing 6X yacht as Mercedes star splashes cash after F1 success
George Russell buys luxury £2.2million Pershing 6X yacht as Mercedes star splashes cash after F1 success

The Sun

time38 minutes ago

  • The Sun

George Russell buys luxury £2.2million Pershing 6X yacht as Mercedes star splashes cash after F1 success

GEORGE RUSSELL has splashed out on a £2.2MILLION luxury yacht following his success on the track. The Formula One superstar has traded the tarmac for the waves after recently purchasing a Pershing 6X yacht. 12 12 12 12 12 Russell, 27, is having one of his best campaigns behind the wheel for Mercedes and is currently fourth in the Driver's Standings. And the Brit is clearly earning himself a handsome pay packet, reportedly £11.2m-per-year, as he he started to treat himself to some of the finer things in life. The four-time F1 Grand Prix winner's new yacht is the definition of luxury, a cutting-edge boat with top speeds of 48 knots and enough space to carry 14 people. The 62ft vessel has four bedrooms, four bathrooms, a kitchen and a remarkable upper deck living area. Just like Russell's F1 car, the boat also packs a punch with twin MAN V12 1550mhp engines. Meanwhile the bow of the boat has a huge plush area for Russell and his pals to lounge in the sun when they're out on the water enjoying their time away from the track. And the rear is fit with a garage in case anyone was hoping to bring their jet ski along with them for a change of pace on the water. Pershing are clearly not a company who shy away from treating their customers either, as Russell recently attended the brand's 40th anniversary party in Capri - sipping on champagne and taking in the views of a private drone show. 12 12 12 12 12 Russell could be in good stead to grow his yacht collection in the future as he looks set to pen a new and improved contract with Mercedes. The 27-year old is out of contract next year and has expressed his hope to stay with the team in the future amid speculation of a potential move for Max Verstappen from Red Bull to Mercedes. Speaking ahead of the British Grand Prix earlier this month, he said: "I want to continue with Mercedes into the future. Toto [Wolff] has never let me down, has always given me his word. 'He's also got to do what's right for his team, which includes me and the thousands of people who work for Mercedes. 'For me it's nothing to worry about, as I don't think I'll be going anywhere, and whoever my team-mate is doesn't concern me either, so I'll just focus on the driving. 'It'll happen when the time is right. I expect in the next couple of weeks. But we'll need to wait and see. 'There hasn't been a lack of interest, let's say. But I've been focused on my side, I am loyal to Mercedes. 'The likelihood I'm not at Mercedes next year is exceptionally low.'

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