Guelph Storm Add Size With New Imports; Both 2025 CHL Import Draft Selections Signed
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Fever's Sophie Cunningham represents Arby's in unprecedented outfit before WNBA game
Sophie Cunningham always makes a statement with her pregame outfits for the Indiana Fever. On Sunday, Cunningham went with a bit of a different approach. She shouted out Arby's, the fast food roast beef chain. MORE: Sabrina Ionescu loses her mind at a ref There isn't an official record of this, but this has to be the first Arby's shirt ever worn on the way into a WNBA game, or maybe a professional sports game anywhere, anytime. That's what they call trendsetting. Cunningham has grown her fanbase greatly in her first season with the Fever, thanks to her talent on the court, her enforcer-like tendencies at times, and her popular social media accounts. And now, she's taking a new approach to the pregame 'fit. MORE: Sparks announce latest plans for Cameron Brink injury return
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Leylah Fernandez beats Anna Kalinskaya 6-1, 6-2 to win the DC Open for her biggest title
WASHINGTON (AP) — Leylah Fernandez collected the biggest title of her career at the D.C. Open with her most lopsided victory of the tournament, defeating Anna Kalinskaya 6-1, 6-2 in the final on Sunday. The left-handed Fernandez, a 22-year-old from Canada who is ranked 36th, earned her fourth singles trophy — all have come at hard-court tournaments — and first at a WTA 500 event. She came quite close to a Grand Slam championship as a teenager at the 2021 U.S. Open, making it all the way to the final in New York before losing to Emma Raducanu. There almost was a rematch in Washington, but Kalinskaya eliminated Raducanu in the semifinals Saturday. Until Sunday, the 48th-ranked Kalinskaya had not dropped a set all week. However, she wasn't able to keep up with Fernandez, who saved the only two break points she faced while taking four of Kalinskaya's service games in a match that lasted 1 hour, 10 minutes. One key: Fernandez claimed 10 of the 12 points in the match when Kalinskaya hit a second serve. This was the first title for Fernandez since October 2023 at the Hong Kong Open. She arrived in Washington with a losing record this season and hadn't won more than two matches at the same tournament since last November. With a mix of baseline excellence and strong net play, Fernandez eliminated top-seeded Jessica Pegula — the U.S. Open runner-up last year — and No. 3 seed Elena Rybakina — the Wimbledon champion in 2022 — on the way to the final. The win against Rybakina in Saturday's semifinals took three tiebreakers and more than three hours to decide. There was no such drama against Kalinskaya, a 26-year-old Russian who fell to 0-3 in tour-level finals. She lost to Jasmine Paolini in Dubai and to Pegula in Berlin last year. The men's final scheduled for later Sunday was No. 7 seed Alex de Minaur against No. 12 Alejandro Davidovich Fokina, who defeated No. 1 Taylor Fritz in the quarterfinals and No. 4 Ben Shelton in the semifinals. ___ AP tennis:

Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Naomi Osaka splits with coach Patrick Mouratoglou as tennis hard-court swing begins
Four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka has split with coach Patrick Mouratoglou after just shy of a year together. Osaka confirmed the split on social media ahead of the WTA 1,000 Canadian Open in Montreal, as the tennis shift to hard courts, where she is most comfortable, kicks into gear. 'Merci Patrick. It was such a great experience learning from you. Wishing you nothing but the best. You are one of the coolest people I've ever met and I'm sure I'll see you around,' she wrote in a statement. Mouratoglou did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Osaka, 27, started working with Mouratoglou, who most famously coached Serena Williams, following the 2024 U.S. Open. Their time together has been an up-and-down sequence of promising signs and frustrations with either injury or close-run defeats for Osaka, who said that Mouratoglou would be left wondering 'what the f— this is ' after a tight first-round loss to Paula Badosa at this year's French Open. Ahead of that tournament, Osaka played a second-tier tournament in Saint Malo, France, after an early loss at the Italian Open in Rome. She won the WTA 125 event in France. reflecting afterward how missing matches due to physical issues — and three frustrating retirements with injury during promising contests in Beijing, Auckland and Melbourne in late 2024 and early 2025 — had left her lacking reps in tight moments. But at the French Open against Badosa, and then at Wimbledon against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Osaka went through the kind of encouraging but ultimately dispiriting match that has marked much of her time with Mouratoglou. Prior to a 6-4, 6-2 defeat to Emma Raducanu at the D.C. Open that proved to be their last match together, six of Osaka's last seven matches had come in three sets, with all of the deciders ending 6-4 against or in a tiebreak. Following the defeat to Pavlyuchenkova, Osaka said that her response to it was entirely removed from her emotions in Paris, where she had to briefly leave the interview room in tears. 'In Paris, I was very emotional. Now I don't feel anything, so I guess I'd prefer to feel nothing than everything,' she said in London. Osaka, who is currently world No. 51, will play Canadian qualifier Ariana Arseneault Monday in her first match at the Canadian Open. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Sports Business, Tennis, Women's Tennis 2025 The Athletic Media Company