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Australian Open champion Keys stunned at Wimbledon

Australian Open champion Keys stunned at Wimbledon

The 4214 hours ago
AUSTRALIAN OPEN CHAMPION Madison Keys became the latest star to crash out of Wimbledon as the American sixth seed was stunned by Laura Siegemund on Friday.
Keys slumped to a 6-3, 6-3 loss against the German world number 104 in the third round on Court Two.
The 30-year-old is the fifth player among the top six seeds in the women's draw to suffer a surprise exit from this year's tournament.
Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula, Jasmine Paolini and Zheng Qinwen had already bowed out, though world number one Aryna Sabalenka is still alive.
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Keys, who beat Sabalenka to clinch her maiden Grand Slam crown in Melbourne in January, is yet to make it past the quarter-finals in 11 visits to the All England Club.
She made 31 unforced errors in a lacklustre display against Siegemund.
It was a miserable way to spend the fourth of July for Keys while her compatriots celebrated the Independence Day holiday back in the United States.
Siegemund, who beat former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez in the second round, is through to the Wimbledon last 16 for the first time.
At 37, she is the oldest player left in the women's tournament, with her best Grand Slam singles run coming when she made the French Open quarter-finals in 2020.
Laura Siegemund celebrates. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo
'When you beat a great player like Madison you have to be really happy,' said Siegemund. 'I managed to keep my nerve in the end. If you don't have nerves in this moment you are probably dead.
'It was a big opportunity. You just take a deep breath and remember your strategy.
'All the girls on the tour are perfectionists. I'm the same but there was no pressure for me. I don't feel like I need to prove anything anymore.'
– © AFP 2025
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Palmeiras 1 Chelsea 2: Palmer stunner fires Blues into CWC semi-finals as new boy Estevao shows Maresca what he's got
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Palmeiras 1 Chelsea 2: Palmer stunner fires Blues into CWC semi-finals as new boy Estevao shows Maresca what he's got

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Make or break: Players who had their career made by a Lions tour or broken by it
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Make or break: Players who had their career made by a Lions tour or broken by it

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Initially, his prospects of making the 2013 tour to Australia looked nullified by a knee injury which ruled him out of the entirety of that year's Six Nations. British and Irish Lions prop Alex Corbisiero (centre L) is congratulated by teammate Richard Hibbard (centre R) after scoring a try against Australia. Photograph: William West/AFP via Getty Yet when Cian Healy went down in the second tour game against the Western Force, Corbisiero's phone rang. His subsequent contribution is difficult to understate, even if scrum penalties might not be everyone's idea of beautiful rugby. While he started the first Test, it was Corbisiero's dominance in the third which earned him a place in propping folklore. He got on the end of the first-minute try which set the tone for the Lions' dominance, but his set-piece work is what stands out. 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Coach for the tour Graham Henry later wrote of 'an age-old story. Betraying trust and betraying your mates for 30 pieces of silver.' Discontent followed the squad from the beginning when Henry picked 10 Welsh players to tour when they were hammered by England that year 46-12. The Lions had beaten Australia in the first Test match in The Gabba before losing the second in Colonial stadium. Rob Howley had been first choice scrumhalf for those games. Austin Healy of the Lions in 2001. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho Although the Leicester and England star withdrew from the Test decider against Australia because of a back injury, Healy's column in the Guardian made all the news and drew the ire of the Lions management. BBC columnist Matt Dawson had already criticised the style of management and training on the tour. 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He played five of the Lions' warm-up games but failed to make a Test team. Then when the 2017 tour to New Zealand arrived four years later, thoughts turned to the game-changing back, who was then an influential figure with Scotland. Hogg had an underwhelming first game-and-a-half before being injured by an accidental stray elbow from team-mate Conor Murray, instantly ending his tour and his chance to prove himself on the Test match stage. Stuart Hogg got injured in the 2017 tour of New Zealand. Photograph: Kai Schwoerer/Getty Four years later on the 2021 tour to South Africa, Hogg was picked at fullback in the 17-22 first Test win. He started again in the second game against the Springboks but the Lions lost 27-9. But by the third Test in Cape Town, Warren Gatland had seen enough and Hogg didn't even make the matchday squad with Welsh back Liam Williams starting and England's Elliot Daly as utility backup on the bench. Hogg never made the running impact of which he was capable. 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Sweden beat rivals Denmark to go 13 games unbeaten
Sweden beat rivals Denmark to go 13 games unbeaten

The 42

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  • The 42

Sweden beat rivals Denmark to go 13 games unbeaten

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