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Tennis: Emotional Kerber leaves Wimbledon return open

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Tennis Emotional Kerber leaves Wimbledon return open

Angelique Kerber leaves the possibility of participating in Wimbledon next year open. Photo

© Steven Paston/PA Wire/dpa

Angelique Kerber ended a disastrous grass-court season with a first-round exit at Wimbledon. She has not yet given a clear answer as to whether she will return to London as a participant. Her next goal is clear.

Angelique Kerber sat there with shining eyes and left the question of her future open. Shortly after her sobering first-round exit at Wimbledon, the 36-year-old was confronted with the approaching end of her career and answered neither yes nor no as to whether this was her last Wimbledon appearance.

“I don’t know. I didn’t come here with that in mind,” said the former world number one, as she was still digesting the low point of her beloved but this time dismal grass season. Kerber neither clearly said ‘Yes, it was my last match on the sacred grass’ nor ‘No, I want to be back in 2025’. After the match, it was perhaps too early to ask such a question.

Kerber would have liked to extend her Wimbledon appearance, as her training partner at Church Road, Jule Niemeier, managed to do. The Dortmund player impressively withstood the rain chaos and moved into the second round late with a surprisingly clear 6:2, 6:1 win against the Swiss Viktorija Golubic.

Her opening match was actually scheduled for Tuesday, like Kerber’s match, but was postponed due to the rain that kept coming. On Wednesday, the start of the match was then postponed by a total of two hours and the match was briefly interrupted. In 2022, Niemeier wrote her own Wimbledon success story by reaching the quarterfinals.

“My Tournament”

Kerber, the 2018 tournament winner, spoke emotionally about her Wimbledon story. “When I look at Wimbledon, it feels like my tournament,” said Kerber. “I’m always happy to come here. I still have the best moments in my mind, and that will stay that way regardless of the match.”

Half a year after the end of her maternity leave, the grass season was supposed to be a highlight for her. But she hasn’t won a single one of her three matches on the green surface. If you add in the early French Open exit, she has suffered four first-round defeats in a row. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

Kerber has already experienced several ups and downs

Despite the defeats, she is not losing her sense of fun, the three-time Grand Slam tournament winner made clear. “I’m already hardened to that,” said the Kiel native, referring to the many ups and downs that have accompanied her tennis career for a long time. In fact, Kerber has already proven several times that she can come back strong after setbacks.

Defeats don’t hurt her quite as much anymore since she became a mother to little Liana. Kerber has said this several times. But it was clear that she doesn’t care about the results at all when she threw herself down on the table in front of her with her arms and put her Wimbledon ID card down next to her. She looked dejected.

It remains to be seen whether the match against Kazakhstani Yulia Putintseva will be the last chapter in her glorious Wimbledon history, with her triumph in 2018 and the final in 2016. At the moment she lacks security, self-confidence and match practice. Kerber is still waiting for a win after the third Grand Slam tournament of the year.

If the former world number one retires at some point, the gap in German women’s tennis could become even more obvious. For years, it has been a topic that the next generation is missing and the situation is worrying.

Kerber goes on medal hunt in Paris

In addition to Niemeier (24), of the six German women in singles, only Laura Siegemund made it to the second round. Like Kerber, the Swabian is 36 years old. On Thursday, she faces a major challenge in the grass court classic against the 2022 Wimbledon champion, Jelena Rybakina from Kazakhstan.

Kerber and Siegemund are planning to compete in the doubles at the Olympic Games. The Summer Games in Paris are Kerber’s next big goal. She will have to get used to the less popular clay court by the end of July. The US Open in New York at the end of August will then offer the last chance to not end the year without a victory at Grand Slam level.

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Champions League schedule and results, 2024-2025 season

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What is the 2024-2025 Champions League schedule? The new tournament format, which now includes 36 teams compared to 32 previously, promises more confrontations from the start of the competition. Find the complete schedule of matches and their results updated in real time in our table below.

During the league phase scheduled between September and December 2024, each club plays eight matches against different opponents, selected based on their UEFA ranking.

Then, the top eight teams in the rankings will advance directly to the round of 16, while teams ranked 9th to 24th will have to go through play-offs in January 2025. These knockout matches will begin in February, with the grand final scheduled for June 2025. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

For French clubs, including PSG, AS Monaco, Lille and Stade Brestois, the challenge will be to stay in the race for direct qualifications and avoid early eliminations.

The final of the competition will take place in Munich on May 31, 2025. We will then know the successor to Real Madrid where Kylian Mbappé now plays.

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Halftime show: Fifa is planning an event like in football at the next World Cup final

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In American football, the halftime show has long been part of the event. Appearances during the break have not been an issue in football so far – but that will change at the next World Cup.

Anyone who goes to the toilet or refills chips during half-time at the next World Cup final will miss something: As the world football association Fifa announces, from the next World Cup in the USA, Canada and Mexico there will be a half-time show in the final. What exactly the association is planning is still very vaguely worded in the announcement. FIFA is probably planning a musical performance modeled on the Superbowl in American football: This so-called half time show is probably the biggest stage that musicians have had so far. In recent years, megastars such as Coldplay, Rihanna and Bruno Mars have appeared at halftime.

FIFA wants to organize a halftime show together with an aid organization

Global Citizen acts as co-organizer. The aid organization is committed to combating extreme poverty around the world. “FIFA has made it its mission to promote football in all countries of the world and thereby have a positive influence on society,” explains the controversial FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

Through this partnership, FIFA, together with Global Citizen, will unite the world of sports and entertainment to actively contribute to a better world. “We are committed to a series of joint actions that promote access to the game and encourage fans to advocate for positive change in their local communities,” Infantino continued. However, the association leaves it open exactly how a halftime show during the World Cup final should support Global Citizen or combat poverty in the world. READ FULL STORY HERE>>>CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE READING>>>

“Eventization” of football is met with rejection in Germany

If FIFA presents an act as big as the NFL at the Superbowl, the football halftime show would actually immediately be in the same league as its US counterparts. In the USA, the show is one of the absolute highlights of the football final. It remains to be seen whether such a show will be received so positively by football fans who are more used to a simpler presentation of their sport.

In Europe and especially in Germany, the organized fan scene is extremely critical of the additional commercialization and “eventization” of sport. A resonant example is Helene Fischer’s act before the 2017 DFB Cup final. The artist was booed so mercilessly and loudly during her short appearance that her singing on the television was difficult to understand at times.

Source: FIFA press release

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Ugo Humbert-Arthur Fils, duel for a title in Tokyo between a calm player and another who doesn’t give up

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Difficult to find two courses as dissimilar as those of Ugo Humbert and Arthur Fils at the ATP 500 in Tokyo, but the rectilinear trajectory of the first will still cross the fractured line of the second, in the final, this Tuesday. Despite losing his first set of the week, Humbert (19th in the world) qualified without too much difficulty by beating Tomas Machac (54th) 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. After having fought like a madman to eliminate Taylor Fritz and especially Ben Shelton, Son went through two tie-breaks with forceps to subdue Holger Rune. One wanders, the other suffers, but we will be treated to a happy ending. Even with a seven-hour time difference with France, this is a pleasure that we won’t shy away from.

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