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Coco Gauff routs Iga Swiatek to reach Madrid final against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka

Coco Gauff routs Iga Swiatek to reach Madrid final against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka
USA’s Coco Gauff returns the ball to Poland’s Iga Swiatek during their 2025 WTA Tour Madrid Open tennis tournament semifinal singles match at the Caja Magica in Madrid Thursday. (AFP)
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Updated 02 May 2025

Coco Gauff routs Iga Swiatek to reach Madrid final against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka

Coco Gauff routs Iga Swiatek to reach Madrid final against No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka
  • It was Gauff’s first win over Swiatek on clay
  • In the men’s quarterfinals, Casper Ruud advanced by defeating Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 7-5 to become the first player born in 1990 or later to reach 30 tour-level semifinals on clay

MADRID: Coco Gauff overpowered defending champion Iga Swiatek 6-1, 6-1 to reach the Madrid Open singles final for the first time Thursday.

Gauff broke Swiatek’s serve three times in the first set and twice in the second to cruise to a 64-minute semifinal victory over the second-ranked Swiatek at the clay-court tournament.

Gauff will face top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka, who defeated Elina Svitolina 6-3, 7-5 to reach the Madrid final for the fourth time in her career.

It was Gauff’s first win over Swiatek on clay.

“The mentality that I had in the whole match was aggressive,” the fourth-ranked Gauff said. “Maybe it wasn’t her best level today, but I think I forced her into some awkward positions.”

Swiatek had recovered from losing the first set 0-6 to Madison Keys on Wednesday.

“I couldn’t really get my level up,” the four-time French Open champion said. “Coco played good, but I think it’s on me that I didn’t really move well, I wasn’t ready to play back the shots with heaviness, and with that kind of game. It was pretty bad.”

The last time Swiatek won only two or fewer games in a match — on any surface — was a 6-0, 6-2 loss to Jelena Ostapenko in Birmingham in 2019.

“For me,” Gauff added, “it was just making sure my level stayed the same. In the second, I raised it.”

Sabalenka reaches 3rd straight final

Sabalenka returned to the final after ending Svitolina’s unbeaten run on clay this year — she was 9-0 on the surface in 2025, without losing a set.

Sabalenka won the title in Madrid in 2021 and 2023, and was runner-up to Swiatek last year.

Gauff is 5-4 against Sabalenka and won their only prior meeting on clay, in Rome in 2021. The American also won their most recent meeting, at the 2024 WTA Finals in Riyadh.

By beating Svitolina, Sabalenka became the first player to obtain 30 main-draw wins at WTA events in 2025.

Men’s quarterfinals

In the men’s quarterfinals, Casper Ruud advanced by defeating Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 7-5 to become the first player born in 1990 or later to reach 30 tour-level semifinals on clay.

The 15th-ranked Norwegian had been 0-3 against Medvedev in his career.

“I looked at our stats last night and saw he beat me on grass, outdoor hard and indoor hard. The last surface was clay so I thought, ‘please don’t make it 4-0,’” Ruud said. “I tried to use the surface to my advantage. I thought the level was pretty good from both players, I was impressed with Daniil’s ability to produce power here on clay.”

Ruud will next face Francisco Cerundolo, who rallied to defeat teenager Jakub Mensik 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2.

Cerundolo had beaten top-seeded Alexander Zverev in the previous round.

In another quarterfinal, fifth-ranked Jack Draper defeated Matteo Arnaldi 6-0, 6-4. Arnaldi had beaten Novak Djokovic in the second round. Draper will enter the top 5 in the rankings for the first time thanks to his run in Madrid. He will face 10th-seeded Lorenzo Musetti, who beat Gabriel Diallo 6-4, 6-3.


Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity
Updated 37 sec ago

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity

Saudi-sponsored Crawford-Canelo fight boosts boxing’s popularity
  • The bout, sponsored by Riyadh Season and Saudi sports promoter Turki Alalshikh, will be broadcast on Netflix
  • Another fight to watch is the bout between Fernando Vargas Jr., and Callum Walsh

LAS VEGAS: Global enthusiasm for championship boxing is set to rise, thanks to the upcoming contest between super middleweight champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and lightweight champion Terence “Bud” Crawford.

The bout, sponsored by Riyadh Season and Saudi sports promoter Turki Alalshikh, will be broadcast on Netflix Saturday, Sept. 13.

Wednesday saw high-profile boxers strutting their stuff before audiences at Las Vegas’ Fontainebleau Hotel. Saudi boxer Mohammed Alakel faces Travis Crawford (not related to Terence) as part of the main card lightweight bout prelude to the Canelo-Crawford battle.

Terence Crawford has fought in four divisions from lightweight to light middleweight, including the undisputed championship at light welterweight and welterweight. He says he will “prove the doubters wrong” when he faces off with Alvarez.

“You know, a lot of people was doubting me, saying that this never been done before. But my reply to it is, ‘It’s never been done before until somebody do it.’ And I think I’m gonna be the one to do it,” he told Arab News.

“Everything is … on schedule. Everything is where it needs to be. I feel great about it and I’m looking forward to it.”

Alvarez, whose 63 wins include 39 knockouts and only two losses and who is the two-time undisputed super middleweight champion, has captured prestigious belts from boxing’s four main sanctioning bodies — the  captured the boxing sports four most prestigious belts from its four major sanctioning bodies — the World Boxing Association, World Boxing Council, World Boxing Organization and the International Boxing Federation.

But some critics point out he has gone the 12-round distance in his last seven fights, with some “underwhelming performances” among them.

Crawford is confident ahead of the bout, saying: “I just think … styles make fights and … certain fighters don’t get up for them. But I think he’s motivated now and I’m looking forward to it.”

He thanked Alalshikh and Riyadh Season for sponsoring the fight and encouraging his move upwards into the Super Middle East division.

Also looking forward to the weekend is Alakel, who will not take his recent successes — including knocking out his last opponent, Yumnan Singh, in the first round of their Aug. 16 match in Riyadh — for granted. However, he is hopeful of a win over Travis Crawford.

“I’ve been working really hard and it’s time to go show the people what I’ve been talking about,” he told Jon Anik, the Ultimate Fighting Championship commentator who will call the fights.

“I just focus on myself because I know the way I fight. I’m not somebody who really cares about what’s happening out there … No pressure, excited to be in a big, big crowd since I was (a) young kid. I’ve been dreaming of these moments and it’s finally alive … I feel the excitement.”

Also on the bill as a co-main fight before the Canelo-Crawford bout are Christian Mbilli who will defend his WBC interim super middleweight belt against Guatemala’s Lester Martinez.

Mbilli, who has won 29 fights with no losses, acknowledged a win could see him face off at a later date with the winner of the Canelo-Crawford battle.

“It’s a little bit of pressure, but it’s good pressure. I’m very happy to be part of attraction of the show. I have a message for everyone, don’t miss the fight. It will be a very, very good fight,” Mbilli told Arab News.

“I’m working on training to never have a loss. I don’t think about loss. I am thinking about win.”

The Cameroonian-French super middleweight, who competed in the 2016 Olympics, said he began boxing as a child because he was constantly fighting other kids in school.

“I had some problem in the streets when I was young. I had a lot of problems like fighting or something like that. I was moved to boxing to know how to defend myself,” he said, explaining how that helped him discover boxing as a career.

Another fight to watch is the bout between Fernando Vargas Jr., and Callum Walsh — both undefeated in their careers to date.

Vargas said he was honored to be sponsored by Riyadh Season and told Arab News his father advised him “to be smart first” and to “study his boxing rivals” and never take them for granted.

“It’s a huge opportunity. I’m not just on the card but I’m co-main eventing, so I definitely wanna get Turki’s (Alalshikh) attention with this victory.

He added he was grateful for the opportunities given to him.

“They get us to big stages like this and the fights in the beginning of your career. You gotta remember those who believe in you and put their money where their heart is.”

Many of the boxers spent the afternoon sparring in rings set up in the lobby of the Fontainebleau Hotel and Casino, while also discussing their hopes for the weekend with media representatives from more than 50 countries.

Canelo vs. Crawford will take place at the 65,000-seat home of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders, the Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.


Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week
Updated 11 September 2025

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week

Turki Alalshikh attends exhibitions and workouts for Canelo-Crawford Fight Week
  • Ƶ’s Abdullah Darkazanli steals the spotlight with second-round victory in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS: Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority and president of the Ƶn Boxing Federation, attended on Wednesday exhibition bouts and public workouts as a part of the Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and Terence “Bud” Crawford fight week.

Alvarez, the undisputed super-middleweight champion takes on the undefeated Crawford on Sept. 13 at the Allegiant Stadium under Riyadh Season 2025.

Alalshikh watched Canelo, Crawford, and the other fighters showcase their preparations at the public workouts for fans.

The night began with a series of exhibition undercard bouts.

The UK’s Mikey Talon recorded a unanimous decision win over America’s Christian Robles after six rounds. The heavyweight clash that followed ended in a draw between Cuba’s Yoandi Toirac and America’s Skylar Lacy.

Mexico’s Bryan Leon Salgado then extended his unbeaten record by defeating America’s Devonte McDonald via unanimous decision. In the fourth fight, Kazakhstan’s Bek Nurmaganbet stopped America’s Steven Sumpter, leaving his opponent bloodied from a barrage of punches.

The highlight of the night was Ƶ’s Abdullah Darkazanli’s emphatic second-round victory over American Cody Koboski, with fans celebrating a memorable triumph for the fighter.

Attention now turns to Thursday night’s press conference at T-Mobile Arena, where Canelo and Crawford will once again face-off before the world’s media.


‘Not on my level’: Usman Nurmagomedov says Paul Hughes does not deserve rematch

‘Not on my level’: Usman Nurmagomedov says Paul Hughes does not deserve rematch
Updated 11 September 2025

‘Not on my level’: Usman Nurmagomedov says Paul Hughes does not deserve rematch

‘Not on my level’: Usman Nurmagomedov says Paul Hughes does not deserve rematch
  • Rivals meet for the lightweight crown at ‘PFL Champions Series: Road to Dubai - The Rematch’ on Friday, Oct. 3 at the Coca-Cola Arena in Dubai

DUBAI: Back in January, PFL lightweight world champion Usman Nurmagomedov and top contender Paul Hughes put on a five-round instant classic that many hailed as a contender for fight of the year.

While Hughes pushed Nurmagomedov to the limit with a star-making performance, the Dagestani champion still left Dubai with the title following a majority decision nod.

For many fans and experts, Hughes’ performance was enough to warrant an immediate rematch. Even then, Hughes needed to earn his way back to a title shot, and he did so in spectacular fashion.

In the main event of this year’s PFL Europe debut in his hometown of Belfast, Northern Ireland, “Big News” Hughes starched Bruno Miranda in just 42 seconds to lock in another shot at the undefeated Nurmagomedov and the PFL title.

The two top-tier 155-pounders (70 kg) are slated to run it back at the “PFL Champions Series: Road to Dubai - The Rematch” card on Oct. 3 in Dubai. It is being touted as the biggest rematch in PFL history.

As impressive as Hughes has been, the champ believes a title shot has not been earned.

“When a fighter loses a title shot, he must work hard, win many fights, and then deserve a second chance,” Nurmagomedov explained at a recent PFL Media Day in Dubai.

“In my opinion, Paul has not earned this rematch, but it doesn’t matter. For me, I am ready.”

Cousin of the legendary Khabib Nurmagomedov, Usman has been carving out his own stellar career path. The 27-year-old Dagestani is 19-0, with notable victories over Patricky “Pitbull” Freire, Benson Henderson and Alexander Shabliy.

Hughes has been Nurmagomedov’s toughest test, and this time he promises not to take the exciting Irishman for granted.

“I always work very hard, morning and evening, like I have throughout my career. Paul is not on my level, but this time I will not underestimate him. I respect him, and I will do my best.”

While Hughes is the next man up, another challenger is waiting in the wings in the form of 2025 PFL World Tournament Lightweight Champion Alfie Davis.

Davis recently bested the dangerous Russian and former PFL Tournament Champion Gadzhi Rabadandov to claim gold and potentially set up a showdown against the winner of the title bout.

Nurmagomedov said: “Right now my full focus is on Paul Hughes. After this fight, I will face the PFL champion, Alfie, but today my mind is only on Paul.”


India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18
Updated 11 September 2025

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18

India-Pakistan javelin showdown: Neeraj Chopra, Arshad Nadeem meet for world gold Sept. 18
  • Tokyo games will be the first time the two athletes meet after a war between their countries
  • Nadeem returns from calf surgery as Julian Weber and Anderson Peters tighten the medal race

NEW DELHI: India’s Neeraj Chopra and Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan will battle for javelin gold in Tokyo next week, the latest chapter in a brotherly rivalry which has soured since a deadly military conflict between their countries.

The Tokyo Olympic champion, Chopra, and his successor in Paris, Nadeem, will line up at the athletics world championships for their first encounter since the nuclear-armed neighbors engaged in a four-day conflict in May, their worst since 1999.

Chopra, who took Olympic silver behind his great rival a year ago, had often spoken about his friendly relations with Nadeem despite the tensions between their countries.

After Nadeem won gold and Chopra stood alongside him on the podium in Paris, Nadeem’s mother Raziah Parveen said: “Winning and losing is part of sport, but they are like brothers.”

Chopra’s mother Saroj said she took some solace in Nadeem beating her son because the Pakistani “is also our boy.”

But publicly at least that changed after the conflict, with high-profile figures from both countries under pressure to distance themselves from the other side.

The 27-year-old Chopra, who will defend his world title in Tokyo, said that they were “never really close friends.”

Nadeem, 28, also played down any friendship with Chopra.

“When he won, I congratulated him, and when I won the gold, he returned the same courtesy,” Nadeem told AFP by telephone en route to Tokyo.

“(Just as) in wrestling, one wrestler wins and the other loses — it’s part of the game.”

INVITATION WITHDRAWN

Nadeem, who is returning to competition after calf surgery in July, hails from a farming village.

He became an overnight sensation when he gave Pakistan their first Olympic gold in 40 years with a Games-record throw of 92.97m.

Nadeem has competed only once since Paris, winning the Asian Athletics Championships in South Korea in May when Chopra did not participate.

The last time the pair clashed was at the Paris Olympics.

In April, the Indian star invited Nadeem to India for his ‘Neeraj Chopra Classic’ javelin event but the Pakistani declined, saying it clashed with his training schedule.

Chopra then withdrew the invitation after an attack in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir on April 22 killed 26 people, mostly Hindu tourists.

India accused Pakistan of backing the attackers, a charge Islamabad denied.

In the conflict that followed more than 70 people were killed in missile, drone and artillery fire on both sides.

“I want to clarify that I don’t have a particularly strong relationship with Nadeem, we were never really close friends,” Chopra said afterwards.

“But because of the current situation, things will not be as they were. That said, if someone speaks to me with respect, I always respond in kind.”

FINE FORM

Chopra became a national hero in India after his Tokyo gold, earning million-dollar endorsement deals with his boyish charm, changing hairstyles and infectious smile.

He won the world title in Budapest in 2023 and has been in fine form since joining Czech javelin great Jan Zelezny’s coaching group ahead of the 2025 season.

He went past 90m for the first time when he threw 90.23m at the Doha Diamond League meeting in May, but finished second to German Julian Weber.

At the Zurich Diamond League last month, Weber once again stood on top of the podium, with a throw of 91.51m. Chopra was second with 85.01m.

Along with Weber, also in Tokyo will be two-time world champion Anderson Peters of Grenada.

The world championships start on Saturday, with the men’s javelin final on September 18.


Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it
Updated 11 September 2025

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it

Lyles will deliver sprint show — but not everyone will like it
  • Lyles, 28, comes into the world championships bidding to emulate Usain Bolt’s four successive global 200m crowns
  • His track exploits and lively personality have gained Lyles the recognition he has long craved in the US

TOKYO: Noah Lyles revels in being a showman but the antics the Olympic 100 meters champion do on occasion upset rivals and officials. They will watch closely to see how the American behaves as he defends his 100m and 200m world titles in Tokyo.

Lyles, 28, comes into the world championships bidding to emulate Usain Bolt’s four successive global 200m crowns — and he was boosted by a thrilling win over Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo in the Diamond League final last month.

Lyles said he would head to Tokyo “with a lot of energy.”

His track exploits — the Zurich win sealed a record-breaking sixth Diamond League track trophy — and lively personality have gained Lyles the recognition he has long craved in the US.

A documentary series “Untitled: The Noah Lyles Project,” a prominent role in the Netflix series “Sprint” and an appearance on NBC’s “The Tonight Show” have raised his profile.

That kind of mainstream coverage is something which World Athletics chief Sebastian Coe said he hopes other American track and field athletes will attract with the Los Angeles Olympics just three years away.

Lyles loves putting on a show and before the Olympics in Paris last year he told GQ Sport the challenge for track and field was to persuade the public globally that the sport was also “entertainment.”

His predecessor as the dominant force in men’s sprinting, Usain Bolt, famously used his arms to replicate a lightning bolt before he raced.

The American goes way beyond that.

He even received a yellow card warning ahead of the Olympic 200m final last year for his over-exuberant entrance into the Stade de France, roaring like a lion and hitting his lane box so hard the number toppled to the ground.

Lyles — who left the track in a wheelchair after finishing third and later revealed he had COVID — also antagonized the usually imperturbable Kenny Bednarek at the US trials this year.

Bednarek was irked when Lyles turned his head to stare down his rival just before he took the tape in the 200m final.

Bednarek, a two-time Olympic 200m silver medallist, shoved Lyles in the back over that apparent taunt.

“That’s unsportsmanlike shit, and I don’t deal with that,” said Bednarek, who US team officials will hope has made up with Lyles as they pair up in the 4x100m relay team.

‘To give again’

Zharnel Hughes, who took bronze in the 2023 world 100m final, said “Sprint” proved saying Lyles had a “loose mouth.”

“This guy can talk!” the Briton said. “I knew he talked, but I didn’t know he talked that much. I was like, ‘this guy, man! Shut up.’“

Bednarek’s hackles may have been raised but Tebogo believes Lyles is more “humble” this year and “talks a lot less.”

That could be down to stress.

Lyles, who has had health issues throughout his life ranging from asthma to dyslexia and ADHD, has admitted to hiding away when he suffers from stress.

“I have to do what I love, which is like building Legos, making music, playing video games, you know, being with my friends,” he told GQ Sport.

“I need like four to five days of just that, and then the energy will naturally start coming back and then it’s like, OK, I’m ready to give again.”

His mother, former top college sprinter Keisha Caine Bishop, who brought up Lyles, his brother Josephus and sister Abby on her own, believes her son is making the most of being in the limelight.

She worries, though, about what happens once the new kid on the block arrives and replaces him.

“I was nowhere on his level,” she said in the same interview. “But... I know what it’s like to see yourself on TV, I know what it’s like to see your name in the newspaper constantly, and everybody recognizes your name.

“And then I know what it’s like when all of that goes away.”

Lyles has the chance in Tokyo to kick that moment further down the track.