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The unwritten rules of tennis and why postmatch handshakes sometimes go awry at the US Open

The unwritten rules of tennis and why postmatch handshakes sometimes go awry at the US Open
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Felix Auger-Aliassime of Canada talks with the chair umpire during his Men's Singles Third Round match against Alexander Zverev of Germany on Day Seven of the 2025 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on August 30, 2025 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (AFP)
The unwritten rules of tennis and why postmatch handshakes sometimes go awry at the US Open
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A general view of fans on Day Seven of the 2025 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on August 30, 2025 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (AFP)
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The unwritten rules of tennis and why postmatch handshakes sometimes go awry at the US Open

The unwritten rules of tennis and why postmatch handshakes sometimes go awry at the US Open
  • Not every contest in every sport displays that sort of civility, but it is an entrenched ritual in tennis, from kids starting out to the pros, even if the word “handshake” never appears in the 61-page Grand Slam rule book

NEW YORK: There’s been a lot of talk about the unwritten rules of tennis during Week 1 of this US Open, whether it’s the necessity of a ” sorry, not sorry ” raised hand after a let cord or the proper way to warm up with an opponent or the legitimacy of an underarm serve.
Another part of the game drawing attention — thanks to players’ complaints about each of the above — is the postmatch greeting at the net, which usually involves shaking hands and, sometimes, a hug or kisses on the cheek. It would seem to be a simple act of sportsmanship, but every so often ends up going awry.
Not every contest in every sport displays that sort of civility, but it is an entrenched ritual in tennis, from kids starting out to the pros, even if the word “handshake” never appears in the 61-page Grand Slam rule book.
“You do it in the juniors. You do it your whole life. It’s part of the fabric of our sport,” said Brad Gilbert, a former player and coach who is part of ESPN’s cast in New York.
“You’ve got to win with class,” he said, “and lose with dignity.”
The Townsend-Ostapenko back-and-forth at the US Open drew scrutiny
Chris Evert, who won 18 majors in the 1970s and ‘80s, said: “I never had a bad moment at the net with anyone.”
That’s hardly the case for everyone — as a few episodes at the US Open showed.
Jelena Ostapenko, the 2017 French Open champion from Latvia, got into a dustup with Taylor Townsend, the No. 1-ranked doubles player from the US, after clasping hands following Townsend’s victory.
Instead of going their separate ways, the athletes exchanged words, with Ostapenko pointing a finger at Townsend, who is Black, and saying she has “no education” — something Ostapenko apologized for Saturday via social media, explaining she meant to accuse Townsend of poor tennis etiquette. Ostapenko was upset that Townsend didn’t apologize after a ball hit the net tape and went over (that’s not actually a rule) and started their warmup with volleys instead of groundstrokes (not a rule, either).
“It was,” Venus Williams said, ”a lot of drama.”
The US Open handshake between Tsitsipas and Altmaier didn’t go well
On Thursday, another net encounter went badly when the loser, two-time Slam finalist Stefanos Tsitsipas, let the winner, Daniel Altmaier, know he hadn’t appreciated an underarm serve — which is allowed.
Rather than engage, Altmaier turned his back on Tsitsipas.
Then, on Saturday, two players — Jaume Munar and Zizou Bergs — got into a postmatch set-to over grunting.
“In the heat of the moment, you can stay stuff which you (wouldn’t) normally ... say (and) you regret afterward,” Altmaier said, adding that he’s not a fan of “discussions at the net.”
Neither is 20th-seeded Jiri Lehecka, who thinks conflicts are better resolved “in the locker room, behind closed doors,” instead of in front of a crowd and TV audience.
It’s not just at the US Open that there can be tension in tennis
Tense moments at the net are not merely a US Open phenomenon, and there’s a segment of tennis social media that chronicles every half-hearted handshake.
“Some people don’t really have a lot of things to do throughout the day, so they pay a lot of attention to this,” said 21st-seeded Linda Noskova.
So folks noticed when Ben Shelton and Flavio Cobolli had a back-and-forth after a match in Canada this month. Or when Danielle Collins gave Iga Swiatek an earful about being “insincere” at the Paris Olympics. Or when Taylor Fritz sarcastically told a Wimbledon opponent to ” have a nice flight home ” after beating him in 2024.
“Maybe if I didn’t like someone really, really hard, then probably — maybe — I wouldn’t want to shake hands with them,” said Swiatek, a six-time Grand Slam champion, “but besides that ... it’s good to congratulate someone if you lost.”
Andrea Petkovic, a 2014 French Open semifinalist who retired three years ago, enjoyed getting glimpses of the “persona of the player.”
She chuckled while recounting a loss to Serena Williams in Rome: “At the end, she said to me, ‘Nice try.’”
No one wants to eliminate tennis handshakes after to-dos at the US Open
No one wants to see this tradition go away, although two-time major semifinalist Maria Sakkari knows there are “going to be incidents where people don’t like each other.”
“We are ... from different countries, different cultures,” Sakkari said. “It’s normal that two people are going to fall out.”
And not only after a match.
Gilbert nearly came to blows during what he called “a big tiff” with David Wheaton at the 1990 Grand Slam Cup, before an official separated them. Wheaton was upset about an overrule; things escalated from there.
“Got pretty heated,” Gilbert said, “but afterward, we still shook hands.”


Al-Ittihad thrash Al-Okhdood 5-2, Al-Qadsiah beat Al-Najma 3-1 in the first round of the Saudi Pro League

Al-Ittihad thrash Al-Okhdood 5-2, Al-Qadsiah beat Al-Najma 3-1 in the first round of the Saudi Pro League
Updated 31 min 26 sec ago

Al-Ittihad thrash Al-Okhdood 5-2, Al-Qadsiah beat Al-Najma 3-1 in the first round of the Saudi Pro League

Al-Ittihad thrash Al-Okhdood 5-2, Al-Qadsiah beat Al-Najma 3-1 in the first round of the Saudi Pro League

NAJRAN: Al-Ittihad crushed host Al-Okhdood 5-2 late Friday at the Prince Hazlul bin Abdulaziz Sports City in Najran to earn their first win in the first round of the Roshn Saudi League.

Karim Benzema scored three of Al-Ittihad's goals, the first one with just 4 minutes into the match, Stephen Bergwijn added a second goal on the 7th minute, and the fifth was an own goal against Al-Okhdood defender Saeed Al-Rubaie in the 30th minute. 

Al-Okhdood's two goals were scored by Sebastián Pedroza.

 

 

In Dammam, host Al-Qadsiah also got their first victory by beating Al-Najma 3-1 at the Prince Mohammed bin Fahd Stadium.

Al-Qadsiah's goals were scored by Matteo Retegui and Julian Quiñones, while Al-Najma's only goal was scored by Ali Jassim. 

 


Real Madrid rally to beat Mallorca 2-1 despite VAR woes

Real Madrid rally to beat Mallorca 2-1 despite VAR woes
Updated 31 August 2025

Real Madrid rally to beat Mallorca 2-1 despite VAR woes

Real Madrid rally to beat Mallorca 2-1 despite VAR woes
  • Without a win this season, Mallorca played a clever game and tried to hit Madrid on the break, but the home side had too much quality in attack

MADRID: Real Madrid recovered from a goal down to beat Mallorca 2-1 at the Bernabeu on Saturday as the home side made light of having three goals chalked off after VAR reviews to make it three wins out of three in La Liga this season.
What should have been a comfortable victory for the home side left fans with their nerves jangling, however, and they needed a goalline clearance from Alvaro Carreras to secure the three points.
Kylian Mbappe was the first to have a goal overturned by VAR when he pounced to score from a superb ball by Trent Alexander-Arnold in the seventh minute, but the review found him to be marginally offside.
Mallorca took a shock lead 11 minutes later when striker Vedat Muriqi muscled his way into the middle of the penalty area at a corner to steer the ball into the net with a combination of his back and shoulder.
Real levelled in the 37th minute after a superbly-worked corner that led to Dean Huijsen teeing up 20-year-old Arda Guler to score with a close-range header.
Vinicius Jr gave his side the lead a minute later, surging forward before cutting back on to his left foot and sending a bouncing shot low into the far corner.
Without a win this season, Mallorca played a clever game and tried to hit Madrid on the break, but the home side had too much quality in attack, and Mbappe had another goal chalked off in first-half stoppage time.
Guler was the next to taste disappointment as his effort 10 minutes after the break was ruled out when a VAR review found him guilty of handball in the build-up, and the home side had Carreras to thank when he pulled off a tremendous goalline clearance to prevent Mallorca from equalising.


Sinner repels Shapovalov to reach US Open last 16

Sinner repels Shapovalov to reach US Open last 16
Updated 31 August 2025

Sinner repels Shapovalov to reach US Open last 16

Sinner repels Shapovalov to reach US Open last 16
  • World number one Sinner rallied from a set down to beat Shapovalov 5-7, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3

NEW YORK: Reigning champion Jannik Sinner came through a testing encounter with Canadian 27th seed Denis Shapovalov on Saturday to book his place in the US Open last 16.
World number one Sinner rallied from a set down to beat Shapovalov 5-7, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 and keep alive his bid to become the first man to retain the title in New York since Roger Federer in 2008.
“A very, very tough match today. I’ve known Denis for quite a long time. I knew that I had to play at a very high level,” said Sinner, who lost his previous meeting with Shapovalov at the 2021 Australian Open.
Sinner awaits the winner of the evening session match between US 14th seed Tommy Paul and Alexander Bublik, the 23rd seed from Kazakhstan.
“Week two is completely different. It’s always a great sight that I’m still here. It’s getting tougher and tougher, also physically and mentally,” said Sinner.
The Italian made serene progress through the first two rounds but dropped his first set of the tournament against a resurgent Shapovalov, a former top-10 player whose career was stalled by injury.
A US Open quarter-finalist in 2020, Shapovalov signalled his intent with a break in the fourth game and raced 5-2 ahead in the first set.
Sinner broke to get back on serve but Shapovalov produced a gutsy hold, saving a break point for 6-5 before taking the next game and the set.
Top seed Sinner punished a slack service game from Shapovalov at 3-3 in the second set as he dragged himself back into the match at a set apiece.
Shapovalov responded by breaking early in the third set and surging into a 3-0 lead, but he couldn’t sustain his level and a defiant Sinner hit back by winning nine games on the spin.
The Canadian offered some belated resistance but by then it was too late as Sinner sealed his 24th successive Grand Slam match win on hard courts.
Sinner has reached the final of all three Grand Slams this season, winning the Australian Open and Wimbledon either side of a defeat to Carlos Alcaraz at the French Open.
Federer is the last man to successfully defend the US Open, winning the title each year from 2004-08.


Osaka shines to set up US Open last-16 clash with Gauff

Osaka shines to set up US Open last-16 clash with Gauff
Updated 31 August 2025

Osaka shines to set up US Open last-16 clash with Gauff

Osaka shines to set up US Open last-16 clash with Gauff
  • Osaka lit up Louis Armstrong Stadium in broad daylight, turning her third-round clash into a showcase of power and composure

NEW YORK: Four-times major champion Naomi Osaka powered into the US Open fourth round on Saturday with a 6-0 4-6 6-3 win over 15th seed Daria Kasatkina to continue her best Grand Slam run since 2021.
Osaka lit up Louis Armstrong Stadium in broad daylight, turning her third-round clash into a showcase of power and composure.
The Japanese player dominated early, absorbed a brief second-set wobble, and closed out the win to set up a blockbuster fourth-round showdown with American third seed Coco Gauff.
“Honestly, I was trying to tell myself to stay calm. I was so shaky today but I’m glad that it was an entertaining match,” Osaka said.
Whenever I come here it feels like home and you guys are very involved and I feel grateful, thank you.
“Can someone come to the match and cheer for me?,” the 27-year-old added. “I mean it’s kinda tough playing an American here but I hope you guys have adopted me. I kinda see her as a little sister so it’s cool to be playing her here.”
From the first point, Osaka looked sharp, putting pressure on Kasatkina with an early break gifted to her by a double fault before racing into a 3-0 lead.
Kasatkina’s delivery deserted her in the first set with eight double faults and only 25 percent of first serves landing as Osaka coolly dished out a bagel in 22 minutes.
Kasatkina, however, forced a decider after a scrappy second set riddled with breaks. Errors crept in on both sides, Osaka’s frustration surfaced, and Kasatkina steadied enough to seize the lead.
Seven service breaks kept the set on edge before the Russian-born player finally held her nerve to level the match.
Osaka, however, regained her composure in the third.
She saved a break point with two blistering winners and surged into a 3-1 lead before closing out the match to stay on course for a third US Open title.


‘We’ll send him back’: Bayern confirm collapse of Jackson deal

‘We’ll send him back’: Bayern confirm collapse of Jackson deal
Updated 30 August 2025

‘We’ll send him back’: Bayern confirm collapse of Jackson deal

‘We’ll send him back’: Bayern confirm collapse of Jackson deal
  • Jackson arrived in Munich on Saturday set to sign a season-long loan
  • Bayern sporting director Max Eberl confirmed to reporters the deal was off

AUGSBURG, Germany: Bayern Munich on Saturday evening confirmed that a proposed loan deal for Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson had collapsed after the English club called off the deal.

Jackson arrived in Munich on Saturday set to sign a season-long loan with the German champions, who had an option to buy the player.

But an injury to Chelsea forward Liam Delap in Saturday’s 2-0 win over Fulham meant the London club recalled the Senegal striker from Germany before he put pen to paper.


Speaking after Saturday’s 3-2 win at Augsburg, Bayern sporting director Max Eberl confirmed to reporters the deal was off.

“Chelsea informed us that they would like the player back after we agreed yesterday.

“The situation now is that the lad is here in Munich, but we are sending him back.”

Jackson’s agent had earlier insisted on social media that his player was not returning to Chelsea.

“We’re not going back. The plane doesn’t go backwards: Munich.”

The German champions were looking for additional support up front for striker Harry Kane, having lost forward Kingsley Coman, Leroy Sane, Thomas Mueller and Mathys Tel in the summer.

Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca suggested he expected Delap to miss six to eight weeks.

“When you have two strikers, it’s enough. When one of them is injured for different weeks, probably it’s not enough,” Marseca said.

The transfer window closes on Monday, September 1.