Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics

Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics
Former world number one and three-time Grand Slam title winner Andy Murray has twice won an Olympic gold medal in singles. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 July 2024
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Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics

Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics
  • Former world number one has twice won an Olympic gold medal in singles

PARIS: Former world number one and three-time Grand Slam title winner Andy Murray confirmed on Tuesday that he will retire after the Paris Olympics.
“Arrived in Paris for my last ever tennis tournament @Olympics. Competing for Great Britain have been by far the most memorable weeks of my career and I’m extremely proud to get do it one final time,” the 37-year-old wrote on social media.
Murray has twice won an Olympic gold medal in singles — at the 2012 Games in London and successfully defending the title four years later at Rio.


Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead

Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead
Updated 04 September 2024
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Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead

Soler climbs to Vuelta 16th stage honors, O’Connor hangs on to lead
  • Spain’s Soler (UAE Team Emirates) got the measure of Filippo Zana and Briton Max Poole for the stage honors
  • Roglic has put himself in a strong position to claim a record-equalling fourth Vuelta which finishes with a time-trial in Madrid on Sunday

LAKES OF COVDONGA, Spain: Marc Soler emerged from the mountain gloom to claim Tuesday’s Vuelta a Espana 16th stage summit finish, with Ben O’Connor narrowly holding on to the leader’s red jersey.

After Monday’s rest day it was back to work with a vengeance for the peloton, the day’s ride culminating with a daunting 12.8km climb up Lagos de Covadonga at 1,100m altitude.

Spain’s Soler (UAE Team Emirates) got the measure of Filippo Zana and Briton Max Poole for the stage honors.

“This is very special. I haven’t won a lot with this team and so after three years, to win at the Vuelta is special,” said Soler, finally hitting the mark after three third-place finishes in the last week.

O’Connor held on to the red jersey — for at least another day.

But three-time Vuelta winner Primoz Roglic, 11th on the day, sliced almost one minute off his lead.

The Slovenian goes into Wednesday’s 17th stage now just five seconds adrift of the Australian who crossed the line 20th.

Roglic will inevitably be ruing the 20sec penalty he picked up on Sunday for using his team car’s slipstream to help join the pack after a change of bike.

While Soler, O’Connor and Roglic all had reason to celebrate in their own right, Tuesday’s stage proved disastrous for Wout van Aert.

The Belgian, leading the sprinters’ points classification after three stage wins in this year’s race, crashed heavily with around 50km to go.

Despite getting back on his bike he pulled up shortly after, nursing his knee sitting on the bonnet of his Visma team car.

Van Aert has endured a tough 2024, suffering multiple fractures after a bone-crunching high speed fall in March in the Tour of Flanders which forced him to miss the remaining Spring one-day classics.

Roglic, meanwhile, has put himself in a strong position to claim a record-equalling fourth Vuelta which finishes with a time-trial in Madrid on Sunday.

Wednesday’s 17th stage is a 143km ride from Arnuero to Santander with a chance for the sprinters or a breakaway to take the spotlight.


Love for American football reached Brazilian Amazon long before the NFL game in Sao Paulo

Love for American football reached Brazilian Amazon long before the NFL game in Sao Paulo
Updated 04 September 2024
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Love for American football reached Brazilian Amazon long before the NFL game in Sao Paulo

Love for American football reached Brazilian Amazon long before the NFL game in Sao Paulo
  • Canuto and Manaus FA’s devotion to football illustrate how much the sport has grown in the last two decades in Brazil
  • Local research group Ibope Repucom said in 2022 that Brazil has about 38 million American football fans, the second-largest international community for the sport after Mexico’s

MANAUS, Brazil: Pedro Canuto wears his pads and practices passing the football a few hundred yards from where boats filled with tourists are navigating the Amazon River into the rainforest.

A quarterback for Manaus FA, arguably the best American football team in the region, the 20-year-old could be playing soccer, the sport for which Brazil is passionate. But he chooses to play a game most of his countrymen know little about.

About 200 people, including dozens of screaming fans, wait in the stands of the Ismael Benigno Stadium for Canuto and his teammates to take the field. Among them are members of the quarterback’s proudly Bare Indigenous family. His mother sometimes spends days walking into the Amazon rainforest to teach in small villages in one of the world’s most remote locations. Still, she comes to most home games to support her son.

“If she is brave enough to do all that, how could I not do what I desire and give 100 percent to the sport and the city I love?” Canuto told The Associated Press at the team’s headquarters one day before its home match against Galo FA, the defending champions. ”My dream is for Manaus one day to retire my No. 1 shirt. Several teams tried to sign me after the latest season, but I don’t see myself playing anywhere else in Brazil. I want to make it here.”

Canuto and Manaus FA’s devotion to football illustrate how much the sport has grown in the last two decades in Brazil. Though it’s not enough to fill the 10,000-seat stadium in the Amazon, interest in the game is now so widespread the NFL will be playing its first-ever game in South America when the Philadelphia Eagles face the Green Bay Packers on Friday night at the NeoQuimica Arena in Sao Paulo — 6,200 miles (10,000 kilometers) away.

Local research group Ibope Repucom said in 2022 that Brazil has about 38 million American football fans, the second-largest international community for the sport after Mexico’s. Marketing analysts say that figure has grown at least 10 percent since. NFL games are shown on ESPN Brasil, which has broadcast them since 1992, and open channel RedeTV. The Brazilian football league Canuto plays in is mostly on social media channels.

Brazil’s main league is the BFA, with 72 teams from the Amazon to the country’s deep south, bordering Uruguay. The league is in its sixth season, which will include more than 200 games in 20 states between June and December. Teams can sign up to three players born in North America, Europe and Japan and use two of them during games.

About a decade ago, Brazilian teams rarely played in full pads, and many of them focused on flag football. Teams like Manaus once had several players who used motorcycle helmets with improvised refrigerator evaporator coils in the front as protection for their heads. None of the athletes followed strict diets to keep in shape or followed concussion protocols whenever they got hit. Being paid to play was almost a dream.

But times are slowly changing.

Accountant Renner Silva has taken every possible role at Manaus FA over the years: player, coach, director, fan and coordinator.

“We need more gear, a proper place to train and more support to travel nationwide to play during the regular season. But one of our biggest difficulties to draw more players and fans to the sport here is the heat,” Silva said as players practiced on a recent evening at Manaus’ Olympic sports facilities — the temperature was at 31 degrees Celsius (almost 88 Fahrenheit). “The stadium we play has no covering and the match starts at 3 p.m. People start getting there at 4 p.m. to watch. And players are already worn out by the second half, when it gets a little cooler.”

Manaus FA shares its public training grounds with joggers and track and field athletes. Kickers need to use their imagination since there can’t be goal posts so javelin and discus throwers can practice, too. The field is only 80 yards long, the same size used in the Brazilian league, but without the 10 yards for each end zone. Silva said there are other fields in the city where the team could prepare better, but local authorities don’t yet believe in the sport’s potential.

Still, the team managed to draw the attention of American quarterback and linebacker Malik Brown, who had never set foot in South America until a few months ago and now says he believes Brazilian football can develop more after the NFL game. The Chicago-born player had a semi-pro career in the United States for two seasons and was set to go to the CFL. But then the pandemic hit and the team he would play for never got back in touch.

Brown continued his career in Germany at the same time as he developed a family business at home. And then, “a call from God” came from Brazil.

“I went through a lot of hard times with coaches, the transfer portal, and that whole thing with America. It was kind of messed up. This is where I needed to be,” Brown said. “I don’t need to always be the face. Sometimes it is about lifting others up, raise their potential. My special ability is being able to plug anywhere where there’s offense, defense, special teams. The coaching room, just in the locker room, no matter where it is, I’m going to step up and give everything I have.”

He has two roles on the Manaus team. He alternates at quarterback with Canuto and also plays linebacker.

“I want to help Pedro develop, make this team something we can all be proud of,” Brown said.

Brown and Canuto took turns with Manaus’ offense during their recent game against Galo FA, a tactic implemented by Mexican coach Rodrigo Ríos. Neither managed to take the team into the end zone and the visitors won 23-0.

Canuto left the field disappointed, despite the cheers from fans. He believes the NFL game in Sao Paulo will be a watershed moment for the sport in Brazil and that one day he will have even more supporters. He hopes to play for another two decades, possibly after a stint in Germany or Mexico, and then open a quarterback academy in the Amazon. He’s in a physical education program at a local university, so he can continue to aim for the future.

His love for football remains unshakeable despite the modest future he can envision for himself.

“I have deeply implanted in my mind that I am carrying the weight of football in the Amazon, I am from here. That has only motivated me to play more, to dedicate myself,” he said. “We’ve only just begun.”


What to look out for in the UEFA Nations League

What to look out for in the UEFA Nations League
Updated 04 September 2024
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What to look out for in the UEFA Nations League

What to look out for in the UEFA Nations League
  • Spain are on a high after their magnificent triumph at the Euros and their gold medal success at the Olympics
  • After missing out on Euros glory, England begin a new era with Gareth Southgate having stepped down

PARIS: International football returns across Europe this week, less than eight weeks after Spain edged out England in the Euro 2024 final in Berlin.

AFP Sport picks out five storylines to follow around the continent ahead of two rounds of fixtures over six days starting Thursday:

Spain are on a high after their magnificent triumph at the Euros and their gold medal success at the Olympics.

Luis de la Fuente’s side are quickly back in action and have another title to defend, having won the last edition of the Nations League. La Roja are in Group 4 of League A and begin with an awkward double-header, a trip to Serbia being followed by a meeting with Switzerland in Geneva. Denmark complete the group.

Their squad does not feature the injured Alvaro Morata, Unai Simon or Mikel Merino, who all played in the Euros final, but wing stars Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams are involved. There are also new faces in Oscar Mingueza, the ex-Barcelona right-back now at Celta Vigo, and Valencia midfielder Pepelu.

“We will keep fighting and trying to go as far as possible in every competition,” insisted De la Fuente.

After missing out on Euros glory, England begin a new era with Gareth Southgate having stepped down.

He has been replaced on an interim basis by Lee Carsley, the England Under-21 coach. Carsley, 50, is for now only in charge for this double-header of Nations League matches, as England play Ireland in Dublin and host Finland at Wembley.

The English Football Association are buying themselves time as they search for a permanent successor to Southgate, with 2026 World Cup qualifying not beginning until next March.

But a good start may see them keep faith in Carsley for the rest of the Nations League campaign, in which England also play Greece after being relegated from the top-tier League A following the last edition.

Carsley’s first squad is missing the injured Jude Bellingham, but there are call-ups for the uncapped quartet of Noni Madueke, Morgan Gibbs-White, Tino Livramento and Angel Gomes.

Cristiano Ronaldo endured a disappointing Euro 2024, failing to score in five matches as Portugal went out in the quarter-finals. Many thought the 39-year-old might then accept it was time to retire, but coach Roberto Martinez has continued to back the former Real Madrid striker, naming him in the latest squad.

“When the time comes, I’ll move on,” Ronaldo, of Saudi club Al-Nassr, insisted on Monday after teaming up with the squad to play Croatia and Scotland at home.

Portugal will also come up against Poland in Group 1 of League A, as they aim to win the Nations League for the second time after triumphing in 2019.

An injury to Paris Saint-Germain striker Goncalo Ramos means Ronaldo is likely to play from the start.

There are other nations beyond England starting afresh under a new coach.

Ireland’s meeting with England will be the first game for their new Icelandic coach Heimir Hallgrimsson. Aged 57, the former Jamaica boss was appointed in July and will also lead the team in World Cup qualifying.

Wales are also under new management after failing to reach the Euros, with Craig Bellamy having replaced Rob Page.

Sweden play their first competitive matches under new coach Jon Dahl Tomasson, the ex-Denmark forward. Mircea Lucescu, now 79, has returned for a second stint in charge of Romania, 38 years after ending his first spell.

This is the fourth edition of the Nations League, but the format has not got any simpler. New this time is the introduction of quarter-finals next March, involving the top two from each group in League A. The four-team finals will take place next June.

Teams finishing third in League A, and second in League B, will face off in relegation/promotion play-offs, with identical play-offs between Leagues B and C.

There is an impact on World Cup qualifying too.

The 12 group winners in European qualifying will go to the World Cup, with another four places going to winners of play-offs featuring the 12 runners-up plus the four highest-ranked teams in the Nations League who have not otherwise made it.


Sabalenka demolishes Zheng to reach fourth US Open semifinal

Sabalenka demolishes Zheng to reach fourth US Open semifinal
Updated 04 September 2024
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Sabalenka demolishes Zheng to reach fourth US Open semifinal

Sabalenka demolishes Zheng to reach fourth US Open semifinal
  • It will be a ninth career semifinal at the Slams for the 26-year-old from Belarus

NEW YORK: World number two Aryna Sabalenka demolished Olympic gold medallist Zheng Qinwen to reach a fourth successive US Open semifinal on Tuesday.
Australian Open champion Sabalenka, runner-up to Coco Gauff in New York last year, triumphed 6-1, 6-2 and will take on Emma Navarro of the United States for a place in the final.
It will be a ninth career semifinal at the Slams for the 26-year-old from Belarus.
She also defeated the Chinese star at the same stage of the US Open in 2023 before going on to beat the 21-year-old again in the Australian Open final in January.
“It was important that I got the early break, that was an advantage because it’s tough to face her,” said Sabalenka after her 73-minute win which saw Zheng hit just nine winners.
The 13th-seeded Navarro reached her maiden Slam semifinal earlier Tuesday with a straight-sets victory over Paula Badosa of Spain.
Sabalenka and Navarro are 1-1 in their head-to-head meetings with both clashes coming this season.
The American won at Indian Wells before Sabalenka came out on top at the French Open.
“The drinks are on me if you cheer for me,” Sabalenka told the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd in an effort to drum up backing for the semifinal against the New York-born Navarro.
“She’s a really good player. We had two battles, they were really close.”


Fritz stuns Zverev to reach US Open semifinals

Fritz stuns Zverev to reach US Open semifinals
Updated 04 September 2024
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Fritz stuns Zverev to reach US Open semifinals

Fritz stuns Zverev to reach US Open semifinals

NEW YORK: Taylor Fritz won a big-hitting battle with Alexander Zverev to reach his first Grand Slam semifinal at the US Open on Tuesday.

The 12th-seeded Fritz came through against the fourth-seeded 2020 runner-up 7-6 (7/2), 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7/3) and will face either American compatriot Frances Tiafoe or Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria for a place in Sunday’s final.

Zverev’s defeat means world number one Jannik Sinner is the only top-four player left in the draw following the shock early exits of Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz.

“I have had a few looks at Grand Slam quarter-finals over the years so I felt it was my turn to take a step further,” said the 26-year-old Fritz who cracked 12 aces among his 45 winners.

“I’ve always had a big serve but at the top of the game it comes back a lot more.

“So I’ve tried to add more to my game with drop shots, coming to the net to back up the serve.”

On Tuesday, Fritz saw three set points come and go in the opener before sweeping through the tie-break.

Zverev registered the first break of the match in the eighth game of the second set on his way to levelling the quarter-final.

The two men exchanged early breaks in the third set until Zverev’s serve let him down in the 10th game. Fritz got into the rallies and converted a fifth set point to go ahead in the tie for the second time.

Zverev saved two break points in the sixth game of the fourth set but once Fritz had won a lung-busting 24-shot rally in the tie-breaker, he had the momentum for victory.