Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams

Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams
Team Europe’s Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with the trophy after winning the Laver Cup against Team World. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 September 2024
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Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams

Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams
  • French Open and Wimbledon winner Alcaraz will be Spain’s key figure as they bid to win the competition dubbed the World Cup of tennis for the first time since 2019
  • US Open and Australian Open champion Sinner is part of Italy’s squad for the finals, which start on Nov. 19

BARCELONA: Spain named 22-time Grand Slam champion Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz in a five-man Davis Cup team on Monday, while Italian world No. 1 Jannik Sinner will also compete in the final eight in Malaga.

Nadal, 38, pulled out of the US Open and Laver Cup in recent months and has only taken part in one of the last seven Grand Slams because of injury and fitness struggles.

French Open and Wimbledon winner Alcaraz will be Spain’s key figure as they bid to win the competition dubbed the World Cup of tennis for the first time since 2019, starting with a clash against the Netherlands.

Alcaraz inspired Team Europe to Laver Cup victory over Team World last weekend in Berlin.

US Open and Australian Open champion Sinner is part of Italy’s squad for the finals, which start on Nov. 19.

The 23-year-old was crucial as Italy triumphed last year, beating Serbian superstar Novak Djokovic twice in one day, first in singles and then in doubles, in the semifinals.

Italy, who face Argentina in their quarterfinal clash, beat Australia in the 2023 final to win the competition for the first time since 1976.


Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury

Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury
Updated 24 September 2024
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Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury

Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury
  • ESPN and Spanish sports daily Marca reported that tests on Monday have confirmed an ACL tear
  • Rodri has been touted as a potential Ballon d’Or winner this year after his influential role in City’s latest Premier League title and Spain’s success at Euro 2024

MANCHESTER: Manchester City and Spain midfielder Rodri could miss the rest of the season due to an anterior cruciate ligament injury, according to reports in Spain on Monday.

The 28-year-old limped off during City’s 2-2 draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday after going down holding his right knee.

ESPN and Spanish sports daily Marca reported that tests on Monday have confirmed an ACL tear.

Rodri’s loss would be a huge blow to City’s hopes of winning a fifth consecutive Premier League title and ambitions of reclaiming the Champions League.

The former Atletico Madrid player has lost just one of his last 84 games for club and country.

He has been touted as a potential Ballon d’Or winner this year after his influential role in City’s latest Premier League title and Spain’s success at Euro 2024.

“Rodri is strong. He leaves the pitch in this action because he felt something, otherwise Rodri stays there,” City boss Pep Guardiola said after the Arsenal match.

“He’s the best holding midfielder in the world, he is a potential Ballon d’Or winner. I would love for him to win (the Ballon d’Or).”

City were already light in cover for Rodri and his absence leaves a gaping hole in the middle of Guardiola’s midfield.

Mateo Kovacic has deputized in the holding midfield role early in the season as Rodri was bedded in slowly after his exertions in winning player of the tournament at Euro 2024.

Just last week Rodri had warned leading players could go on strike over an ever-expanding schedule.

He played over 5,000 minutes in 63 games for City and Spain last season.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen, but it’s something that worries us because we are the guys that suffer,” he said on the increasing physical and mental demands placed on players.

“Someone has to take care of us because we are the main characters of this, let’s say, sport, or business, whatever you want to call it.

City face Watford in the League Cup on Tuesday, little over 48 hours after the Arsenal match.


Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry
Updated 23 September 2024
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Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

LONDON: Call it the dark arts. Call it anti-football. Call it doing whatever it takes to win.

Arsenal tried it all against Manchester City on Sunday in the latest chapter of the Premier League’s new heavyweight rivalry — and came within seconds of victory.

“There was only one team that came to play football,” Manchester City midfielder Bernardo Silva grumbled after an intense, absorbing and incident-packed 2-2 draw at Etihad Stadium. “The other came to play to the limits of what was possible to do and allowed by the referee, unfortunately.”

John Stones’ equalizer for City in the eighth minute of second-half stoppage time denied Arsenal, who played with 10 men for the entire second half, what would have been a defining victory for a team that is getting closer and closer to Pep Guardiola’s repeat champions.

City’s players know it, too.

Hence Bernardo’s outspoken post-match comments on Arsenal. Notice how Erling Haaland chucked the ball at the back of Arsenal defender Gabriel’s head in City’s wild celebrations after Stones’ late intervention. Look, too, at Pep Guardiola kicking his seat in the dugout after feeling a sense of injustice at the manner of Arsenal’s equalizer by Ricardo Calafiori.

Arsenal has gotten under City’s skin.

Roll on the return match at Emirates Stadium in early February.

“As a football match, it is a great spectacle for the Premier League,” City captain Kyle Walker said of the new rivalry with Arsenal, who have been runners-up in the last two seasons. “Probably not so much certain stuff — I think it’s part and parcel of the game and we’ll say the dark arts.”

Stones spoke of Arsenal’s attempts to slow the game down by what he perceived as feigning injuries to allow manager Mikel Arteta to “get some information on to the pitch.”

“I wouldn’t say they have mastered it but they have done it for a few years now so we knew to expect that,” Stones said. “You can call it clever or dirty, whichever way you want to put it, but they break up the game which upsets the rhythm.”

To that extent, Arteta looks to have taken a page out of former Chelsea and Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho’s playbook. Mourinho was, of course, once a huge rival of Guardiola’s and took cynical play to the extremes at times.

Arteta’s Arsenal can play beautiful football, as well. But with captain Martin Odegaard out injured and Leandro Trossard sent off against City in first-half stoppage time, the

Gunners knew when it was time to change the approach to the other extreme.

“It’s unbelievable what we have done,” said Arteta, who knows City and Guardiola inside out having once been his fellow Spaniard’s assistant at the Etihad.

For Silva, matches against Liverpool — which was City’s big rival before Arsenal — were more enjoyable to play in.

“Liverpool always faced us face-to-face to try to win the games,” the Portugal playmaker said, “so by this perspective, the games against Arsenal haven’t been like the ones we had and have against Liverpool. So yes, maybe a different rivalry.”

Silva was one of many City players to get riled in what was an incendiary encounter pretty much from the start. At one stage, he curled his finger into a “0” as he faced up to Gabriel – seemingly in reference to Arsenal not winning any Premier League titles, at least since Silva joined City in 2017. Arsenal’s last league championship was in 2004.

Pressed on the difference between playing Liverpool and Arsenal, Silva said: “Maybe that Liverpool have already won a Premier League, Arsenal haven’t. That Liverpool have won a Champions League, Arsenal haven’t.”

Will this be the season that Arsenal end their wait for the league title?

After five games, Arsenal sit in fourth place and two points behind City, the leaders, having just emerged from visits to Tottenham and City — two of their toughest away games — in the space of a week with four points, either side of a 0-0 at Atalanta in the Champions League.

The stage could be set for another City vs. Arsenal title race.


Dubois changes perceptions and muscles onto the top table of heavyweights, wants Usyk next

Dubois changes perceptions and muscles onto the top table of heavyweights, wants Usyk next
Updated 23 September 2024
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Dubois changes perceptions and muscles onto the top table of heavyweights, wants Usyk next

Dubois changes perceptions and muscles onto the top table of heavyweights, wants Usyk next
LONDON: Tyson Fury looked as stunned as everyone else inside Wembley Stadium after witnessing Daniel Dubois dismantle Anthony Joshua in the latest shake-up of boxing’s heavyweight division.
Except Fury had other things on his mind.
“Listen, that’s cost me 150 million,” Fury, scratching his head, shouted to a friend at ringside on Saturday night.
Maybe Fury vs. Joshua — the long-awaited heavyweight fight that boxing officials had reportedly been planning — might never happen.
Instead, it’s Dubois, another British fighter, who has muscled his way onto the sport’s top table.
Given his age, he could be there to stay.
The 27-year-old Dubois might have the boxing world at his feet after a brutal fifth-round knockout of Joshua that not only legitimized his status as the IBF titleholder but made plenty sit up and take notice.
That included Fury and Oleksandr Usyk, currently the two major powers among the heavyweights who are preparing for a rematch in the Kingdom in December and were seen joking around at ringside on Saturday. Usyk won their first fight in May to become the first undisputed heavyweight champion since 2000, but vacated his IBF belt in June.
The wider plan was for Joshua to take on Fury — reportedly there was an agreement on a double-header for the sum Fury was talking about — or to fight Usyk for a third time, having already lost twice to the Ukrainian.
Now Joshua, outclassed by Dubois, looks to be out of the picture. Dubois is the main in waiting.
As for a potential Fury-Dubois fight, Frank Warren — the British promoter who represents both boxers — said that would put him in a “very, very awkward position.”
“It’s not something I would push for,” Warren said. “If there’s an offer made that makes a lot of sense, then that’s up to them.”
More likely, then, is a rematch between Dubois and Usyk, especially if Usyk beats Fury. That would put all belts on the table for another fight for the title of undisputed.
Usyk stopped Dubois in the ninth round when they fought in Poland in August last year, but only after controversially getting time to recover from what was adjudged a low blow by Dubois in the fifth round.
It sent Usyk to the canvas, where he sat against the ropes. Replays showed the punch hitting around Usyk’s belt and Dubois still maintains he was robbed.
“I want to get my rematch,” Dubois said of Usyk, “and put the wrong right.”
There’s video of Usyk and Dubois talking in the ring after their fight in Wroclaw, with Usyk telling his beaten challenger: “Daniel, you young. You can. You can dream.”
Still, Usyk said after the Dubois-Joshua fight that he thought Joshua would win on Saturday.
“For me, it’s a surprise,” said the Ukrainian.
Uysk said he was only thinking about “Tyson Fury and the fight and of my family and preparation” when asked if he wanted to take on Dubois again.
Fury, it seems, has money on his mind, too.
If he loses to Usyk, Fury could still fight Joshua in what would be billed as a grudge match, but it wouldn’t be so appealing and there would be no belts on the line for two fighters now in their mid-to-late 30s.
Joshua’s reputation has been seriously damaged by the way he was beaten up by Dubois, though the guy who has been a walking marketing phenomenon for the past 10 years wants to fight on.
“It’s far from over yet,” Joshua said in a video released on social media platform X. “We’ve done it once, done it twice. Doing it a third time hasn’t been easy but I believe it’s something I can achieve.”
Emulating the likes of Muhammad Ali and Lennox Lewis and becoming a three-time heavyweight champion might be beyond Joshua, though.
Instead, the baton undoubtedly has been passed to Dubois.

UAE’s Al-Qemzi cruises into record books with 5th powerboating world title

UAE’s Al-Qemzi cruises into record books with 5th powerboating world title
Updated 23 September 2024
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UAE’s Al-Qemzi cruises into record books with 5th powerboating world title

UAE’s Al-Qemzi cruises into record books with 5th powerboating world title
  • Team Abu Dhabi star rounded off another triumphant season with victory in Portugal

VILA VELHA DE RODAO:Team Abu Dhabi’s Rashed Al-Qemzi has become the most successful driver in the history of the UIM F2 World Championship after clinching the driver’s title for a fifth time with a commanding victory in Portugal.

The Emirati rounded off his record-breaking season with an emphatic third Grand Prix triumph of the 2024 campaign in a repeat of his race win on the Tagus River circuit at Vila Velha de Rodao last year.

It took him into the record books ahead of Sweden’s four-time F2 champion Erik Stark, confirming an 18th world title for Team Abu Dhabi since Guido Cappellini arrived as team manager nine years ago.

After qualifying in second place for the sixth and final round of the championship, Al-Qemzi held a six-point lead over Lithuania’s Edgaras Riabko and knew a second-place finish would be enough to see him retain the F2 crown.

If there was any doubt over the final outcome in the title race, it was quickly dispelled as Al-Qemzi made a superb start, accelerating away past Monaco’s pole position winner Giacomo Sacchi to take an immediate lead.

It was a lead he did not seem to surrender at any stage as he underlined his status as one of the world’s top powerboat racing talents, winning by more than three seconds from Sacchi, with Riabko taking third spot to finish championship runner-up.

Despite making an early exit with mechanical problems, Team Abu Dhabi’s Mansoor Al-Mansoori secured third place overall in the championship to follow up his Grand Prix victory in Portugal a week earlier.

“I’m very happy to be world champion again, and I want to thank my team for the great support they’ve given to myself and to Mansoor this season,” said Al-Qemzi.

“Compared with my other four titles, this one was very difficult. There was some tough competition, and I missed some podiums. But we worked hard to get the points we needed.”

Al-Qemzi first came to notice by winning the Nations Cup and F4-S world titles before tackling the F2 World Championship for the first time in 2016, finishing ninth overall.

He secured his first F2 world title the following year, and the others followed in 2019, 2021, and last year when he wrapped up the championship in Portugal with one round to spare.


All-Australian Ripper squad captures LIV Golf team crown

All-Australian Ripper squad captures LIV Golf team crown
Updated 23 September 2024
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All-Australian Ripper squad captures LIV Golf team crown

All-Australian Ripper squad captures LIV Golf team crown
  • The Aussies denied 4Aces a second team title in three seasons and doomed a worst-to-first bid for Iron Heads, who finished last in the LIV season team standings
  • Smith birdied the par-5 17th to give the Aussies a two-stroke lead and when Johnson found the water off the 18th tee, the outcome was all-but settled
  • LIV has announced four events to start the 2025 season, including Riyadh and Adelaide in February plus Hong Kong and Singapore in March

WASHINGTON: Cam Smith’s Ripper won the LIV Golf Team Championship on Sunday, the all-Australian squad defeating Dustin Johnson’s all-American 4Aces and Iron Heads by three strokes.

Smith, the 2022 British Open champion, birdied three of the last six holes to fire a four-under par 68 at Maridoe Golf Club in suburban Dallas.

That gave Ripper a team total of 11-under par 277 with 4Aces and Kevin Na’s Iron Heads sharing second on 280 and Legion XIII, playing without captain Jon Rahm, fourth on 282.

The Aussies denied 4Aces a second team title in three seasons and doomed a worst-to-first bid for Iron Heads, who finished last in the LIV season team standings.

Justin Herbert birdied four of his last five holes to shoot 69 for Ripper with Marc Leishman and Matt Jones both on 70.

“It’s so good ... not only great golfers but they’re better people and I think that’s what being a Ripper is all about,” Smith said shortly after his teammates doused him in champagne on the 18th green. “To have those guys out there today to lean on, there was something telling me that we were going to be all right.”

The stroke-play final saw the scores of all four players counting to the team total after a shotgun start.

Ripper, 4Aces and Iron Heads were tied for the lead at 8-under as the captains final group, which began at the first hole, reached the 16th tee.

Jones birdied the par-5 second to lift Ripper one ahead at 9-under while Na made bogey at 16 and Scott Vincent closed with a birdie at the third to keep the Iron Heads one adrift.

Harold Varner III closed with a long birdie putt at the first to lift 4Aces level with Ripper but Herbert answered on the same hole moments later with an eight-foot birdie to put Ripper back on top at 10-under.

Smith birdied the par-5 17th to give the Aussies a two-stroke lead and when Johnson found the water off the 18th tee, the outcome was all-but settled, Smith finishing off the triumph with a par minutes later.

Johnson, the 2016 US Open and 2020 Masters champion, closed with a bogey to shoot 69. The 40-year-old Johnson, who won a LIV individual title at Las Vegas in February, shared his team’s low score with birdie-free Patrick Reed, the 2018 Masters winner.

Iron Heads, the 13th and last seeds, ousted defending champion Crushers in a Saturday semifinal. They were led by Na and Japan’s Jinichiro Kozuma on 69.

Legion XIII, usually led by season individual LIV champion Rahm, was without the two-time major winner from Spain after he withdrew Saturday with flu symptoms.

Saudi-backed LIV’s third campaign closes with merger negotiations ongoing between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF).

LIV has announced four events to start the 2025 season, including Riyadh and Adelaide in February plus Hong Kong and Singapore in March.