Tag Archives: sports and recreation

Hilaree Nelson: US ski mountaineer missing below summit of Nepali ​​mountain



CNN
 — 

Pioneering ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson has gone missing during an expedition in Nepal, according to one of her sponsors.

The 49-year-old American, who has enjoyed a famed career spanning over two decades, reportedly disappeared below the summit of Nepal’s ​Mount Manaslu – the world’s eighth-highest mountain.

“We are in touch with Hilaree’s family and supporting search and rescue efforts in every way we can,” ​apparel company The North Face​, one of Nelson’s sponsors, tweeted on Monday.

Nelson is a mother of two, and her partner is also an experienced ski mountaineer, Jim Morrison, according to The North Face. She had been skiing and exploring the Nepali mountain with Morrison when she was announced missing.

Jiban Ghimire, managing director of Shangri-La Nepal Trek, told Outside magazine that his crew received a call on Monday saying Nelson had fallen and was nowhere to be seen.

“I got a call from our staff at Base Camp that her ski blade skidded off and [she] fell off the other side of the peak,” Ghimire told Outside.

​Shangri-La Nepal Trek did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

Last week, Nelson wrote an Instagram post about the challenges of the trip along with pictures of the expedition.

“I haven’t felt as sure-footed on Manaslu as I have on past adventure into the thin atmosphere of the high Himalaya,​” she wrote, mentioning the bad weather which has plagued climbers in recent days.

“These past weeks have tested my resilience in new ways.”

Morrison also posted on Instagram saying: “We went up high and tried hard but the mountain said no. Tails between our legs we bailed from camp 3 and head down, (on skis).”

Nelson is a pioneer in the mountaineering community and a role model to the new generation of climbers.

She has made first descents through more than 40 expeditions across the world and was named captain of The North Face Athlete Team in 2018.

In 2012, she became the first ​woman known to climb the world’s highest peak​, Everest​, and also the adjacent mountain​, Lhotse​, in 24 hours.

She has continued to explore the world’s mountains, often with Morrison, and pushed the limits of what is expected in the sport.

The Nepal Tourism Board did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.



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Roger Federer brings down curtain on his career with a defeat, but still dazzles alongside longtime friend and rival Rafael Nadal



CNN
 — 

Roger Federer’s career may have ended in a defeat on Friday, but the five-minute standing ovation that followed was testament to the unique, indelible mark he left on the sport of tennis.

The adulation of the crowd, seemingly endless rounds of applause and chants of “Roger, Roger, Roger,” reduced Federer to tears.

“I’m happy, I’m not sad,” he said after the match, a 6-4 6-7 9-11 defeat to Jack Sock and Frances Tiafoe alongside longtime friend and rival Rafael Nadal at the Laver Cup at London’s O2 Arena.

“I enjoyed tying my shoes one last time. Everything was the last time.”

Following 24 years of excellence on the court – more than 1,500 matches, 103 singles titles and 20 grand slams – this was Federer’s last competitive match.

The epic tiebreak that sealed the win for the American pair was a fitting end to not only a match that, despite the intense and often emotional build-up, far surpassed expectations in its grandeur and quality, but also a career that has produced so many moments of genius and provided joy to so many.

For three-day competition between teams from Europe and the rest of the world that has rarely felt like much more than an exhibition since its inception in 2017, the announcement of Federer’s retirement added some welcome prestige to this weekend’s play.

While the competition, featuring nine head-to-head singles and three doubles matches, may have previously garnered unsubstantial global attention, this year’s edition had now unquestionably become one of the biggest tennis events of the year.

Of course, this was largely due to it being Federer’s swansong, but it was also providing tennis fans with something they hadn’t seen for many years: Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray all healthy and together competing at the same tournament.

Social media posts from these four superstars in the week leading up to the event no doubt would have had fans feeling nostalgic. The quartet displayed genuine warmth towards one another, akin to a group of school friends that hadn’t been together for many years, as they explored London’s landmarks.

Perhaps, though, the feelings of nostalgia came not only from the 2022 Laver Cup signaling the end of Federer’s long and storied career, but also from the fact it finally confirmed the beginning of the end of tennis’ golden era.

With Nadal, Djokovic and Murray all well into their 30s and all suffering lengthy injury absences at some point during their careers, their eventual retirements now loom large over the sport.

These four players – “the big 3 plus some clown,” as Murray comically put it on his own Instagram page – will officially never grace the same tournament again.

Where Federer’s on-court achievements rank among the greats in the men’s game will be up for debate – though he is no doubt in the top three – there is no question he is the most transcendent tennis player to ever pick up a racket.

Largely due to the way he played the game, nobody else in the sport has garnered the global adoration, the endorsements or become a cultural icon quite like the suave Swiss superstar.

For most of his career, Federer seemed to glide around the court rather than scamper, his locks flowing and bouncing above his headband, while his outrageously aesthetic one-handed backhanded became arguably the most iconic and recognizable shot tennis has ever seen.

More importantly, the beauty of his game brought – at the peak of his powers – unprecedented success. He became the first player to surpass the previous men’s record of 14 grand slams titles held by Pete Sampras, then became the first to reach the landmark 20.

While Nadal and Djokovic may have now surpassed his grand slam total, the epic battles Federer had with these two players during his career only further added to his legacy.

On another day, the three matches that preceded Federer’s final goodbye may have been noteworthy in themselves – Muray versus Alex De Minaur was a particularly engrossing encounter – but today felt like warmups for the main event.

By the end of the second set of Murray’s match against De Minaur – which the Australian won in a third-set match tie break to earn Team World’s first point of the day – Federer had changed into his shorts and headband in the Team Europe dugout and looked ready to take to the court, only adding to the anticipation that had been steadily building inside the arena.

In De Minaur’s on-court interview after the match, he mentioned how he would be cheering on Team World against Nadal and Federer, resulting in the 23-year-old being roundly booed by a crowd that then burst into laughter.

When Federer’s name was finally announced as he made his way onto the court, the noise of the crowd was so deafening that it drowned out the announcer’s voice entirely before he could finish introducing the Swiss and his doubles partner Nadal.

The 41-year-old was met with another booming cheer when having his accomplishments read out during the warmups, but the loudest roar came when Federer punched away a volley to give him and Nadal their first point of the match.

For most of the opening exchanges, there was still a zip in Federer’s shots as he carried himself with his trademark grace around the court, but when chasing a dropshot from Tiafoe that landed not two yards in front of him, the age in Federer’s legs began to show for the first time as he struggled to reach the ball.

Not that these moments happened often, a remarkable thought given his age and the three knee surgeries he has undergone. In fact, as he continued to show a remarkable touch – at the net in particular – it’s likely most in the capacity crowd inside the O2 Arena were wondering why he was retiring at all.

One moment in particular drew shocked gasps from the crowd when the big screens showed the replays. While chasing down a short ball, Federer squeezed his forehand through the tiny gap between the net and the post.

It may have lost them the point, as the ball passed under the top of the net, but even in the final game of his career Federer was producing moments most had never seen on a tennis court before.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, there still seemed to be plenty of magic left in what many viewers throughout his career have often described as a wand instead of a racket.

There were plenty of smiles from both Federer and Nadal early on, including a laugh when Federer had clearly misheard the plan for the upcoming point and had to walk back over to his partner for another debrief, resulting in the Swiss sheepishly holding his hands up to apologize.

But as the first set wore on, the mood on the court shifted as the relentless competitive nature that has made these two players such a force over the years finally began to come to the fore.

When the pair, affectionately dubbed ‘Fedal’ by fans, clinched the first set 6-4, the atmosphere inside the arena was on the brink of party mode.

But make no mistake, Sock and Tiafoe were by no means happy to roll over and allow Federer to walk off into the sunset with an easy victory. The American duo broke serve early in the second set as they looked to spoil the party atmosphere, but Federer and Nadal soon broke back to restore parity.

The best game of the match came with the scores tied at 5-5, as Nadal saved six break points – including one of back-to-back smashes from Federer that drew raucous cheers from the crowd – to put the pair on the brink of victory.

But Sock then held a tricky service game of his own to take the set to a tiebreak, the first point of which Federer – and the entire stadium – thought he had served an ace, only to be greeted by a “let” call from the umpire that was loudly booed by the entire arena.

A brilliant tie break from the American duo sealed the second set and led to an epic decider.

The drama that was packed into the third set – a 3-0 lead opened and squandered by Federer and Nadal, a brutal forehand that Tiafoe smashed into Federer’s back and an ace from Federer that was greeted with a standing ovation – was a fitting end to an incomparable career.

In the end, that Federer was unable to secure the win didn’t matter too much and the emotion in his goodbye speech – barely able to get through it when speaking about the support his family had given him throughout his career – also reduced his doubles partner to tears.

“It feels like a celebration,” Federer said. “It’s exactly what I wanted at the end, exactly what I hoped for.”

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Easton Oliverson: Family of Little Leaguer who suffered severe injuries after falling from bunk bed is suing the league and bed manufacturer



CNN
 — 

The family of a 12-year-old Little League World Series player who was critically injured after falling from a bunk bed is suing the league and the company that made the bed, according to court documents.

Easton Oliverson of Utah’s Snow Canyon Little League suffered a fractured skull after falling from a bunk bed at the players’ dormitory in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, while he was sleeping on August 15. He was placed in a medically induced coma and underwent multiple surgeries.

The suit was filed Friday in state court in Pennsylvania by Easton’s parents, Jace and Nancy Oliverson, and it seeks at least $50,000 in compensatory and punitive damages on counts of negligence and liability.

According to the suit, bed maker Savoy Contract Furniture and the Little League were negligent for “failing to have rails on the bed,” allowing Easton to fall.

“Savoy designed, manufactured, distributed, marketed, and/or sold the bunk beds in a dangerous and defective condition in that they did not contain every element necessary to make them safe for their intended use,” the court filing reads.

The parents also allege their son suffered “significant and permanent injuries” as a result, according to the lawsuit.

Little League Baseball Inc. declined to comment on pending legal proceedings. CNN has been unable to reach Savoy for comment.

On August 17, shortly after the fall, Little League released a statement to CNN, saying the bunk beds at the players’ dorms did not have safety rails.

“Since 1992, Little League has used institutional-style bunk beds to offer the most space for the players to enjoy their time in the dorms. While these beds do not have guard rails, Little League is unaware of any serious injuries ever occurring during that period of time,” the league’s statement read. “Out of an abundance of caution, Little League has made the decision to remove all bunks from within the dorms and have each bed frame individually on the floor.”

Oliverson whose nickname is “Tank,” was hospitalized in Pennsylvania for two weeks before transferring to a children’s hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah. On September 19, an Instagram account set up to provide updates on his recovery announced he had returned home.

Support for Oliverson came flooding in after news of his injury made national headlines.

The Brigham Young University football team and Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts submitted supportive videos through Instagram for Easton.

Oliverson thanked people for their prayers in a video posted to social media August 30.



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Roger Federer announces his retirement from the ATP Tour and grand slams



CNN
 — 

Roger Federer has announced that he will retire from the ATP Tour and grand slams following the Laver Cup next week in London.

“I am 41 years old. I have played more than 1500 matches over 24 years. Tennis has treated me more generously than I ever would have dreamt, and now I must recognize when it is time to end my competitive career,” the 20-time grand slam winner said in an Instagram post.

The last few years of Federer’s career have been marred by a series of injuries, as he underwent two knee surgeries in 2020 and another after he was defeated by Hubert Hurkacz in the 2021 Wimbledon quarterfinal – his last competitive match to date.

“As many of you know, the past three years have presented me with challenges in the form of injuries and surgeries,” he said. “I’ve worked hard to return to full competitive form. But I also know my body’s capacities and limits, and its message to me lately has been clear.”

Roger Federer muses on retirement planning

Federer’s long career coincided with those of 22-time grand slam winner Rafael Nadal and 21-time grand slam winner Novak Djokovic, with whom he dominated men’s tennis for the last two decades.

“I would also like to thank my competitors on the court,” Federer said.

“I was lucky enough to play so many epic matches that I will never forget. We battled fairly, with passion and intensity, and I always tried my best to respect the history of the game. I feel extremely grateful.”

Nadal took to Twitter to commemorate his great rival and friend: “Dear Roger,my friend and rival. I wish this day would have never come. It’s a sad day for me personally and for sports around the world. It’s been a pleasure but also an honor and privilege to share all these years with you, living so many amazing moments on and off the court.

“We will have many more moments to share together in the future, there are still lots of things to do together, we know that … I’ll see you in London.”

Despite playing alongside two of the greatest players of all time, Federer has still broken multiple records, including becoming the oldest ever world No. 1 at age 36 and remaining at the top of the rankings for a record 237 consecutive weeks.

Among his many accolades, Federer won a career grand slam: the Australian Open six times, the French Open once, the US Open five times, and Wimbledon – the tournament with which he was synonymous – a record eight times.

He also won 103 ATP titles – the second most in the Open era behind only Jimmy Connors – a record six ATP finals, the Davis Cup and a gold medal at the 2008 Olympics in the men’s doubles alongside Stan Wawrinka.

“This is a bittersweet decision, because I will miss everything the tour has given me,” he said.

“But at the same time, there is so much to celebrate. I consider myself one of the most fortunate people on Earth. I was given a special talent to play tennis, and I did it a level that I never imagined, for much longer than I ever thought possible.”

“The last 24 years on tour have been an incredible adventure. While it sometimes feels like it went by in 24 hours, it has also been so deep and magical that it seems as if I’ve already lived a full lifetime.

“I have had the immense fortune to play in front of you in over 40 different countries. I have laughed and cried, felt joy and pain, and most of all I have felt incredibly alive.”

As well as thanking his fans, Federer thanked his team, sponsors, parents, sister, wife and children, and recalled his time growing up in Basel, Switzerland.

“When my love of tennis started, I was a ball kid in my hometown of Basel. I used to watch the players with a sense of wonder. They were like giants to me and I began to dream. My dreams led me to work harder and I started to believe in myself,” he said.

“Some success brought me confidence and I was on my way to the most amazing journey that has led to this day. So, I want to thank you all from the bottom of my heart, to everyone around the world who has helped make the dreams of a young Swiss ball kid come true.”

Almost as soon as Federer announced his retirement, tributes began rolling in from the tennis world.

Newly crowned US Open champion and men’s world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz, who was two months old when Federer won his first grand slam, tweeted a broken heart emoji, as did two-time grand slam winner Garbiñe Muguruza.

“Roger, where do we begin?” posted Wimbledon’s official Twitter account.

“It’s been a privilege to witness your journey and see you become a champion in every sense of the word. We will so miss the sight of you gracing our courts, but all we can say for now is thank you, for the memories and joy you have given to so many.”

Federer’s retirement announcement arrived a month after Serena Williams also declared her intention “to evolve away” from the sport, signaling an almost simultaneous end to eras in which they have shaped men’s and women’s tennis.

Williams’ likely swansong unfolded at the US Open – in her home country and at the site of her first grand slam triumph – but Federer told CNN’s Christina Macfarlane in 2019 that he had no such specific plans.

“I think it will all come down to is it the body, is it the family, is it the mind, is it a morning when I wake up, how will it happen?” he said.

“The day that it happens, maybe that is the end or maybe I say I’ve got a few more tournaments left in me, I don’t know. And then maybe that one tournament that I think it could be is way too far away and then you just can’t make it there … Wimbledon stands out as a place but there are actually many others.”

Due to injuries, Federer was absent from this year’s main draw at Wimbledon for the first time since 1998, and he will finish his career at the Laver Cup – a tournament which he was a driving force behind in which six players from Europe play six players from the rest of the world.

“I would like to go out on my terms,” he added in 2019. “I don’t have the fairytale ending in my head saying it has to be another title somewhere and then I have to announce it big and say, ‘By the way, that was it, guys.’ I don’t have to have it that way.

“The expectations from the media is that it all has to end so perfectly and I’ve given up a long time ago. I just think as long as I’m healthy and I’m enjoying myself at the very end, I know it’s going to be emotional anyway.”



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Robert Sarver: LeBron James and other NBA figures respond to Suns owner decision



CNN
 — 

LeBron James and Chris Paul have criticized the NBA for the punishment handed down to Phoenix Suns owner Robert Sarver, who this week was fined $10 million and suspended for a year after an independent investigation found he engaged in hostile, racially insensitive and inappropriate behavior.

The report, commissioned by the NBA last fall after an ESPN report about Sarver’s behavior, found the Suns owner had “on at least five occasions during his tenure with the Suns/Mercury organization, repeated the N-word when recounting the statements of others.”

He also “engaged in instances of inequitable conduct toward female employees, made many sex-related comments in the workplace, made inappropriate comments about the physical appearance of female employees and other women, and on several occasions engaged in inappropriate physical conduct toward male employees.”

“Read through the Sarver stories a few times now,” James wrote on Twitter. “I gotta be honest…Our league definitely got this wrong. I don’t need to explain why. Y’all read the stories and decide for yourself. I said it before and I’m gonna say it again, there is no place in this league for that kind of behavior.

“I love this league and I deeply respect our leadership. But this isn’t right. There is no place for misogyny, sexism, and racism in any work place. Don’t matter if you own the team or play for the team. We hold our league up as an example of our values and this aint it.”

According to the NBA, 320 current and former employees who worked for Sarver were interviewed. The NBA said Sarver and the Suns and Mercury organizations cooperated with the investigation.

Sarver, who has been the Suns’ and Mercury’s majority owner since 2004, cannot have any involvement with the team during the yearlong suspension and must complete a workplace training program. The $10 million fine is the maximum allowed as determined by the NBA by-laws.

Paul, a 12-time All-Star who has played for the Suns since 2020, also said the NBA’s punishment should have been more severe.

“Like many others, I reviewed the report. I was and am horrified and disappointed by what I read,” Paul wrote on Twitter. “This conduct especially towards women is unacceptable and must never be repeated.

“I am of the view that the sanctions fell short in truly addressing what we can all agree was atrocious behavior. My heart goes out to all of the people that were affected.”

In 2014, then Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling was given a lifetime ban by the NBA and forced to sell the franchise after being recorded making racist remarks.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver, who had not long assumed his role before the Sterling allegations came to light, explained why Sarver wasn’t given a lifetime ban for his comments.

“This case is very different and it’s not that one was captured on tape and the other isn’t,” Silver said, per NBA.com. “Indefensible is not strong enough – it’s beyond the pale in every possible way – but it was a whole different context than what we saw in that earlier case.

“Looking back over his track record of hiring, his track record of support for particular employees, what the actual people said about him – while there were terrible things – there were also many, many people who had very positive things to say about him through this process. I took all of that into account.

“There are particular rights here, somebody who owns an NBA team as opposed to somebody who’s an employee. The equivalent of a $10 million fine and a one-year suspension, I don’t know how to measure that against a job. I don’t have the right to take away his team … but to me, the consequences are severe.”



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A woman died in the Grand Canyon while hiking in extremely high temperatures, park says



CNN
 — 

A woman who embarked on a multi-day backpacking trip through the Grand Canyon National Park died on a trail Sunday, the park said.

Delphine Martinez, 59, of Window Rock, Arizona, “became disoriented and later unconscious” while hiking along the Thunder River Trail and was not able to be resuscitated, a release from the park said.

While the park did not release Martinez’s cause of death, it noted that high temperatures in the inner canyon were well over 100 degrees on Sunday. At Phantom Ranch, which lies at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, the high temperature reached approximately 115 degrees, the release said.

Martinez died about one mile from where the Tapeats Creek and Colorado River converge, the parks service said. Her death is being investigated by the parks service and the Coconino County Medical Examiner.

“Park rangers at Grand Canyon National Park urge visitors to Grand Canyon, especially inner canyon hikers and backpackers, to be prepared for excessively hot days in the coming weeks,” the release said.

Temperatures on exposed parts of the trail can reach more than 120 degrees in the shade during the summer, and park rangers caution people not to hike in the inner canyon during peak hours of heat between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

“Hiking in extreme heat can lead to serious health risks including heat exhaustion, heat stroke, hyponatremia, and death,” the release said.

Another Arizona hiker died Monday after suffering heat exhaustion while hiking near the Spur Cross Trailhead, about 40 miles north of Phoenix, officials said.

Arizona, like much of the West, has been stifled under extremely high temperatures over the last few days as a heat wave sweeps across the region. The blistering temperatures have led the National Weather Service to issue an excessive heat warning for the Grand Canyon area until Wednesday evening.

Heat is the top killer among natural disaster deaths, studies show. Extremely high temperature can put significant strain on the heart or making breathing more difficult, and it can also cause a person to dangerously overheat to the point of severe illness – or even death.

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Nick Kyrgios beats top seed Daniil Medvedevat at US Open



CNN
 — 

Defending champion Daniil Medvedev was knocked out of the US Open after losing 6-7 6-3 3-6 2-6 against Nick Kyrgios in the fourth round.

Medvedev won his first grand slam title in New York last year, but on Sunday was bettered by Kyrgios, who is enjoying the best run of results in his career – reaching the Wimbledon final in July and winning the Citi Open title in Washington last month.

The result means Medvedev will cede his position at the top of the world rankings come the end of the tournament, while Kyrgios will appear in his first US Open quarterfinal when he faces another Russian playing under a neutral flag, Karen Khachanov, on Tuesday.

Medvedev later said he had struggled physically on the court, but added that Kyrgios outplayed him in the last two sets.

“Today, I felt a little bit sick,” he told reporters after the match. “The thing is in the USA I get sick one time for sure in the swing because the AC (air conditioning) is just crazy. Last year it happened in Cincinnati.”

“I felt my throat a little bit today … At the same time, it’s not an excuse at all because Nick played good.”

It was the fourth time Kyrgios had beaten Medvedev in five meetings and the second time in as many months after victory in Montreal.

The Australian saved several set points in a close first-set tie break – the first set Medvedev had dropped in the tournament – before falling behind in the second set when he dropped serve twice.

Medvedev leveled the match, but momentum swung in Kyrgios’ favor when he won five straight points on Medvedev’s serve in the fourth game of the third set.

The 23rd seed always looked the favorite to win the match from there, breaking twice in the fourth set to seal the victory in close to three hours. He ended the encounter with 53 winners, 21 of which were aces.

“I just thought I played the right way,” Kyrgios told reporters. “I returned unbelievable today. Just thought the third and fourth set were just so free. I was just having a lot of fun, embracing every moment out on Ashe (Arthur Ashe Stadium) today. Really proud of that.”

Kyrgios went on a nine-match unbeaten run in the build-up the US Open, deploying a newfound focus and consistency on the court which has seen him enjoy considerable success this season – something he attributes to overcoming mental health challenges over the past few years.

“I feel like I’m more just proud of the way that I’ve bounced back after everything, honestly,” he said. “I’ve been in some really tough situations mentally, and in some really scary places.

“Obviously if you look at it on paper, I probably wasn’t expected to win that. Maybe take a set or two if I’m lucky … I just sit there in the locker room after and I’m just super proud of the performance because there was really a time where I didn’t think I was capable of producing and doing this anymore.”

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Serena Williams’ legendary tennis career likely over after third-round singles’ play loss at US Open



CNN
 — 

Serena Williams’ legendary tennis career has likely come to an end after she fell to Australia’s Ajla Tomljanović in the third round of the US Open at Arthur Ashe Stadium in Flushing, New York.

The 23-time grand slam singles champion leaves an indelible mark, not only on tennis, but all of sport.

Tomljanović, who won the more than three-hour match 7-5 6-7(4) 6-1, advances to the round of 16 at the US Open for the first time.

In an on-court interview with ESPN after the match, Williams was asked whether she would reconsider her evolution away from tennis, as she has put it.

“I don’t think so, but you never know,” she said.

In a happy tears-filled interview she thanked her parents, saying she was very grateful to them because they started everything.

And she credited her older sister, Venus Williams, for her success.

“I wouldn’t be Serena if there wasn’t Venus,” she said. “She’s the only reason Serena Williams ever existed.”

Tomljanovic said she was feeling sorry because “I love Serena just as much as you guys do.”

“What she’s done for me, for the sport of tennis, is incredible,” she said in her interview on court. “I never thought that I’d have a chance to play her in her last match when I remember watching her as a kid in all those finals, so this is a surreal moment for me.”

Tomljanovic was asked how she handled the occasion of being in this electric environment at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

“I just thought she would beat me, you know,” Tomljanovic said. “The pressure wasn’t on me. She’s Serena. I didn’t think that I – even to the last point I knew that she’s in a really good position to win even when she’s down 5-1. I don’t know how many match points I needed to finish it off, but that’s just who she is. She’s the greatest of all time, period.”

After her improbable second-round win over Anett Kontaveit, Serena Williams, 40, summed up her surprise performances at the US Open better than perhaps anybody else could.

“I’m just Serena,” she said matter-of-factly, a quote that will no doubt go down as one of the most memorable in sport.

That ability to find another gear and dig even deeper in the most difficult moments has provided the bedrock for Williams’ sustained success over more than 20 years on the Tour.

She showed the same grit and tenacity Friday as the world No. 46 Tomljanović was on top of her game.

Williams, arguably the greatest women’s tennis player ever, fought off five match points before a shot into the net ended it.

“I tried,” Williams said. “Ajla just played a little bit better.”

The crowd of 23,859 inside Arthur Ashe Stadium for the night session tried to will Williams to another victory but on this night, the winner of 847 career matches and 73 titles was second best.

Given her form coming into the US Open – just one win since returning to the circuit in June after a year out with injury – it was fair to assume that Williams’ opening round match against Danka Kovinic would be little more than an emotional farewell from tennis for the 23-time grand slam champion.

But being “just Serena,” Williams produced by far her best tennis of the season to consummately dispatch Kovinic and extended her last dance in New York by couple of days.

Then came Kontaveit, the world No. 2 and one of the toughest players on Tour. The Estonian would provide a much sterner test than Kovinic and Williams undoubtedly went into their match as the considerable underdog.

Surely, after two glittering decades at the top, this is where Williams’ career would come to end? Of course it didn’t. She is, after all, “just Serena.”

In her three-set win over Kontaveit, Williams elevated her level of tennis to a place many thought she may no longer be able to reach. The accuracy and power in her widely feared serve seem to have returned, as has her speed around the court.

Tomljanovic reached a career-high ranking of 38 this season and has enjoyed some notable success in 2022, including quarterfinal runs at Wimbledon and the recent Cincinnati Open.

On Friday she was steady as she had just 30 unforced errors to Williams’ 51.

She will face Russian Liudmila Samsonova in the round of 16. Samsonova defeated Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia 6-3, 6-3.

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Greg Knapp: New York Jets assistant coach has died following bicycle crash

Mark Brown/Getty Images

Greg Knapp previously worked with the Atlanta Falcons



CNN
—  

New York Jets assistant coach Greg Knapp has died, five days after being involved in a bicycling crash, the Knapp family announced on Thursday. He was 58.

Nicknamed “Knapper,” he “was called back home to Heaven, where he will be reunited with his Dad,” the family said in a statement.

“Those of us who were so blessed to have known him, know that he would have wanted even this moment to be a teachable one,” the statement says. “So this is it…’Live every day as if it’s your last, and love those around you like it won’t last!’”

Knapp collided with a single motorist on Saturday in California, according to the San Ramon Police Department. After a preliminary investigation, authorities said they do not suspect drugs and/or alcohol were a factor in the incident. Police said the driver of the vehicle cooperated with the investigation.

San Ramon is about 30 miles east of Oakland.

Knapp was hired by the Jets to be the passing-game specialist in January after spending the last three seasons with the Atlanta Falcons as the quarterbacks’ coach. Knapp helped the Denver Broncos win the Super Bowl in the 2015 season when he was the quarterbacks’ coach for four seasons. The coaching veteran also spent 10 seasons as an offensive coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers, Atlanta Falcons, Seattle Seahawks and the then-Oakland Raiders.

“The loss of a loved one is always a challenge but is harder when it is completely unexpected,” Jets head coach Robert Saleh said in a statement. “Charlotte, Jordan, Natalie, and Camille please accept our most sincere condolences. Greg had such an inner peace about him that people always seemed to gravitate towards. He lived life in a loving way that helped him connect with people from all walks of life in a unique way. In his short time here, I believe the people in this organization had a chance to experience that connection. Greg, thank you for all that you have shared with us, you will be missed brother.”

“In his short time with us, Greg had an immediate influence on those who had the pleasure of spending the smallest amount of time with him,” Jets Chairman Woody Johnson said. “His legacy is not only working with some of the brightest quarterbacks the league has ever seen, but the countless others across this world he has had an indelibly positive influence on.”



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Tokyo 2020: Cori ‘Coco’ Gauff will miss the Olympics after testing positive for Covid-19



CNN
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American tennis hopeful Cori “Coco” Gauff will miss the Tokyo Olympics after announcing on Twitter Sunday she tested positive for Covid-19.

The 17-year-old is currently the 25th ranked woman in the world.

“It has always been a dream of mine to represent the USA at the Olympics, and I hope there will be many more chances for me to make this come true in the future,” Cori tweeted. “I want to wish TEAM USA best of luck and a safe games for every Olympian and the entire Olympic family.”

The United States Tennis Association (USTA) tweeted a statement in response to Cori’s announcement. A USTA spokesperson said they’re currently trying to determine if they can replace her on the roster.

“We were saddened to learn that Coco Gauff has tested positive for COVID-19 and will therefore be unable to participate in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games,” USTA’s statement read. “The entire USA Tennis Olympic contingent is heartbroken for Coco. We wish her the best as she deals with this unfortunate situation and hope to see her back on the courts very soon.”

The Tokyo 2020 Olympics will begin on Friday – but concern is growing over the danger of Covid spreading, with 55 confirmed cases now linked to the Games, including officials and contractors.

Neither the International Olympic Committee (IOC) nor Team USA are requiring athletes to be vaccinated to participate in the Olympic games.

Three members from South Africa’s Olympic football team have tested positive for Covid-19 after arriving at the Tokyo Olympic Village, according to the South African Football Association. The team members include two footballers – Thabiso Monyane and Kamohelo Mahlatsi – and video analyst Mario Masha, according to the association.

The whole team is now under quarantine “until cleared to train,” according to the the association said. Monyane and Mahlatsi are the first athletes to have tested positive in the village.

The first positive case of Covid-19 in the Olympic village was reported Saturday after an individual – not believed to be an athlete – tested positive.

Outside the Olympic Village, a third athlete tested positive on Sunday, organizers said. The names and nationalities of the positive cases were not made known by organizers.

Some athletes have decided against the risk and pulled out of the games, including Australian tennis star Nick Kyrgios and Australian basketball player Liz Cambage. About 10,000 Olympic volunteers have also quit.

As of Friday, more than 15,000 Olympic individuals had entered Japan, according to Thomas Bach, IOC president. The Olympic Village, containing 21 residential buildings, will house about 11,000 athletes.

The Japanese public, as well as many international observers, have voiced alarm over the Games going forward as Japan struggles to rein in its latest coronavirus outbreak.

The country saw a huge second wave in the spring, peaking in April and May with close to 6,000 new cases per day. Cases began falling in June but have risen in recent weeks, sparking fears the arrival of teams from more than 200 countries could turn the Games into a global superspreader event.

Olympic organizers announced this month that the Tokyo venues will not have spectators due to the city’s coronavirus state of emergency – an unprecedented move, according to an IOC spokesman.

The Olympic Village is prepped with Covid testing and health centers, with signs reminding residents to wear face masks and keep at least one meter (about 3.3 feet) away from each other. Athletes will be contact-traced and tested for Covid daily; if they test positive, they will be taken to an isolation facility outside the Olympic Village, and will not be able to compete.

CNN’s Jessie Yeung contributed to this report.



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