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Medvedev, new number one

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Medvedev, new number one

(Melbourne) The misfortune of some is the happiness of others: by losing in the quarter-finals in Dubai, Novak Djokovic left his world No.1 crown to Daniil Medvedev, the Russian with a strong and uninhibited character, who will have to now come to terms with this new status.

He will not ascend the throne of the ATP until Monday officially, but already, Daniil Medvedev could already be delighted Thursday to have won his duel from a distance with Djokovic.

“It’s not easy to play a match when you learn that during the day,” said the Russian, who qualified for the semi-finals in Acapulco after his 6-2, 6-3 victory over Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka.

At 26, he put an end to the domination of four giants: for the first time since 2004, the head of the ATP escaped from one of the members of the “Big 4”, namely Djokovic, Roger Federer, Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal.

The native of Moscow will also find the Spaniard in the semis in Mexico, less than a month after their standoff in the final of the Australian Open which had turned in favor of the Majorcan in the 5and set when Medvedev had led 2 sets to 0.

The Russian, crowned at Flushing Meadows five months earlier, had then missed his chance to become the first player in the Open era (since 1968) to win two first Grand Slam titles in quick succession.

But during his fortnight in Australia, he had also been able to extricate himself from a few perilous situations, proof of a new maturity.

“I was mad! »

It was a bit by accident that the slender Russian (1.98 m) found himself with a racket in hand at 9 years old. While taking him to a swimming lesson, his mother Olga came across an advertisement for tennis lessons and his father Sergey, an IT engineer, thought the idea of ​​enrolling him there was a good one.

Little did he know, then, that the snowshoes would cost him dearly. Because, when things escape him, his son turns out to be a real ball of nerves.

“I was mad! “, he confessed to the newspaper The Team in 2019. “You can’t even imagine what I was like until I was 19… I don’t know where it came from, but around 10 I started messing around on the court. »

“I was screaming, crying, breaking racquets… Everything you can imagine, I was doing. I never liked being like that. From the age of 14, I could lose a lot of games because of this attitude. And after each defeat, I dwelled on it for a long time, ”he said then.

After studying physics, mathematics, then commerce, this fan of esports, especially “FIFA”, ended up devoting himself entirely to tennis. And his parents with, since the family went to live with him in Antibes in 2014.

He was then 18 years old, joined the Elite Tennis Center in Cannes and met the man who is still his coach, the Frenchman Gilles Cervara.

tense middle finger

Medvedev was still an unknown in 2017, when he played his first Wimbledon and stood out there. Beaten to 2and turn, he throws coins at the foot of the chair umpire to challenge a decision.

But he ends up understanding that this attitude does not help him. Just before the 2019 US Open, the Russian explains that he uses a mental trainer to help him channel himself. “Often it works. But that doesn’t mean there won’t be a match where, all of a sudden, I’m going to completely freak out. »

It just happened at the US Open that year. Facing the Spaniard Feliciano Lopez, he qualified under the boos of Louis Armstrong, after snatching his towel from the hands of a ball boy, throwing his racket towards his chair and stretching a middle finger in front of the camera. “Thank you all, the more you whistle at me, the more energy you give me,” he said.

“I was an idiot. I’m working to become a better man on the court,” he later apologized. The whistles will only stop in the final, a titanic fight finally lost against Nadal.

The ice chilled the fire in the veins of Medvedev, who also drew on the heavy defeat in the Australian Open final in February 2021 against Djokovic, then against Nadal this year, to turn a corner.

After stealing the place of N.1 from the first, he can take “(s)revenge” in Acapulco against the second. And show before the hour who is the new king.

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Looking ahead to 2025 Our best tennis photos

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Looking ahead to 2025 Our best tennis photos

Check out some of the best tennis shots our photographers have taken over the past year

PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, THE PRESS

American Coco Gauff returns a serve from Russian Veronika Kudermetova during their third round match on center court at the IGA stadium.


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Victoria Mboko at work against Elena Rybakina in the semi-final at the National Bank Open


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Eugenie Bouchard on the backhand during her second round match at the National Bank Open


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Marta Kostyuk screams during her match against Daria Kasatkina at the National Bank Open.


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Mirra Andreeva in action against McCartney Kessler at the National Bank Open


PHOTO HUGO-SÉBASTIEN AUBERT, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Naomi Osaka watches the ball in the first round of the National Bank Open against Ariana Arseneault.


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Bianca Andreescu suffered an ankle injury against Barbora Krejčíková at the National Bank Open.


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Liudmila Samsonova displays her muscles during her duel against Naomi Osaka at the National Bank Open.


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

A doubles match pitting Italians Jasmine Paolini (right) and Sara Errani against Canadians Bianca Jolie Fernandez (left) and Leylah Annie Fernandez at the National Bank Open


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Daria Kasatkina keeps her eyes on the ball against Marta Kostyuk in the third round at the National Bank Open.


PHOTO DOMINICK GRAVEL, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Victoria Mboko celebrates on court her victory against Naomi Osaka in the final of the National Bank Open.

Source: lapresse

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The famous Swiss, who has three Grand Slam awards, will retire in 2026

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The famous Swiss, who has three Grand Slam awards, will retire in 2026

40-year-old Swiss tennis player Stan Wawrinka He announced that he will retire in 2026.

“Every book must have an ending. It is time to write the last chapter of my career as a professional tennis player. In 2026, I will spend my last season on tour.”

I still want to challenge myself and complete this journey in the best possible way. I still have dreams about this sport. I enjoyed everything tennis gave me, especially the emotions I felt playing for you.

I look forward to meeting you again anywhere in the world. Last move,” Wawrinka wrote on social networks.

Stan has three Grand Slam trophies – Australian Open 2014, Roland Garros 2015 and US Open 2016. He also played in the Russian Federation final in 2017, where he lost to Rafael Nadal.

Wawrinka is currently ranked 157th in the ATP rankings. His personal best is third place.

During his career, Stan won 16 singles trophies and three doubles trophies at ATP level. At the 2008 Olympics, Wawrinka won the gold medal in the doubles tournament with Roger Federer. Stan won the Davis Cup with the Swiss team in 2014.

Wawrinka will start his farewell season with the national team in the United Cup (January 2-11).

Source: Sport UA

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Led by Mboko and Auger-Aliassime, Canada has accumulated successes in 2025

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Led by Mboko and Auger-Aliassime, Canada has accumulated successes in 2025

(Montreal) The second half of 2025 could prove to be a pivotal moment in the history of tennis in the country. At the same time, it is the sequence of promising Canadian performances on the courts – hard surface, clay, grass, whatever – over the last 15 years.

The saying “little train goes a long way” applies quite well to Tennis Canada. And with six representatives in the top 50 at the end of 2025 – including Gabriela Dabrowski, 10e in doubles – which do not seem about to plateau, this little train could pick up speed in 2026.

The representatives of the Unifolié completed 2025 with 15 titles on the two major professional circuits, nine among the ladies, six among the men. Out of the lot, a triumph stands out.

“This year, it’s certain that the strongest moment, for me, was here, with Vicky Mboko’s victory,” says Valérie Tétreault, director of the National Bank Open, in an interview with La Presse Canadienne in her office on 2e floor at the IGA Stadium.

However, there were many more highlights on the Canadian tennis scene in 2025.

Félix Auger-Aliassime did more than his share with three titles, two additional finals, a semi-final appearance at the US Open and progression to fifth in the ATP rankings, a personal high.

PHOTO ANTONIO CALANNI, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Felix Auger-Aliassime

Had it not been for Mboko’s exploit in Montreal and his meteoric rise to the 333e place, in January, until the 18the level of the world rankings, Auger-Aliassime’s performances would undoubtedly have been the highlight of the year at Tennis Canada.

To this, Mboko added a title to his record, in Hong Kong, in November. Leylah Annie Fernandez (22)e) won two tournaments, including one in the 500 category. Denis Shapovalov (23e) imitated her.

Exactly a year ago, Gabriel Diallo occupied 87e step; it will start 2026 on the 41e rank, helped by a first career title, in June, on grass.


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Gabriel Diallo

Tétreault savors this list because, among other things, of the range of names it brings together.

“In other years, we had a player who performed well, and often, it was perhaps a little more difficult for the others. There, we really had the impression that at a given moment, they were all taking turns,” notes Tétreault.

“We had Denis who won [à Los Cabos, le 19 juillet]. Afterwards, it’s Leylah who wins in Washington [le 27 juillet]. We have Vicky winning here [le 7 août] and Felix, [qui excelle] straight after at the US Open. They were different players who were performing at the highest level,” she emphasizes.

To this list, we can add Dabrowski’s doubles titles in Cincinnati, a tournament of the caliber of Montreal, then at the United States Open three weeks later.

“To see this for Canadian tennis, I think that’s what makes me the most proud. I think we don’t realize how new it was not so long ago when Milos Raonic was starting to win ATP 250 titles,” she notes.

When Raonic defeated Fernando Verdasco on February 13, 2011 in the final of the San Jose tournament for the first of his eight career titles, it was the first time a Canadian had triumphed at an ATP singles tournament since Greg Rusedski in April 1995.

In 2014, Eugenie Bouchard’s title in Germany was only the second by a Canadian at a singles tournament in 26 years.

The time of such shortages seems to be over.

Since 2019, in singles alone, Canadian athletes have amassed around twenty titles. Auger-Aliassime has eight, in addition to 12 other appearances in tournament finals.

Despite all her pride, Tétreault is not necessarily surprised. She sees the emergence of players who had already shown great skills at the junior level. She also sees a dynamic there which is similar to a form of emulation.

“Apart from, perhaps, Gabriel Diallo, who we saw less coming, the others, already at a young age, had pretty much all been identified as hopes, not only of Canadian tennis, but hopes of international tennis. I think it was just a matter of time before they could hatch,” emphasizes Tétreault.

“But then, I think that there is still something in there like a kind of training phenomenon, in the sense that seeing a Canadian player experience success, it motivates the others. Then, we suddenly have the impression of being part of a movement,” she says.

Mboko’s unexpected triumph, moreover, was the exclamation point to another successful edition in Montreal, in a context where, for the first time, the main draw extended over 12 days and brought together 96 players in singles.

And what’s more, Mother Nature greatly collaborated.

At the end of the tournament, the organizers welcomed 287,329 spectators, a record, of course, for the women’s event in Montreal.

“As much as there were a lot of unknowns going into this year’s tournament, more than usual, I think we can say mission accomplished because we saw a format that worked well,” said Tétreault.

“My biggest concern was more about the reception of the players, knowing that they were roughly double what we were used to welcoming,” adds Tétreault.

“We wanted to make sure we had the necessary space. The way we reconfigured it, and with the results of the player survey and the feedback we received from the WTA, I think it demonstrated that we had done what we needed to do to be ready for this. »

In addition to revealing Mboko, the National Bank Open offered Eugenie Bouchard the chance to play on the court of her childhood by offering her a pass to the main draw.


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Eugenie Bouchard

Bouchard thanked the organization by delivering two solid performances, even causing a lot of trouble for the Swiss Belinda Bencic, a quality player, in what was the Montrealer’s swan song in professional tennis.

Source: lapresse

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