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WTA announces schedule for return to China

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WTA announces schedule for return to China

(St. Petersburg) The WTA, the professional women’s tennis circuit, on Friday unveiled the tournament schedule scheduled for China this fall, after a four-year absence in the country due to the COVID-19 pandemic and then the Peng Shuai case.

Seven tournaments will take place in mainland China and Hong Kong in September and October.

The WTA 250 Guangzhou Open will be the first tournament held and will begin on Monday, September 18.

It will be followed by the Ningbo tournament (WTA 250) from September 25, then the China Open (WTA 1000) in Beijing from September 30. Other tournaments on the program: those of Zhengzhou (WTA 500), Hong Kong (WTA 250) and Nanchang (WTA 250), the week of October 9 and finally that Zhuhai from October 23.

With the exception of the Beijing Winter Olympics last year, which took place in a ‘bubble’, most sports came to a standstill in China after the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic at the end of the year 2019.

The WTA had also suspended its events in China for 16 months, until last April, following the Peng Shuai affair.

PHOTO ANDY BROWNBILL, ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES

Peng Shuai

The Chinese player, former world No.1 in doubles, found herself at the heart of a state affair and a global crisis after accusing the former vice prime minister Zhang Gaoli, 40 years her senior, of of sexually assaulting her before making her his mistress.

The player disappeared a few days in November 2021 after posting a long message on the Chinese social network Weibo in which she denounced the top leader. She had reappeared in public several times, notably during the Beijing Winter Olympics, accompanied by regime officials.

If the WTA has not obtained all the guarantees on the fate of Peng Shuai, it has resolved to return to China, an essential country for its financing.

The Chinese market is also the most dynamic in the world, with no less than twenty million players according to figures from the International Tennis Federation (ITF).

Source: lapresse

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Tennis

Australian Open Defending champion Madison Keys advances to third round

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Australian Open Defending champion Madison Keys advances to third round

(Melbourne) Defending champion Madison Keys beat Ashlyn Krueger 6-1, 7-5 in the second round of the Australian Open on Thursday.

Ninth seeded, Keys won the American duel in an hour and a quarter ahead of Krueger, 62e in the world.

Keys erased a 5-2 deficit in the second set.

“I would say I started the match really well and Ashlyn was a little slower to get into the rhythm,” Keys said. I expected it to get tougher, and that’s what happened. »

Last year, Keys earned her first major title by beating Aryna Sabalenka in the final at Melbourne Park.

Sixth seed, American Jessica Pegula defeated her compatriot McCartney Kessler 6-0, 6-2, after dominating 6-1 in breaks.

Among the men, the Serbian Novak Djokovic, titled 10 times in Melbourne, will play against the Italian Francesco Maestrelli, 141e in the world.

Source: lapresse

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Andreeva said that she never thought about changing her citizenship

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Andreeva said that she never thought about changing her citizenship

The first racket of Russia, Mirra Andreeva, said that she had never thought about changing her citizenship and her neutral status at international tournaments does not put any pressure on her.

On Wednesday, 19-year-old Andreeva beat Greek Maria Sakkari in the second round of the Australian Open with a score of 6:0, 6:4.

– I didn’t even think about it. I heard that Dasha Kasatkina changed her citizenship, and many more players changed their citizenship. But at the moment I intend to play in my previous status. I didn’t receive any offers or anything like that.

— Doesn’t it create pressure when you play without a flag?

“The lack of a flag doesn’t put pressure on me, I just do my job on the court, focus on how to become even better, how to improve. So for me this does not create any pressure,” the Australian Open press service quotes Andreeva as saying.

In the third round of the Australian Open, the Russian will play with the 77th racket of the world, Elena Gabriela Ruze from Romania.

Source: Sportbox

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Sabalenka responds to Oleynikova’s accusations that she supports Lukashenko

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Sabalenka responds to Oleynikova’s accusations that she supports Lukashenko

The world’s first racket Arina Sabalenko He responded to Ukraine’s accusations at the press conference Alexandra Oleynikova In support of Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukoshenko:

– Ukrainian tennis player Alexandra Oleynikova mentioned you and several Russian players, saying that you support their governments, and called for a ban on the participation of Russian and top Russian players. I just wanted to give you a chance to answer this.

– Actually, I’ve talked about this a lot before. Of course I want peace and if I could change something I would definitely do it. Other than that, I don’t have anything else to say.

– As a follow-up to the previous question, I respect your wish not to comment on politics, but do you consider Oleynikova’s comments yesterday, in which she personally mentioned you, as unfair? Do you want politics to stay out of tennis?

– Look, I’m here for tennis. This is a tennis event and I’ve said enough in the past and I don’t want to talk politics here.

Source: Sport UA

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