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Peng Shuai affair The WTA begins its return to China

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Peng Shuai affair The WTA begins its return to China

(Canton) This is the culmination of an about-face: the WTA returns to China this Monday, 21 months after having loudly announced the “suspension” of Chinese tournaments to defend tennis player Peng Shuai.

The WTA tournament in Guangzhou (September 18-23), a metropolis in the south of the country, will be the first since pre-COVID-19 in 2019. No star of the top 20 should not be present, but the event should certainly attract attention.

Organizer of the women’s circuit, the WTA announced this “suspension” in December 2021 and demanded guarantees from Beijing on the fate of the Chinese Peng Shuai, who had accused a former senior manager of “forced” sexual intercourse.

It is “more important than business”, insisted Steve Simon, the president of the WTA, saying he was ready to sacrifice the enormous economic interests linked to the Chinese market.

Dramatic twist in April 2023: the WTA announces the resumption of tournaments, despite the fact, it says, that “the situation” has “shown no signs of change” regarding Peng Shuai.

“A total capitulation”, for sports analyst Mark Dreyer, based in China. “Because it was obvious to anyone who knows China that they were not going to conduct a free and impartial investigation into the sexual assault allegations,” he explains.

“It would almost have been better” for the WTA in terms of image “if it had not adopted this position,” underlines Mr. Dreyer, author of Sporting Super Powera book on the sporting ambitions of the Asian giant.

The suspension was very symbolic anyway, the tournaments being at the time… already suspended in China due to anti-COVID-19 health measures. International competitions did not really resume there until 2023.

An economical choice

In a long message published on the internet in November 2021, Peng Shuai, ex-N. 1 in the world in doubles, now aged 37, recounted her thwarted romantic relationship with a former Chinese prime minister, Zhang Gaoli, 39 years her senior and married.

She indicated in a sentence that she felt “forced”, one day, to accept sexual intercourse.

The player later claimed that the term “sexual assault” used by the WTA to describe the case was incorrect and that “everything is fine.”

China is almost essential for the WTA, given the quality of local infrastructure and investments, television rights and sponsors.

“The choice of return is economical,” declares Lionel Maltese, lecturer at the University of Aix-Marseille, organizer of the ATP tournament in Marseille and former member of the executive committee of the French tennis federation (FFT).

“The income generated in China strongly impacts the financing and income of all players, because the tournaments have significant prizes and guarantees and the WTA returns the added value generated to the players,” he summarizes.

Before COVID-19, the WTA organized 10 tournaments there each year (out of more than 60), with a total of $30 million.

Among them was notably its end-of-season Masters, in Shenzhen (south), now abandoned and which offered record prizes for the women’s circuit.

Cornet’s “convictions”

China is all the more important for the WTA as five Chinese women appear in the top 100 world – notably Zheng Qinwen (22e), 20 years old, recent quarter-finalist at the United States Open, or Wang Xinyu, 21 years old and titled in women’s doubles this year at Roland-Garros.

Good performances which stimulate the enthusiasm for tennis in China and therefore the economic potential of the market.

“When you have enough big names, the money and the tournaments flow,” Dreyer said.

The headliners in Canton should be the Polish Magda Linette (24e world) and the Romanian Sorana Cirstea (26e).

Will the players discuss the Peng Shuai affair?

“There is no leadership among the players on ethical issues,” believes Lionel Maltese.

“Rare athletes take a stand. The years of Bill Russell in basketball or Mohamed Ali in boxing or even Arthur Ashe in tennis are distant. »

The Frenchwoman Alizé Cornet (99e world) however announced this week that she would not participate in the fall tournaments in China in order to be “faithful” to her “convictions”.

A visit from retired Peng Shuai is not excluded. Since the affair broke out, it has appeared, in a visibly orchestrated manner, during other sporting competitions, notably the Beijing Winter Olympics in February 2022.

Source: lapresse

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Australian Open Gabriel Diallo loses to Alexander Zverev in the 1st round

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Australian Open Gabriel Diallo loses to Alexander Zverev in the 1st round

(Melbourne) Quebecer Gabriel Diallo had a good start, but his opponent was simply too strong in the first round of the Australian Open tennis tournament.

Diallo (41e) lost 6-7 (1), 6-1, 6-4 and 6-2 to German Alexander Zverev (third) on Sunday.

Obviously not intimidated by his opponent, Diallo quickly scored a break to make it 3-1 in the opening set. Although he let this lead slip away, he still won the first five points of the tiebreaker to give himself the lead.

Zverev, who reached the final of this first major tournament of the season before losing to the Italian Jannik Sinner last year, was however whipped by this first round. He took the second run in 32 minutes and maintained his pace until the end.

Zverev slammed 15 aces and won 85% of rallies with his first serve ball. He will face in the second round the winner of a duel between the Australian Alexei Popyrin (49e) and the Frenchman Alexandre Muller (50e).

Diallo struggled with his second ball, committing five double faults and winning 38% of the points with it.

Having ended his long-standing association with coach Martin Laurandeau at the start of the year, Diallo begins the new season with three defeats in four games. The first two came at the hands of Hong Kong’s Coleman Wong (132), in the second round in Hong Kong, and Italian Andrea Vavassori (336e), in the first round in Adelaide.

Diallo reached the second round in Melbourne last year. His best Grand Slam result is a third-round loss at the 2024 U.S. Open. However, he is 0-8 against players in the top 10 on the ATP Tour.

Canadian Liam Draxl (145e) was also in action on Sunday morning in Melbourne, with a match against Bosnian Damir Dzumhur (66e).

Félix Auger-Aliassime (seventh) and Denis Shapovalov (23e), among men, just like Leylah Annie Fernandez (22e), Victoria Mboko (17e) and Marina Stakusic (127e), on the women’s side, are also in the running.

Source: lapresse

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The Australian Open tennis tournament gets underway

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The Australian Open tennis tournament gets underway

(Melbourne) Italian Jasmine Paolini was dominant from the start at the Australian Open, winning 6-1, 6-2 in just over an hour against Belarusian Aliaksandra Sasnovich on Sunday.

Paolini (seventh) won the first round in just 27 minutes against Sasnovich (102e) on center court, giving the crowd what they wanted as a curtain-raiser to this first major tournament of the season.

At the end of the day, the world’s leading rackets Aryna Sabalenka and Carlos Alcaraz will make their debut. The Belarusian will face the French Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah (118e), while the Spaniard takes on the Australian Adam Walton (79e).

Sabalenka is seeking her third Australian Open title. She lost in the final last year against American Madison Keys (ninth).

Alcaraz, for his part, will try to win the only Grand Slam tournament he is missing, although he has triumphed twice in France, England and the United States.

The American Venus Williams (576e) will become the oldest player, at 45, to play a main draw match in Australia. She will face the Serbian Olga Danilovic (68e).

Williams has never won the Australian Open. She reached the final in 2003 and 2017, losing to her sister Serena each time.

Source: lapresse

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Kostyuk’s potential opponent in the second round of the Australian Open has been announced

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Kostyuk’s potential opponent in the second round of the Australian Open has been announced

Kazakhstani tennis player Yulia Putintseva (WTA 105) can compete with Ukraine Marty Kostyuk (WTA 20) in the second round of the 2026 Australian Open.

Putintseva lost in the first round of the Australian major Beatrice Hadda Mayu (Brazil, WTA 59) in 2 hours 55 minutes.

Kostyuk will face Putintseva if she defeats Elsa Jacquemot (France, WTA 58) in the 1/64 final match.

Australian Open 2026. 1/64 finals

Yulia Putintseva (Kazakhstan) – Beatriz Haddad Maya (Brazil) – 3:6, 7:5, 6:2

Photo gallery of the match

Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine

Source: Sport UA

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