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Rested, Djokovic launches down the home straight

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Rested, Djokovic launches down the home straight

A month and a half after his historic 24th Grand Slam crown, world No.1 Novak Djokovic begins his home series of the season at the Masters 1000 in Paris starting on Monday, ahead of the Turin Masters in mid-November.

After her 24th major title – an all-time record equaled by Australia’s Margaret Court – which she won at the United States Open in mid-September, “Nole” received such an unforgettable and rousing reception in Belgrade, on the balcony of the town hall with his colleague . basketball world runner-up, who was moved to tears.

He then made a victorious foray into the Davis Cup in Valencia, Spain, before hitting the pause button for six weeks.

We saw him at the end of September, the tennis racket swapped for a golf club, but he was still a competitor at heart: he was the one who won a celebrity event held on the sidelines of the Ryder Cup near Rome, associated with a former Welsh footballer Gareth Bale, supervised by Scotland’s Colin Montgomery, former world No. 2 golfer.

Pre-season preparation

“I’m not at the same level in golf as I am in tennis,” he smiled at a press conference on Saturday, however, as he approaches the dizzying milestone of 400 weeks on the world tennis throne (he will begin his 397th on Monday).

Despite skipping the Asian tour, Djokovic is not yet twiddling his thumbs: in addition to resuming training for the end of the season, the 30-year-old Serb has spent some of the last few weeks already starting his pre-season preparations . for 2024, he explained.

Until then, at home in eastern Paris, where he holds the title record with six wins (2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2019 and 2021), the outgoing finalist will continue his duel for the No. 1 world championship at the end. of the year against his young rival Carlos Alcaraz.

Only five hundred points separate the two players in the match, the ranking established for the calendar year (8,945 points for Djokovic to 8,445 for Alcaraz).

From Beijing (semi-final) to Shanghai (round of 16) in the fall, “Carlitos” didn’t really take advantage of “Djoko’s” absence, bringing only 270 points from Asia. And the 20-year-old Spaniard, whose leg and back are creaking, has just stopped playing in Basel.

Training with Alcaraz

Both exempt from the first round, the two rivals trained together on Sunday afternoon.

Djokovic will start his tournament with either compatriot Miomir Kecsmanovic (55th) or Argentina’s Tomas Martin Etcheverry (32nd), while Alcaraz will start with France’s Alexander Muller (84th) or a player from the qualifiers.

In an extremely dense field with the entire top 15 there, a restart of the 2022 final is potentially looming for the Serb with Denmark’s Holger Rune from the quarter-finals and, in the previous round, an electrifying head-to-head with young American Ben Shelton .

Rune, in fact, is one of the players looking for one of the last three tickets still up for grabs for the Masters that will bring together the top 8 of the season from November 12 to 19 in Turin (Italy).

Five players already officially have their entry in their pocket: Djokovic, Alcaraz, Daniil Medvedev, Yannick Shiner and Andrei Rublev. Stefanos Tsitsipas is holding tight for sixth place and Alexander Zverev and Rune are the two best at the moment for the bottom two.

Source: rds

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Australian Open Auger-Aliassime cherishes mentoring role for Mboko

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Australian Open Auger-Aliassime cherishes mentoring role for Mboko

(Melbourne) When Canadian tennis star Félix Auger-Aliassime looks at the young and promising Victoria Mboko, who is only 19 years old, the 25-year-old Montrealer feels the weight of time passing.

It seems not so long ago that Auger-Aliassime took the path that Mboko is about to follow. He was a precocious teenager, so gifted and so young that his life was turned upside down in an instant.

And he can offer some tips for keeping things in perspective.

“Maybe if you’re a big movie star and you reach a certain status, it’s hard to come down. But I’ve had experiences where you can be in the top 10 and then lose a few games and people are like, “Oh, he’s not like that anymore.” They treat you differently,” Auger-Aliassime said.

“You go on the court and you always have to face a player who wants to beat you, even more so when you have moved up the ranks. Tennis therefore quickly humbles you. »

Mboko started the year 2025 at 333e place in the ranking. At the end of the season, she had won the prestigious Omnium Banque Nationale in Montreal and was featured in the top 20 of the WTA rankings.

Honors quickly followed: the tributes and hype, the media requests and the courtside seats at Toronto Raptors games.

And even the ultimate status symbol for a successful tennis player: a new role as an ambassador for Rolex.

But Mboko says she has remained the same person.

“So much has happened in the past year and I have had so many new experiences that it has of course changed my current life. I’ve had to adapt pretty quickly, but I’m still surrounded by the same people and I feel like I haven’t really changed, personality-wise. »

Auger-Aliassime took advantage of the opportunity offered to him to chat with the big names in tennis. He said that when you meet them backstage, you get the impression that they are still 18 years old. They continue to clown around and tell the same jokes.

Only public perception changes.

“As you move around the venue and the hotels, people treat you a little differently. You need to be surrounded by the right people who can tell you the truth and not just what you want to hear,” he said.

Mboko’s larger-than-life image can be seen on the Australian Open website, where she is part of a quartet billed as the “new faces making waves”.

She is alongside 18-year-old Mirra Andreeva, who is already in the top 10, and 24-year-old Jack Draper, who also reached the top 10 before an arm injury hampered his progress.

The fourth player is Joao Fonseca, a Brazilian five days older than Mboko, for whom the hype has been so intense that some are disappointed he is not already competing with world No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz and No. 2 Jannik Sinner for Grand Slam titles.

Mboko understands this.

“Unless you win every tournament, you’re going to lose every week. So I think you have to adapt, accept that and use it as a lesson to improve the following week,” she said.

“Of course, the goal is to be more consistent and try to find my place on the circuit this year. »

For Mboko, who experienced an understandable decline after her triumph in Montreal, but who pulled herself together and concluded 2025 with a title in Hong Kong, the 2026 season looks very different.

She is traveling to Australia for the first time as a professional. And everything changed.

But one thing remains true: Mboko fights against stage fright before each match. This is one of the reasons why it can sometimes have a difficult start.

Auger-Aliassime explains that it is simply a process.

“I don’t think even players in their 30s can say they have it all figured out,” he says. We always try to improve, but we learn. Even at 15 or 16 years old, when you play a junior Grand Slam final […] at that moment, it’s the pinnacle, and you feel this pressure and anxiety.

“Before matches, I had moments where I could barely breathe, sort of. But as you play more and more matches, you find a way to calm down. And then you feel less stressed. Today, at 25, no match really scares me. »

The spotlight will be on the two young Canadians when the Australian Open kicks off on Sunday.

Auger-Aliassime has been through this before and wants to take the final steps towards his first Grand Slam title.

For Mboko, this is all still very new. But this year, after what she accomplished in 2025, she is no longer the hunter, but the prey.

This is a new phase of his career. And a new opportunity to learn.

Source: lapresse

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VIDEO. Maestro at work: Federer wins tiebreaker against Ruud at Aus Open

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VIDEO. Maestro at work: Federer wins tiebreaker against Ruud at Aus Open

44-year-old legendary Swiss former tennis player Roger Federer He arrived in Melbourne to attend the opening ceremony of the Australian Open 2026.

On January 16, Roger started training with the Norwegian team. Casper Ruudand then played a tiebreaker with him. Switzerland won with a score of 7:2.

The best moments of tennis matches LIVE on Telegram channel Tennis on Sport.ua

Federer won the Australian Open trophy six times in his career. Roger retired from his professional career in September 2022.

Main rule matches of the Australian Major start on January 18. Ruud, ranked 12th, will face Mattia Bellucci in the first round.

VIDEO. Maestro at work: Federer wins tiebreaker against Ruud at Aus Open

PHOTOGRAPH. Roger Federer beat Casper Ruud in tiebreaker

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Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
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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PHOTOGRAPH. Kichenok receives consolation prize after WTA 500 final in Adelaide

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PHOTOGRAPH. Kichenok receives consolation prize after WTA 500 final in Adelaide

January 16 Ukrainian tennis player Lyudmila Kichenok and her partner Desiree Krawczyk lost to Katerina Siniakova/Zhang Shuai in the final of the WTA 500 tournament in Adelaide, Australia.

The Ukrainian and the Americans lost in two sets with scores of 1:6 and 4:6 in 1 hour and 10 minutes. This was the first head-to-head meeting between the duo, and Lyudmila and Desiree held their first joint competition since 2019.

After the final match, an awards ceremony was held where consolation prizes were given to Kichenok and Krawczyk.

For Lyudmila, it was the 25th final in her career and the first since June 2025. Kichenok fought for the 12th trophy in his career.

PHOTOGRAPH. Kichenok receives consolation prize after WTA 500 final in Adelaide

Source: Sport UA

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