Archive January 24, 2026

Djokovic ‘Hanging In There’ After Landmark 400th Slam Win

Novak Djokovic, the first player to reach the final 16 of the Australian Open, declared he was “hanging in there” after becoming the first player to win 400 Grand Slam matches on Saturday.

In front of a throbbing crowd on center court, the 38-year-old Serbian great extended his own all-time winning streak to include match wins at the majors by sweeping past Dutchman Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (7/4) in front of a boisterous crowd.

Next best are Serena Williams and Roger Federer (369), respectively.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis championship match in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates a match point with Botic van de Zandschulp of the Netherlands. IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE (Photo by DAVID GRAY/AFP) —

Victory won 102 matches for Federer, who holds the record for Australian Open singles victories with 102 wins.

A fourth-round match between Djokovic and Czech rising star Jakub Mensik or American debutant Ethan Quinn, whose match was postponed due to extreme heat, will be Djokovic’s reward.

Real Madrid Top Football Rich List, and READ ALSO:

The 24-time champion is currently fighting to overthrow Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz’ recent dominance.

Djokovic continued, “I’m still trying to give these young guys a push for their money.” “I’m still here,” I said. I’m anchored there.

Alcaraz and Sinner are undoubtedly the world’s two best players. They are currently playing on a different level than everyone else.

However, you’re aware that whenever you enter the court and the ball rolls, you always have a chance, especially on the court where I’ve had the best luck in my career.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Novak Djokovic (L) and Botic van de Zandschulp (L) of Serbia shake hands with Botic van de Zandschulp (L). IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE

He argued that he was “not getting ahead of myself” after reaching the semi-finals of all four majors last year and failing to advance.

He claimed that during some of the Grand Slams last year, I grew too excited and too early. “I was playing really well, getting to the quarters and semis, and then getting injured in pretty much three of the four.”

Van de Zandschulp, who is 75th overall, never looked confident of delivering yet another shock at Indian Wells last year in three sets against Djokovic.

After a massive 26-point rally, the fourth seed reclaimed the game with some incredible tennis in set one, sealing the crucial break in the final game.

On his opening serve of the second set, he broke the Dutchman once more, moving to 4-2, but it was difficult and he grew increasingly irritable.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis competition in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Netherlands’ Botic van de Zandschulp (R) takes the court after losing to Serbia’s Novak Djokovic. IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE (Photo by DAVID GRAY/AFP) —

He once nearly hit a ball kid while quickly apologizing after hurling a ball toward an advertising hoarding out of frustration.

Djokovic&nbsp, who was taken after a tumble during a medical timeout in set three, had work on his foot.

He proved to be the most resilient during the set’s tiebreak and they exchanged breaks.

He described the fall where he appeared to turn his ankle as “a few points before, I almost saw the physio, I was planning to see him for my blisters.”

“Thankfully, I managed to fall well,” if you will. At that time, things could have been incredibly ugly.

Since winning the US Open in 2023, Djokovic and Margaret Court have won 24 major titles.

Djokovic ‘Hanging In There’ After Landmark 400th Slam Win

Novak Djokovic, the first player to reach the final 16 of the Australian Open, declared he was “hanging in there” after becoming the first player to win 400 Grand Slam matches on Saturday.

In front of a throbbing crowd on center court, the 38-year-old Serbian great extended his own all-time winning streak to include match wins at the majors by sweeping past Dutchman Botic van de Zandschulp 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (7/4) in front of a boisterous crowd.

Next best are Serena Williams and Roger Federer (369), respectively.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis championship match in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Novak Djokovic of Serbia celebrates a match point with Botic van de Zandschulp of the Netherlands. IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE (Photo by DAVID GRAY/AFP) —

Victory won 102 matches for Federer, who holds the record for Australian Open singles victories with 102 wins.

A fourth-round match between Djokovic and Czech rising star Jakub Mensik or American debutant Ethan Quinn, whose match was postponed due to extreme heat, will be Djokovic’s reward.

Real Madrid Top Football Rich List, and READ ALSO:

The 24-time champion is currently fighting to overthrow Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz’ recent dominance.

Djokovic continued, “I’m still trying to give these young guys a push for their money.” “I’m still here,” I said. I’m anchored there.

Alcaraz and Sinner are undoubtedly the world’s two best players. They are currently playing on a different level than everyone else.

However, you’re aware that whenever you enter the court and the ball rolls, you always have a chance, especially on the court where I’ve had the best luck in my career.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Novak Djokovic (L) and Botic van de Zandschulp (L) of Serbia shake hands with Botic van de Zandschulp (L). IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE

He argued that he was “not getting ahead of myself” after reaching the semi-finals of all four majors last year and failing to advance.

He claimed that during some of the Grand Slams last year, I grew too excited and too early. “I was playing really well, getting to the quarters and semis, and then getting injured in pretty much three of the four.”

Van de Zandschulp, who is 75th overall, never looked confident of delivering yet another shock at Indian Wells last year in three sets against Djokovic.

After a massive 26-point rally, the fourth seed reclaimed the game with some incredible tennis in set one, sealing the crucial break in the final game.

On his opening serve of the second set, he broke the Dutchman once more, moving to 4-2, but it was difficult and he grew increasingly irritable.

On day seven of the Australian Open tennis competition in Melbourne on January 24, 2026, Netherlands’ Botic van de Zandschulp (R) takes the court after losing to Serbia’s Novak Djokovic. IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE (Photo by DAVID GRAY/AFP) —

He once nearly hit a ball kid while quickly apologizing after hurling a ball toward an advertising hoarding out of frustration.

Djokovic&nbsp, who was taken after a tumble during a medical timeout in set three, had work on his foot.

He proved to be the most resilient during the set’s tiebreak and they exchanged breaks.

He described the fall where he appeared to turn his ankle as “a few points before, I almost saw the physio, I was planning to see him for my blisters.”

“Thankfully, I managed to fall well,” if you will. At that time, things could have been incredibly ugly.

Since winning the US Open in 2023, Djokovic and Margaret Court have won 24 major titles.

Heart surgery & darkest nights – the unbreakable ‘Baltic Gladiator’


To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

When Modestas Bukauskas was 19, he was staring at wires coming out of his body and trying not to look as doctors operated on his heart.

The fledging athlete would be awake throughout surgery that lasted almost five hours. He had been experiencing heart palpitations since childhood, and they were only worsening as his athletic career blossomed.

Many could have lived with the condition, but Bukauskas was not just anyone.

He was a kid who wanted to make his Lithuanian father proud and become a UFC fighter.

And here he was having the operation he hoped would make that possible.

“It was pretty brutal,” Bukauskas tells BBC Sport.

“I was awake the whole time. They literally had wires going up my groin into my heart and they were trying to induce palpitations.

“Then they had to basically burn off an external circuit in my heart to basically fix my heart.”

The experience fortified Bukauskas. He would push himself to the limit in training, and a two-year spell playing basketball in Louisiana resulted in him being on the verge of fainting during sessions in 40-degree Celsius heat.

He was already a British kickboxing champion by the time he had the heart operation, with the palpitations having had him worried.

“It was very dangerous. I was lucky it never happened in any of my kickboxing fights,” says Bukauskas.

“But I think that was a little starting point as to all the hardships I’d have to go through.

“That was the first steps to being able to overcome anything else that came later on in life.”

    • 5 days ago
    • 19 January

Lithuanian beginnings & ‘no-holds-barred’ father

As Bukauskas puts it, his “whole life has all been about mental resilience”.

He was born in Lithuania in 1994, four years after the country declared independence from the Soviet Union.

The last Soviet troops only withdrew from Lithuania in 1993.

Bukauskas’ father Gintas relocated his family to the UK, hoping for a “better life”.

Gintas had competed in No Holds Barred competitions in the Soviet Union. They were chaotic events of fights and performing physical feats like breaking bricks with bare hands.

It signalled a love of combat sports but was a world away from what his son experiences in the UFC today.

But it meant that the young Bukauskas was soon marked by the fighting spirit. His “battle-tested” father started training him aged five.

While other children were playing outside, Bukauskas was laying into pads and practising kicks with his father in their living room.

“Essentially we’re living out this dream together,” Bukauskas says, acknowledging his father’s influence.

“I always describe him as the angel on my shoulders.

“In all my fights where I get the finish, he’s always the person that screams what the finish will be.

‘I drank myself to sleep each night’

In his youth, Bukauskas played tennis and basketball, even moving across the world to pursue the latter, but every road led him back to fighting.

Once his heart issue was resolved, Bukauskas focused entirely on mixed martial arts – bar a short side quest aged 24 when he appeared on ITV dating show Take Me Out – and was signed by the UFC with a 10-2 record.

He won his first fight but slipped to three defeats in a row. He blew his knee out in a defeat by Khalil Rountree in 2021.

The UFC cut him afterwards and so began another difficult chapter in the life of the young Bukauskas.

“There was a lot of times just in my room, like within my four walls with my knee in a cast… a lot of times where it was very painful, drinking myself to sleep,” he explains.

Deep down, he knew this was not a sustainable path to sporting success.

“Obviously I’m not proud of that,” Bukauskas says.

“I guess you could say I’ve always been taught in the household to be mentally tough, so I never really looked at it like [I was depressed].

“It was my way of escaping the real world.”

Bukauskas hid the drinking from his father. He spent weeks in a dark place in his mind he had never been to before.

But his father and those closest around him were a constant source of reassurance, and Bukauskas re-emerged stronger.

“You just ride that wave,” he says.

The next chapter of the Baltic Gladiator

Remarkably, it took Bukauskas only 14 months to recover from his knee woes and earn a spot back in the UFC. He returned in 2023 and has a 6-1 record from seven fights since, including four wins in a row.

“It probably would have broken many people,” Bukauskas says of the injury ordeal.

“Because my whole life people have kind of been shoving me off to the side.

“So I just kept using that as fuel. I’m like, OK, I’m going to show you what’s up.”

Fighting gave Bukauskas the identity he craved.

Russian Krylov, 33, his opponent this weekend, has taken on several of the division’s top fighters.

Facing him is Bukauskas’ chance to fire himself into the UFC’s top 15 rankings for the first time.

“If a top-15 match had come a bit earlier, it might’ve been too soon. So I think everything is playing out exactly how it should,” Bukauskas says.

“I expect this to be the best showing of me in a flow state, me showing exactly what I’m capable of.

“Showing all of my attributes and just let people know who the Baltic Gladiator is.”

Related topics

  • Mixed Martial Arts
    • 2 days ago
    Justin Gaethje and Paddy Pimblett face off with the UFC belt in between them
    • 28 April 2024
    Split image of Claressa Shields, Paddy Pimblett and Chris Eubank Jr

More MMA from the BBC

    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Surviving bombs and hunger to become a professional tennis player


Let’s face it, you need a heap of cash to make it as a professional tennis player.

The cost of equipment, coaching and travel is astronomical and it can be difficult to fulfill potential depending on your circumstances.

Growing up in a country ravaged by war only further stacks the odds against you.

After playing in her first Grand Slam main draw at the Australian Open, Ukraine’s Oleksandra Oliynykova laid bare the obstacles she has faced on the way to the top.

The 25-year-old left Ukraine as a child because of her father’s opposition to the country’s pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych, but is back living there in spite of the ongoing full-scale invasion by Russia.

Now a top-100 player, it is not so long ago that Oliynykova was eating only sandwiches at tournaments to save money.

Under the omnipresent threat of missiles, Oliynykova had no electricity or water in her Kyiv apartment as she trained for the season-opening major.

“A drone hit the home across the road. My apartment was literally shaking because of the explosion,” she said.

The A$150,000 (£75,757) she earned for her first-round appearance at the Australian Open will help Oliynykova both on and off the court. Helping cash trickle further down the ladder is one of the reasons leading players are campaigning for the Grand Slams to offer more prize money.

“Oliynykova’s story is on another level. It is so inspiring and sad, but I hope every single player listens to it,” Slovakian former world number five Daniela Hantuchova told BBC Sport.

“Players are talking about prize money – when I won my first 25k tournament it was the first time we, as a family, could afford to have pizza with seafood on.

Oleksandra Oliynykova hits a serve at the 2026 Australian OpenGetty Images

Damir Dzumhur, a fixture in the men’s top 100 over the past decade, was born in Sarajevo while missiles rained down on the Bosnia-Herzegovina capital in 1992 as the former Yugoslavia dissolved.

Two days after Dzumhur and his mother were collected from the maternity ward, the hospital was bombed.

When Dzumhur was old enough to pick up a racquet, there were very few courts available. Most had been bombed.

“My first steps on the court were in a small school gym, which was used for football and basketball, not tennis,” the world number 66 told BBC Sport.

“They just put the net in the middle and that’s where I started playing.

“I didn’t play on a proper hard court until I was 12 at a junior tournament in France.”

Being born in a country without tennis pedigree means there is usually a lack of financial support from their federation and fewer role models to follow into the game.

Hantuchova believes players who have come from humble beginnings develop a resilience, discipline and mentality that is “not seen that often these days”.

“When I decided I wanted to play tennis, I asked my parents if – one day – I could have a chance of getting a racquet,” said Hantuchova, who describes her Bratislava upbringing as “simple”.

“I knew I had to wait until their monthly salary allowed them to do so.”

Novak Djokovic, considered by many as the greatest player of all time after winning 24 major titles, has blazed a trail for Serbia.

As a child, Djokovic was forced to take shelter in Belgrade as Nato bombed the Serbian capital between March and June 1999.

“My upbringing during several wars in the 90s was a difficult time,” the 38-year-old said in 2020.

    • 14 July 2019
    • 20 January 2019

American Frances Tiafoe is another player who built his career from scratch.

The son of parents who fled Sierra Leone’s civil war in the 1990s, Tiafoe used to sleep on the floor at a plush Maryland tennis centre where his father was a janitor.

The two-time US Open semi-finalist stayed there while his mother Alphina worked night shifts as a nurse.

The benefit of Tiafoe’s situation was access to top-quality tuition, while Djokovic is eternally grateful for being nurtured by Jelena Gencic, who ran a tennis camp and developed his talent.

Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina had her potential recognised by businessman Yuriy Sapronov. He sponsored her move to Kharkiv – 420 miles from her home – so she could receive professional coaching as a 12-year-old.

Initially, Sapronov struck a deal to receive a cut of her future earnings, but waived his percentage in exchange for Svitolina becoming an ambassador for his companies.

“I don’t know how my career would have developed without his support, but I’m very thankful to him,” Svitolina added.

“It’s part of tennis life that you need a lot of investment to get results.”

Djokovic and Svitolina have become symbols of their nations, seen by many compatriots as providing a voice for them on the international stage.

They and other players have set up charitable foundations to give something back to the countries and people that shaped them – something particularly welcomed in times of hardship.

“When the war in Ukraine started, setting up a foundation was a natural instinct to help people who are in need,” world number 20 Marta Kostyuk told BBC Sport.

“The focus was kids affected by war, but I realised I can have more impact and make more difference by popularising tennis as a sport and physical activity in Ukraine.

Related topics

  • Tennis

More on this story

  • Some tennis balls
    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Surviving bombs and hunger to become a professional tennis player


Let’s face it, you need a heap of cash to make it as a professional tennis player.

The cost of equipment, coaching and travel is astronomical and it can be difficult to fulfill potential depending on your circumstances.

Growing up in a country ravaged by war only further stacks the odds against you.

After playing in her first Grand Slam main draw at the Australian Open, Ukraine’s Oleksandra Oliynykova laid bare the obstacles she has faced on the way to the top.

The 25-year-old left Ukraine as a child because of her father’s opposition to the country’s pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych, but is back living there in spite of the ongoing full-scale invasion by Russia.

Now a top-100 player, it is not so long ago that Oliynykova was eating only sandwiches at tournaments to save money.

Under the omnipresent threat of missiles, Oliynykova had no electricity or water in her Kyiv apartment as she trained for the season-opening major.

“A drone hit the home across the road. My apartment was literally shaking because of the explosion,” she said.

The A$150,000 (£75,757) she earned for her first-round appearance at the Australian Open will help Oliynykova both on and off the court. Helping cash trickle further down the ladder is one of the reasons leading players are campaigning for the Grand Slams to offer more prize money.

“Oliynykova’s story is on another level. It is so inspiring and sad, but I hope every single player listens to it,” Slovakian former world number five Daniela Hantuchova told BBC Sport.

“Players are talking about prize money – when I won my first 25k tournament it was the first time we, as a family, could afford to have pizza with seafood on.

Oleksandra Oliynykova hits a serve at the 2026 Australian OpenGetty Images

Damir Dzumhur, a fixture in the men’s top 100 over the past decade, was born in Sarajevo while missiles rained down on the Bosnia-Herzegovina capital in 1992 as the former Yugoslavia dissolved.

Two days after Dzumhur and his mother were collected from the maternity ward, the hospital was bombed.

When Dzumhur was old enough to pick up a racquet, there were very few courts available. Most had been bombed.

“My first steps on the court were in a small school gym, which was used for football and basketball, not tennis,” the world number 66 told BBC Sport.

“They just put the net in the middle and that’s where I started playing.

“I didn’t play on a proper hard court until I was 12 at a junior tournament in France.”

Being born in a country without tennis pedigree means there is usually a lack of financial support from their federation and fewer role models to follow into the game.

Hantuchova believes players who have come from humble beginnings develop a resilience, discipline and mentality that is “not seen that often these days”.

“When I decided I wanted to play tennis, I asked my parents if – one day – I could have a chance of getting a racquet,” said Hantuchova, who describes her Bratislava upbringing as “simple”.

“I knew I had to wait until their monthly salary allowed them to do so.”

Novak Djokovic, considered by many as the greatest player of all time after winning 24 major titles, has blazed a trail for Serbia.

As a child, Djokovic was forced to take shelter in Belgrade as Nato bombed the Serbian capital between March and June 1999.

“My upbringing during several wars in the 90s was a difficult time,” the 38-year-old said in 2020.

    • 14 July 2019
    • 20 January 2019

American Frances Tiafoe is another player who built his career from scratch.

The son of parents who fled Sierra Leone’s civil war in the 1990s, Tiafoe used to sleep on the floor at a plush Maryland tennis centre where his father was a janitor.

The two-time US Open semi-finalist stayed there while his mother Alphina worked night shifts as a nurse.

The benefit of Tiafoe’s situation was access to top-quality tuition, while Djokovic is eternally grateful for being nurtured by Jelena Gencic, who ran a tennis camp and developed his talent.

Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina had her potential recognised by businessman Yuriy Sapronov. He sponsored her move to Kharkiv – 420 miles from her home – so she could receive professional coaching as a 12-year-old.

Initially, Sapronov struck a deal to receive a cut of her future earnings, but waived his percentage in exchange for Svitolina becoming an ambassador for his companies.

“I don’t know how my career would have developed without his support, but I’m very thankful to him,” Svitolina added.

“It’s part of tennis life that you need a lot of investment to get results.”

Djokovic and Svitolina have become symbols of their nations, seen by many compatriots as providing a voice for them on the international stage.

They and other players have set up charitable foundations to give something back to the countries and people that shaped them – something particularly welcomed in times of hardship.

“When the war in Ukraine started, setting up a foundation was a natural instinct to help people who are in need,” world number 20 Marta Kostyuk told BBC Sport.

“The focus was kids affected by war, but I realised I can have more impact and make more difference by popularising tennis as a sport and physical activity in Ukraine.

Related topics

  • Tennis

More on this story

  • Some tennis balls
    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Coronation Street’s Beverley Callard issues worrying health update days after soap return

Beverley Callard, who previously appeared on Coronation Street, is currently filming new scenes for a rival soap.

Coronation Street legend Beverley Callard has been supported by fans after she issued an update on how she is doing in her new soap job.

The actress, 68, became a household name back in the ‘80s playing Liz McDonald on the ITV soap. Liz rocked up to the cobbles with the rest of the McDonald clan, including son Steve (Simon Gregson) in 1989.

And for 30 years, she was a regular contributor to a number of significant storylines. Liz’s time on the soap was filled with drama, from saucy flings to blazing feuds.

But in 2019, Beverley left soap fans gutted when she confirmed she was leaving. The iconic character then said her goodbyes to soap a year later.

Since then, Beverley has kept herself busy. In 2020, she appeared on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!, and she also landed a spin-off travel show with IAC co-star Jordan North.

What’s more, Beverley made her soap return recently after landing a role in Irish soap Fair City. Beverley is playing the role of Lily, who is the long-lost mother of character Gwen.

The actress is currently over in Ireland filming the soap and has been keeping fans updated on Instagram. However, this week, Beverley took to her Instagram to issue an update, revealing she is feeling under the weather.

Without prior authorization, content cannot be displayed.

Beverley stated in a video that she is working extremely hard in Dublin and that she is having the best time there. I absolutely adore the back-to-back studio scenes, the cast is fantastic, and everyone is fantastic. However, there is only one major issue.

You’ll make fun of me because I have a cold and am completely dehydrated, and I’m certain it’s because of a lack of it. A box of Yorkshire Tea bags was then displayed by Beverly.

She continued, “I’m not doing any advertising, but I can’t get enough of Yorkshire tea.” And they don’t use it at the office. Then, Beverley retorted, “I have two tea bags left, so that’s making me have a cold!” Please tell me where in Dublin I can buy Yorkshire tea. !

Having the best time in Dublin, but I’m cold and in need of a cuppa, Beverley wrote in the caption! Why is there no place where I can buy Yorkshire tea? !

Fans eluded the comments section and pleaded with “Oh dear, I hope you feel better soon.” Another remarked, “Love will improve soon.” “Enjoy darling hope it clears up,” is a third phrase.

Continue reading the article.