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Djokovic beats Musetti to reach Miami quarter-finals

Images courtesy of Getty

Novak Djokovic advanced to the Miami Open quarter-finals by defeating Lorenzo Musetti 6-2, 6-2.

Due to the rain, world number five Djokovic, who has won six Miami titles, started slowly and was broken in the opening game when Musetti of Italy gave up a 2-0 lead.

However, 37-year-old Serbian Djokovic completely dominated the match at that time.

The 24-time Grand Slam champion won nine straight games, winning the first set 6-2 and moving up to 3-0 in the second.

Fourth seed Djokovic praised the difficulty, particularly in the first seven or eight games of the match.

With a 6-4, 2-6, 6-4 victory over Frenchman Gael Monfils, Korda won the quarter-finals, and Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina advanced after defeating Casper Ruud of Norway 6-4, 6-2.

Serena Williams, a 23-time Grand Slam champion and former world no 1 in women’s tennis, was a witness as she watched Djokovic from the stands.

He scored on match point with a backhand winner to take the lead to 5-2 in the second set, and Musetti double-faulted to seal the victory.

Actually, I pointed to her and inquired whether it was okay after that down-the-line passing shot, “,” said Djokovic.

Sabalenka makes it to the semi-finals.

Aryna Sabalenka, the world’s number one, defeated Zheng Qinwen of China 6-2 7-5 to reach the semi-finals in Miami for the first time.

In the second set, Sabalenka came back from a 4-2 deficit to win the Australian Open final in January.

After beating Magda Linette 6-3, 6-2, the 26-year-old Belarusian will face Jasmine Paolini in the final four, the Italian sixth seed.

Paolini defeated Linette in the quarter-finals to save seven of the eight break points she faced.

Sabalenka said she was “really proud” of the way she handled her emotions after extending her lead-to-head record to 6-0 against Zheng.

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  • Tennis

‘What an incredible group’ – Wales boss Bellamy

In their World Cup qualifier against North Macedonia in Skopje, Wales boss Craig Bellamy praised his “incredible group” of players.

Bojan Miovski capitalized on Joe Allen’s loose pass in the opening minute of extra time to score. The hosts had already figured out how to score all three points.

In the final seconds, however, David Brooks scored for Wales to keep Bellamy’s unbeaten start as Wales manager.

‘What an incredible group’ – Wales boss Bellamy

In their World Cup qualifier against North Macedonia in Skopje, Wales boss Craig Bellamy praised his “incredible group” of players.

Bojan Miovski capitalized on Joe Allen’s loose pass in the opening minute of extra time to score. The hosts had already figured out how to score all three points.

In the final seconds, however, David Brooks scored for Wales to keep Bellamy’s unbeaten start as Wales manager.

Anning relishes view from the top after world gold

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Amber Anning could finally put the highs and lows into perspective by staring out from the 61st floor and admiring Nanjing’s glass-and-steel skyline.

After being disqualified for a lane infringement at the European Indoor Championships in the Netherlands, she was reduced to tears two weeks prior.

She had already won the 400-meter world indoor title three hours earlier in China, reclaiming her place as a leading British woman.

And she had already lost once more a short while earlier.

Jeremiah Azu, the 60m world indoor champion, and Amy Hunt, the 60m finalist, went up to the top floor of our hotel that evening to play cards and listen to some music, she told BBC Sport.

“That was our celebration,” the statement read. Really cool and had a nice, understated vibe. However, I actually lost every game. I was so upset!

“Jeremiah won twice or three, Amy won,” but I couldn’t, despite winning the 400-meter hurdle, which was the most crucial event. “

Anning has a propensity to find herself trumps when it matters in her brief career.

She competed in Budapest while still a student and was awarded a world bronze medal with Britain’s 4x400m team.

She won two relay medals before moving on to the 2024 Olympic final in Paris, breaking the legendary Christine Ohuruogu’s British record and placing in fifth place.

Getty Images

Her ascent to the top of the game has been fashionable.

She set a championship record last summer when she captured the British title, leaving Laviai Nielsen and Jodie Williams in the dust.

With 175 meters left, Alexis Holmes bumped her in Nanjing on the tight turns of an indoor track.

Anning slants back, back, and possibly out of the woods.

But she regrouped herself, snuck into Holmes’ lead, blasted off the final bend, and defeated her rival.

Just three-hundredths of a second from her winning margin.

She said, “You have so much time to think with 400m, which is different from 60m where you just get it done.”

What are you going to do before now and the end to get your gold medal, I said to myself when I was pushed, “This is not how you visualized it, this is not the execution you wanted”?

“I had to wait, be patient, stay in touch with her, and then time it to perfection.

When I watched it back, I realized that I wasn’t winning if I had chosen to do it even a second earlier or later. How it functions is strange.

Anning’s replacement for Ohuruogu as the British record holder has a beautiful symmetry.

When Ohuruogu was in its early years, Lloyd Cowan, who led the team’s career, also coached Anning. He was 58 years old when he died in January 2021 from complications brought on by a Covid-19 infection.

He reminded me of my track dad, Anning said. Just being surrounded by him felt so warm. Such a difficult defeat, to say the least.

“I believed I would be here with him today, accomplishing this, and I know he would be proud of me.”

It’s nice to have the record kept in the family, which we do.

On the board of the Lloyd Cowan Bursary, Anning’s mother serves alongside Ohuruogu, helping to lower financial barriers for promising young athletes and coaches who might otherwise be disadvantaged by athletics.

If Cowan had influenced Anning’s early potential, American intelligence has been improved.

Anning left the UK for Louisiana State University as a teenager after her mother encouraged her.

Armand Duplantis, the 100-meter world champion, and Sha’Carri Richardson, the alma mater, inspired her to push herself.

She said, “I needed that extra push because I felt maybe a little too comfortable over here [in the UK].”

You can tell that every day you see success in your face.

Only a small percentage of people are going to make it because the population is so large and there are so many people there. Perhaps they want it even more because they are aware of the slimmer chances.

Amber Anning wins the British title in ManchesterGetty Images

It took some time.

Anning acknowledges that she was “not as disciplined as I should have been” initially in Louisiana before moving to Arkansas, where there was a less lively party scene and a 400-meter elite team.

It is a testament to how hard she grinds to beat Holmes, the most successful American, over 400 meters.

Other well-known opponents might be worth considering.

The all-time top 400m hurdles champion, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, ran the seventh-fastest 400m time of 2024 in a September invitational race, and is thought to be using Michael Johnson’s Grand Slam Track on flat.

Femke Bol, a native of the Netherlands, holds the 400-meter indoor world record after winning gold in Glasgow last year.

Anning will be prepared if they square up against her.

She remarked, “Let them come. I enjoy competing because it improves the lives of others.

That simply means I need to work out more, work harder, and do a little bit better to stay top and up there.

related subjects

  • Athletics

Anning relishes view from the top after world gold

This video is not playable.

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

Amber Anning could finally put the highs and lows into perspective by staring out from the 61st floor and admiring Nanjing’s glass-and-steel skyline.

After being disqualified for a lane infringement at the European Indoor Championships in the Netherlands, she was reduced to tears two weeks prior.

She had already won the 400-meter world indoor title three hours earlier in China, reclaiming her place as a leading British woman.

And she had already lost once more a short while earlier.

Jeremiah Azu, the 60m world indoor champion, and Amy Hunt, the 60m finalist, went up to the top floor of our hotel that evening to play cards and listen to some music, she told BBC Sport.

“That was our celebration,” the statement read. Really cool and had a nice, understated vibe. However, I actually lost every game. I was so upset!

“Jeremiah won twice or three, Amy won,” but I couldn’t, despite winning the 400-meter hurdle, which was the most crucial event. “

Anning has a propensity to find herself trumps when it matters in her brief career.

She competed in Budapest while still a student and was awarded a world bronze medal with Britain’s 4x400m team.

She won two relay medals before moving on to the 2024 Olympic final in Paris, breaking the legendary Christine Ohuruogu’s British record and placing in fifth place.

Getty Images

Her ascent to the top of the game has been fashionable.

She set a championship record last summer when she captured the British title, leaving Laviai Nielsen and Jodie Williams in the dust.

With 175 meters left, Alexis Holmes bumped her in Nanjing on the tight turns of an indoor track.

Anning slants back, back, and possibly out of the woods.

But she regrouped herself, snuck into Holmes’ lead, blasted off the final bend, and defeated her rival.

Just three-hundredths of a second from her winning margin.

She said, “You have so much time to think with 400m, which is different from 60m where you just get it done.”

What are you going to do before now and the end to get your gold medal, I said to myself when I was pushed, “This is not how you visualized it, this is not the execution you wanted”?

“I had to wait, be patient, stay in touch with her, and then time it to perfection.

When I watched it back, I realized that I wasn’t winning if I had chosen to do it even a second earlier or later. How it functions is strange.

Anning’s replacement for Ohuruogu as the British record holder has a beautiful symmetry.

When Ohuruogu was in its early years, Lloyd Cowan, who led the team’s career, also coached Anning. He was 58 years old when he died in January 2021 from complications brought on by a Covid-19 infection.

He reminded me of my track dad, Anning said. Just being surrounded by him felt so warm. Such a difficult defeat, to say the least.

“I believed I would be here with him today, accomplishing this, and I know he would be proud of me.”

It’s nice to have the record kept in the family, which we do.

On the board of the Lloyd Cowan Bursary, Anning’s mother serves alongside Ohuruogu, helping to lower financial barriers for promising young athletes and coaches who might otherwise be disadvantaged by athletics.

If Cowan had influenced Anning’s early potential, American intelligence has been improved.

Anning left the UK for Louisiana State University as a teenager after her mother encouraged her.

Armand Duplantis, the 100-meter world champion, and Sha’Carri Richardson, the alma mater, inspired her to push herself.

She said, “I needed that extra push because I felt maybe a little too comfortable over here [in the UK].”

You can tell that every day you see success in your face.

Only a small percentage of people are going to make it because the population is so large and there are so many people there. Perhaps they want it even more because they are aware of the slimmer chances.

Amber Anning wins the British title in ManchesterGetty Images

It took some time.

Anning acknowledges that she was “not as disciplined as I should have been” initially in Louisiana before moving to Arkansas, where there was a less lively party scene and a 400-meter elite team.

It is a testament to how hard she grinds to beat Holmes, the most successful American, over 400 meters.

Other well-known opponents might be worth considering.

The all-time top 400m hurdles champion, Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, ran the seventh-fastest 400m time of 2024 in a September invitational race, and is thought to be using Michael Johnson’s Grand Slam Track on flat.

Femke Bol, a native of the Netherlands, holds the 400-meter indoor world record after winning gold in Glasgow last year.

Anning will be prepared if they square up against her.

She remarked, “Let them come. I enjoy competing because it improves the lives of others.

That simply means I need to work out more, work harder, and do a little bit better to stay top and up there.

related subjects

  • Athletics

My upbringing was characterised by fear – Ingebrigtsen

Images courtesy of Getty

Jakob Ingebrigtsen, the double Olympic champion, claimed that his father, Gjert, had “manipulated” and “controlled” him throughout his development on Tuesday in front of a court.

Gjert Ingebrigtsen, 59, is accused of physically and mentally abusing his 24-year-old son Jakob and another of his children in Norway.

Former coach Gjert for his son, who denies the allegations.

According to Norwegian state broadcaster NRK, “my upbringing was very much characterised by fear,” he said in a court hearing in Sandnes Jakob.

“Everything was decided by me,” he said. There was a lot of manipulation.

Jakob, who won 1500m gold at Tokyo 2020 and 5, 000m gold at Paris 2024, gave an in-depth account of a number of alleged abuses at the hearing on Tuesday.

He claimed that he was forced to train two or three times a day as a teenager and that he was a schoolboy who was unable to attend parties.

Jakob also referred to a number of instances in which his father assaulted him.

Jakob was eight years old when he received a negative report about his behavior at school, and it is claimed that Gjert repeatedly struck him.

He added that his father punched Jakob in the face because he was late for a race in 2008, making it eight years old. He claims that his father punched him in the stomach after he fell off a scooter a year later.

He referred to another alleged incident from 2016 at a junior championships where his father threatened him and another one where Gjert was said to have allegedly thrown his video game console out of the window.

Background

Jakob, 24, and his brothers Filip, 31, and Henrik, 34, both Olympic athletes, made public accusations that their father, who coached them until 2022, had been violent in October 2023.

The trio, who are one of seven Ingebrigtsen children, stated at the time that they still feel uneasy and afraid about Gjert, who they claimed was “very aggressive and controlling.”

Gjert claimed via his attorney that his claim was “baseless” and that he had never abused his children.

In April, Gjert was charged with one offence, but due to time constraints, five charges were dropped. The case was later expanded with a new charge.

Jakob won two Olympic medals, two of them, two of which were silver in the 1500m, and one of the 11-time European champions.

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  • Athletics