Alcaraz to take on amateurs in Million Dollar One Point Slam

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Amateur players will have the chance to win A$1m when they face tennis’ top professionals – including world number one Carlos Alcaraz – in a single-point showdown before January’s Australian Open.

Organisers of the year’s first Grand Slam have announced the Million Dollar One Point Slam, which will pit 10 amateur players against 22 professionals in a knockout tournament at Melbourne Park.

Players will play ‘rock, paper, scissors’ to determine who serves or receives, and whoever wins the point will progress to the next round.

The winner of the event will take home £490,000.

The US Open staged a revamped, standalone mixed doubles tournament in August which encouraged top singles players to participate, with the winners receiving $1m (£737,000).

The Australian Open held its inaugural One Point Slam event this year, but the prize fund was A$60,000 (£29,400) and it generated little publicity.

Andrey Rublev was the only top-10 player involved, and his run came to an end when he put the one and only serve allowed into the net in his quarter-final.

Australian professional Omar Jasika won the One Point Slam, which pitted 16 amateurs – eight men and eight women aged between 15 and 72 – against 16 professionals.

Australian Open tournament director Craig Tilley said: “Whether you’re an amateur or a pro, the ultimate winner will walk away with the prize. Entries will open soon at clubs across the country.”

How will it work?

Organisers have not said exactly how the event will work, but it is expected to follow a similar format to this year’s edition.

The professionals were allowed to serve once and the amateurs twice – as is the norm in traditional tennis.

While it is unclear how the draw will work, there will be five knockout rounds and the venue will be the Rod Laver Arena rather than the smaller Kia Arena.

The final stages will take place in a night session instead of 1pm local time.

Any Australians – or international players who have registered with Tennis Australia – can enter ‘One Point Slam’ events at their local tennis clubs.

The winners of the grassroots tournaments will then go into a draw, with one amateur player from every state and territory selected to take part in the ‘grand finale’ in a night session on Wednesday, 14 January.

There will also be a qualifying draw in December which amateurs, lower ranked pros, celebrities and sport stars can enter.

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‘If it had been any other swimmer or kids, they would have become very ill’

Hector Pardoe

When I started out in open water swimming, I was more concerned about sharks than sewage.

I was a novice to the issues of pollution. It is not the norm for humans to think about it.

But, as I prepared for the lake equivalent of the ‘three peaks challenge’ earlier this year, it was clear I had to take the risks from pollution into account.

According to figures from the Environment Agency, raw sewage was spilled by water companies into England’s rivers and seas for a record 3.6 million hours in 2024.

And concerns about water quality impacting sporting events have also been widely reported, such as postponements and illness at the Paris Olympics and concerns before the boat race.

I took Pepto-Bismol and precautionary antibiotics to try and ward off E.coli or bacteria, and also used the extensive health and safety protocol from the Team GB doctor at the Olympics.

For the challenge, I swam alongside boats that were kitted out with a sensor that measured water quality in real time.

I met the chief executive of the water sensor company a few weeks later, who showed me the results and said it was remarkable how filthy these lakes are, not just from sewage but from other polluting sources like agriculture run-off too.

He said if it had been any other swimmer or kids in it, they would have become very ill, and the only reason I didn’t was because of my immunity from swimming in these conditions around the world.

‘Like just staring into an enormous black hole’

Haector Pardoe swimming alongside boat in lakeHector Pardoe

I was recognised at the BBC Green Sport Awards last year and was able to present athlete of the year Imogen Grant with her award on stage.

That left me inspired to take it to the next level. To see what I could do to amplify my messaging, raise more money, push the sustainable message that comes with my sport of open water swimming.

The challenge was to swim the three largest lakes in the UK – Loch Lomond, Lake Windermere, Llyn Tegid – and to try to do it all in 24 hours. It had not been done before so I just took it from there.

The total distance of the challenge was 55km (34 miles) and it would be the longest swim of my career so far.

It began at the biggest of the lakes – Loch Lomond – at midnight.

I had never done night swimming before, so that was daunting and I needed to plan for that.

Loch Lomond is also probably one of the darkest lochs in the world. It is 400-500m deep and it is like you are just staring into an enormous black hole. It is scary and nothing could really prepare me for that.

That leg of the challenge was tough, it was brutal – 14 degree waters, nearly eight hours of exposure, cold air temperature.

But I broke the timing record for that loch, and I jumped in the car and thought the hardest part of the challenge was done.

Once I had got the biggest one out of the way, it would feel like I was coming back down the mountain – but it very much did not feel like that.

I was now sleep deprived, knackered, frustrated, and probably a little bit delirious. I started refuelling because I had burned around 7,000 calories, but I have never been that tired before in my life and fell asleep, dropping the pasta all over me.

That was probably the toughest moment. Waking up covered in pasta and asking my dad how long until Windermere, only to find out it was 20 minutes away and I didn’t even feel like I had had more than five minutes break.

My forearms were completely swollen but the competitive nature in me wanted to see it through.

Thank goodness Bala Lake was a small one because I don’t think I could have taken much more.

It was amazing and inspiring to have so many people there at the finish line, but I was also just happy to know that I was going to be in my bed in a few hours.

‘We swim as a pack’ – working together for change

Two people on a boat with banner that says #endsewagepollution with surfers against sewage logo and a lake and landscape in backgroundHector Pardoe

In open water, we swim as a pack.

Because when you swim together the current is stronger, and I think the same applies to the environment. When we are working together, we are advocating and pushing a message for a cleaner environment and a cleaner world.

We are stronger, we are united and I think we are all swimming the same course here.

Everyone can help by just talking about it, raising the issue and applying pressure. Sometimes it feels like we are fighting an uphill battle, but we are coming together, the community is taking a stand – we are fighting.

In July, the environment minister pledged the number of times sewage is discharged by water companies will be halved by 2030, so the issue is being acknowledged.

There are so many individuals, not just myself, who are doing remarkable things out there, like these kinds of challenges, to bring attention to it.

My YouTube documentary from the challenge has already had more than 175,000 views, which has shown me how strong doing something like this can be. It can really amplify the issues of pollution in UK waterways.

Already I am looking ahead to what I can do next year. What is the next one that I can do to amplify the message even more?

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Fifa accuses Malaysia of faking foreign-born players’ eligibility

Fifa has accused Malaysia of falsifying citizenship documents so seven foreign-born players could play for the national team.

Football’s world governing body had fined and suspended the players in late September and on Monday released a report justifying its action.

Fifa said the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM) had forged birth certificates to make it look like the players’ grandparents were born in Malaysia. This, the body said, “constitutes, pure and simple, a form of cheating”.

Fifa’s “grandfather rule” allows foreign-born football players to represent countries that their biological parents or grandparents were born in. This aims to prevent national football teams from simply importing foreign players to boost performance.

Fifa investigated the players following Malaysia’s 4-0 win against Vietnam in June, in response to questions about their eligibility.

In September, the Fifa disciplinary committee suspended the seven players for a year and ordered them to pay a fine of 2,000 Swiss francs ($2,500; £1,870). At the time, Fifa did not share details about the reason for their suspension, only that it related to “doctored documentation”.

The football governing body ordered FAM to pay 350,000 Swiss francs ($440,000; £330,000).

In recent years, South East Asian countries have launched recruitment drives for naturalised players, hoping to emulate Indonesia’s strategy of recruiting Dutch-born footballers from the Indonesian diaspora.

Earlier this year, FAM sent Fifa birth certificates showing that the grandparents of its seven players had been born in Malaysian cities like Penang and Malacca.

But Fifa said investigators obtained original birth certificates of the grandparents, which showed that they were born in countries like Argentina and Spain – all corresponding with the players’ birthplaces.

The seven players include Spanish-born Gabriel Felipe Arrocha, Facundo Tomas Garces and Jon Irazabal Iraurgui, Argentinian-born Rodrigo Julian Holgado and Imanol Javier Machuca, Netherlands-born Hector Alejandro Hevel Serrano and Brazilian-born Joao Vitor Brandao Figueiredo.

Malaysia’s sports minister Hannah Yeoh said Fifa’s findings had tarnished the country’s image. She said the ministry would wait for FAM’s appeal to be over before making any official statement.

“I also understand that all local football fans are naturally angry, disappointed and want to see improvements,” she told a news conference on Tuesday, according to government news agency Bernama.

Strictly’s George Clarke rushed for treatment after injuring back in training

Strictly Come Dancing’s George Clarke has revealed that he was battling a secret injury during Saturday’s show despite placing third on the leaderboard with his Paso Doble

The stars of Strictly Come Dancing are facing the second dance off this week – and the stress of the competition is already running high.

George Clarke has revealed that he was rushed to a physiotherapist last week after injuring his back in rehearsals last week. The influencer opened up about hurting his back on his podcast, The Useless Hotline Podcast – inviting on Strictly professional dance partner Alexis Warr for the first time.

The 25-year-old wowed the judges and the public with his impressive Paso Doble on Saturday, receiving a score of 30. He landed in third place on the leaderboard for weeks one and two, closely following Lewis Cope and Amber Davies who took second and first place respectively.

Despite storming the scoreboard, George revealed on his podcast that he was given less time to rehearse for his Paso Doble after needing physio for a back injury he sustained in rehearsal.

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“I didn’t want it to be a thing on the night,” he said. “That’s why they asked in the VT, they were like, ‘Do you want to mention your back?’ and I said, ‘I don’t want it to be a thing.'”

He added: “I had a pinched nerve all week in my back. I had acupuncture half way through the week. I went to physio four times.” As for how he did it, George admitted that the injury happened after a handstand went wrong.

“I was like, ‘I’ll throw in a handstand or something.’ I like doing a handstand, if I keep my legs together I’d probably be better at it but it doesn’t feel fun when you do it that way,” he said.

“I did that and got up and went, ‘My back hurts a little bit actually. Ah s**t, I’ve got a little twinge in there somehow. I’ll try to carry on.'”

Will said that after they took a lunch break, he was unable to return to training and “went straight to physio” instead. “I went to physio the next morning as well. Danced for a bit, sat down,” he said.

Meanwhile, Alexis said that it’s the ‘most frustrated’ she had seen George, with him adding: “Monday is when they throw a load of information at you and then it’s Terrible Tuesday because you’re trying to figure it out.” Not only was he behind with training, but George hade to keep halting rehearsal because of his back pain.

“It would get to the point where I’m getting it then I had to sit down because my back was hurting,” he said.

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Earlier this week, George revealed what taking part in the competition really means to him, writing on Instagram: “Probably [a] good time to continue being serious and thank everyone for their unbelievable support so far.

“Whether you’re old or new (here, not just in general) I really appreciate the comments, the messages and obviously the votes!”

Robin Williams’ heartbroken daughter calls for an end to sick trend

Comedian and actor Robin Williams’ daughter Zelda has issued a devastating plea to social media users as she begged for the end of a ‘gross’ trend circulating online

Robin Williams’ daughter Zelda has put out a heartbreaking plea as she continues to grieve her famous dad. The beloved Hollywood actor died by suicide aged 63 in 2014 following months of debilitating ill health.

Now, his daughter has been forced to put out a message to fans online as she shared a sick trend sweeping social media. The director has urged people to stop creating and sending her AI-generated videos of Robin.

She pleaded: “Please, just stop sending me AI videos of Dad. Stop believing I wanna see it or that I’ll understand, I don’t and I won’t. If you’re just trying to troll me, I’ve seen way worse, I’ll restrict and move on.

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“But please, if you’ve got any decency, just stop doing this to him and to me, to everyone even, full stop. It’s dumb, it’s a waste of time and energy, and believe me, it’s NOT what he’d want.”

Zelda added: “To watch the legacies of real people be condensed down to ‘this vaguely looks and sounds like them so that’s enough’, just so other people can churn out horrible TikTok slop puppeteering them is maddening.

“You’re not making art, you’re making disgusting, over-processed hotdogs out of the lives of human beings, out of the history of art and music, and then shoving them down someone else’s throat hoping they’ll give you a little thumbs up and like it. Gross.”

In her final appeal to social media users, she concluded: “And for the love of EVERY THING, stop calling it ‘the future,’ AI is just badly recycling and regurgitating the past to be re-consumed.

“You are taking in the Human Centipede of content, and from the very very end of the line, all while the folks at the front laugh and laugh, consume and consume.”

Sadly, it was not the first time Zelda had to call out the behaviour as last year she slammed a story circulating about Robin as fake. A story claimed the Mrs Doubtfire star had owned a monkey.

Zelda hit out: “It’s been brought to my attention some probably AI-written BS like this is going viral. Dad didn’t own a pet monkey, NO ONE should, and if you’re ever tempted to, support your local exotic animal rescues instead. That is his Night at the Museum costar, who now lives at one.”

Before his death, Robin complained that ‘gut discomfort’ was making him anxious and he developed a resting tremor in his left hand along with a slew of seemingly unconnected ailments that came and went.

He suffered stomach cramps, heartburn, and constipation. Robin then started having trouble with his sight and smell, struggled to urinate, was more anxious than ever and began having disturbed sleep.

His limbs would sometimes freeze mid-movement for no obvious reason, while his voice became weaker, his posture less rigid and sometimes he just froze on the spot.

In May 2014, Robin was told by doctors they thought he was suffering from Parkinson’s disease but the actor didn’t believe it. Robin died in August and initially it was thought depression was to blame.

An autopsy would later reveal he had actually been suffering from Lewy body dementia – an aggressive, incurable brain disorder that is associated with a higher risk of suicide. It is often misdiagnosed as Parkinson’s due to an overlap in symptoms such as impairment of motor function.

If you’re struggling and need to talk, the Samaritans operate a free helpline open 24/7 on 116 123. Alternatively, you can email jo@samaritans.org or visit their site to find your local branch

If you have been affected by this story, advice and support can be found at Dementia UK.

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