Jack Draper believes it has been important to stand up for his friend Jannik Sinner and that the Italian is undeserving of any hate as
Category: Tennis
‘I can trust him’: Emma Raducanu to continue coaching partnership with Mark Petchey
Emma Raducanu has revealed she intends to continue her coaching partnership with Mark Petchey on an ad hoc basis following her quarter-final run at the
Lucy Shuker: ‘I took up the sport to find me. It wasn’t to be a Paralympian’
“There are thousands of people out there that have a disability. Just because you have one doesn’t mean you have to stop living,” says Lucy
Let it out or bottle it up? Does venting emotion harm performance in elite sport? | Sean Ingle
Two scenes from an extraordinary week. The first: Justin Rose, a gentleman in a bearpit as Augusta hollered loud and long for Rory McIlroy. The
Tennis body defends ‘uncomfortable’ shower rule as criticism bubbles over
The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) has come under fire after it issued a reminder about anti-doping rules, saying players chosen to give samples must
Alex de Minaur beaten by in-form Alcaraz in Barcelona quarter-final
Alex de Minaur’s 50th tour-level quarter-final has ended in defeat, the Australian No 1 beaten 7-5 6-3 in 100 minutes by defending champion Carlos Alcaraz
Serena Williams says she’d ‘have gotten 20 years’ if caught like Jannik Sinner
Serena Williams says she would have been hit with a 20-year ban if she had failed drug tests like men’s world No 1 Jannik Sinner,
Lois Boisson pokes fun at Harriet Dart ‘deodorant’ jibe on social media
French tennis player Lois Boisson has responded to Harriet Dart’s on-court claim that “she smells really bad” with a social media post that pokes fun
Harriet Dart apologises for requesting that opponent ‘wear deodorant’
Harriet Dart has apologised after requesting her opponent at the Rouen Open put on deodorant because she “smells really bad”. The British No 4 was
Handmade balls and no two courts the same: Tudor-era ‘real tennis’ is making a racket in Sydney
“It’s a bit like three-dimensional chess, and it’s much more intellectual than an average sport because it’s so complicated,” Maggie Henderson-Tew says through a wide