WHAT'S NEW

Welcome To LEADFORTRESS FORUM.....You can send your article to mutelviz@gmail.com for publication......FOLLOW US@ facebook.com/mutairu.zubairu.9....twitter:@mutairuz1.....VISIT US: leadfortress.blogspot.com...BREAKING NEWS=............... .THE MORE YOU LOOK THE LESS YOU SEE ....................... ....
Showing posts with label sport| TENNIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sport| TENNIS. Show all posts

Friday, 16 February 2018

Roger Federer title as oldest world no.1 in tennis history.

Roger Federer is now the oldest world No 1 in the history of tennis.

Federer returned to the summit of men’s tennis for the first time in more than five years, after he beat Robin Haase at Rotterdam’s ABN Amro World Tennis Tournament.

The 36-year-old secured his spot in the history books and the last four of the tournament with a 4-6 6-1 6-1 victory against Haase on Friday.

Federer needed to reach the semi-finals, in order to overtake Rafael Nadal when the rankings are next updated on Monday.

The Swiss was last the top-ranked player in November 2012 and will replace Andre Agassi, who was 33 when he topped the standings in 2003.
Read More »

Thursday, 11 January 2018

Why my daughter won’t play tennis – Serena Williams

American tennis star, Serena Williams, has revealed she doesn’t want her daughter, Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. to play tennis when she grows up.
The star player said her daughter will not have a normal life if she follows her footsteps.
Recall that the mother of one withdrew from the year’s opening Grand Slam, which will be played as from Jan. 15 to Jan. 28 because she needed more time to be ready to defend her title after giving birth to her first child in September.
Speaking to Vogue magazine, Serena said, “I would hate her to have to deal with comparisons or expectations. It’s so much work, and I’ve given up so much. I don’t regret it, but it’s like Sliding Doors: Go through a different door and lead a different life.
” I’d like her to have a normal life. I didn’t have that.
“I think sometimes women limit themselves. I’m not sure why we think that way, but I know that we’re sometimes taught to not dream as big as men, not to believe we can be a president or a CEO, when in the same household, a male child is told he can be anything he wants.
” I’m so glad I had a daughter. I want to teach her that there are no limits.”
Read More »

Thursday, 4 January 2018

Murray, Nishikori out of Australian Open as injury list grows

Former world number one Andy Murray and Japan’s Kei Nishikori pulled out of the Australian Open Thursday as a host of top names battle to be fit for the year’s first Grand Slam.
Murray, 30, had failed to recover from a hip injury sustained last year and has not played since losing in the Wimbledon quarter-finals last July, while Nishikori has been on the sidelines since August due to a torn tendon in his right wrist.
“Sadly I won’t be playing in Melbourne this year, as I am not yet ready to compete,” the three-time Grand Slam champion Murray said in a statement.
“I’ll be flying home shortly to assess all the options but I appreciate all the messages of support and I hope to be back playing soon.”
Murray, who earlier withdrew from the Brisbane International, did fly from Queensland to Melbourne, but only to catch a connecting flight back to Europe, the national broadcaster ABC reported.
– ‘Hard decision’ –
Australian Open tournament director Craig Tiley said he respected what was a “very hard decision for Andy.”
The loss of the Scot, who may now opt for surgery on his hip, came with injury clouds hanging over a who’s who of stars before the Open begins on January 15
World number one Rafael Nadal and six-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic remain huge doubts having yet to play a competitive match this year.
Nadal, the reigning French Open and US Open champion, pulled out of Brisbane at the weekend with a knee injury but said he still intends to play at Melbourne Park.
Former world number one Novak Djokovic has not played since a right elbow issue forced him to quit Wimbledon in the quarter-finals.
He cancelled scheduled appearances in Abu Dhabi and Doha but intends to test the injury next week at two warm-up events in Melbourne before deciding whether to embark on a tilt at a record seventh Aussie title.
“Novak is travelling to Australia where he will take part in two exhibition tournaments,” said a statement on 12-time Grand Slam winner’s website early Thursday. “After the two events, the decision will be made about his participation.”
World number eight Jack Sock joined the growing injury list when he injured his hip at the Hopman Cup in Perth on Tuesday.
Former champion Stan Wawrinka and Canada’s Milos Raonic are also returning from injuries but intend to play in Melbourne.
On the women’s side of the draw there are question marks over the fitness of defending champion Serena Williams, who has not played competitively since giving birth four months ago.
– ‘Game becoming more physical’ –
And British number one Johanna Konta, a semi-finalist in Melbourne two years ago, retired from her Brisbane quarter-final Thursday with a right hip injury and was not sure if she would defend her Sydney International title next week.
“Hips take a massive beating,” Konta said.
“Obviously, our game is becoming more and more physical and the demands of the tour as well, week-in and week-out, is becoming more demanding.”
Earlier in the week Wimbledon champion and world number two Garbine Muguruza was forced to retire at Brisbane with severe leg cramps, though the Spaniard two-time Grand Slam winner on Thursday accepted a wildcard to play in Sydney.
US Open champion Sloane Stephens pulled out of Brisbane before the tournament to rest a troublesome knee but is entered for Sydney.
And upcoming French star Caroline Garcia, who enjoyed a breakthrough season in 2017 rising to eight in the world, retired in tears with back pain from the same event on Sunday.
Asian number one Nishikori said his rehab had been “going well but I am just not ready 100 percent to come back yet in best of five set matches”.
The 28-year-old made the fourth round of the Australian Open last year, losing in five sets to eventual champion Roger Federer, who at the age of 36 appears to be one of the few top names to be fully fit.
Read More »

Muguruza gets Sydney wildcard after Brisbane pull-out

World number two Garbine Muguruza accepted a wildcard into the Sydney International Thursday to get match fit after retiring with severe cramp from a tournament this week.
The Wimbledon champion was ahead 2-1 in the deciding set against Serbia’s Aleksandra Krunic in the second round of the season-opening Brisbane International when she collapsed after a serve.
The Spaniard could not continue, derailing her Australian Open preparations.
“This wildcard is a very valuable opportunity for me get back on the court and hopefully play a few more matches before the first Grand Slam of the year in Melbourne,” said Muguruza.
“The Sydney draw is incredibly strong and there will be no easy matches.”
Muguruza joins reigning French and US Open champions Jelena Ostapenko and Sloane Stephens in the draw for the Sydney tournament, starting Sunday.
Venus Williams, Petra Kvitova, and Angelique Kerber will also play.
Read More »

Saturday, 30 December 2017

Serena Williams loses on comeback

Serena Williams lost on her comeback from a maternity break as French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko powered to victory in the “first to ten points” final set at the Abu Dhabi exhibition tournament on Saturday.
The 36-year-old Williams looked far from full fitness just four months after the birth of her first child and Ostapenko, a 20-year-old Lithuanian, won 6-2, 3-6, 10/5.
The former world No.1 is hoping to defend her Australian Open title when the tournament gets underway January 15.
Read More »

Sunday, 24 December 2017

Serena to return in Abu Dhabi with Australian Open in mind

Former world number one Serena Williams will make a surprise comeback at the Mubadala exhibition event in Abu Dhabi next Saturday, as she gears up for her Australian Open title defence in January.
The decision to play in the United Arab Emirates should virtually confirm Williams’ participation at Melbourne Park.
The 36-year-old has not played since clinching a 23rd Grand Slam singles title 11 months ago, after revealing she was pregnant during the tournament and taking time off to give birth to her first child, Alexis Olympia in September.
Williams will return with a match against Latvia’s French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko, making them the first women to compete in the previously male-only event.
“I am delighted to be returning to the court in Abu Dhabi for the first time since the birth of my daughter,” she said in a statement released by the tournament organisers on Sunday.
“The Mubadala World Tennis Championship has long marked the beginning of the men’s global tennis season and I am excited and honoured to be making my comeback as part of the first women to participate in the event.”
The former world number one can equal Margaret Court’s all-time record of 24 Grand Slam titles, although she will have to make do with a low seeding Down Under after slipping to 22nd in the rankings.
Williams’ comeback raises the prospect of a renewal of her one-sided rivalry with Maria Sharapova, after the Russian’s own comeback earlier this year from a doping ban.
It also provides a boost the Australian Open, after two-time champion Victoria Azarenka pulled out of the warm-up event in Auckland over the ongoing custody battle that has stopped the Belarusian from playing since Wimbledon in July.
Serena claimed an Open-era record 23rd major title by beating older sister Venus 6-4, 6-4 in this year’s Australian Open final, a feat made all the more remarkable by the fact that she was two months pregnant.
Ostapenko broke through with a stunning French Open title, and the 20-year-old will take on Serena for the first time.
The Mubadala event had already seen men’s world number one Rafael Nadal and three-time Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka withdraw.
The six-strong men’s field in Abu Dhabi does feature Serb Novak Djokovic, who will also be making his comeback.The 12-time Grand Slam champion has not played competitively since his quarter-final loss to Tomas Berdych at Wimbledon because of an elbow injury.
Read More »