Simona Halep retires from tennis after crushing defeat in Romania

  • Former world No 1 makes announcement to home fans
  • ‘I’ve always been realistic with myself and with my body’

The former world No 1 Simona Halep has announced her retirement after enduring a resounding defeat in her first match of 2025.

Halep belatedly got her season under way in her home event, the Transylvania Open, in Romania on Tuesday, after being handed a wildcard. But the two-time grand slam title winner secured just two games as Italy’s Lucia Bronzetti powered to a 6-1, 6-1 victory in just 59 minutes.

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Emma Raducanu suffers straight-sets defeat by Vondrousova in Abu Dhabi

  • Third loss in a row for British No 2 after 6-3, 6-4 defeat
  • Raducanu still seeking a new coach after Cavaday’s exit

Emma Raducanu suffered a third straight defeat in the opening round of the Abu Dhabi Open. The 22-year-old was beaten 6-3, 6-4 by the former Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova to add to her losses to Iga Swiatek in the third round of the Australian Open and to Cristina Bucsa in Singapore last week.

Originally given a wild card into qualifying, the British No 2 was bumped up to the main draw and handed a tricky opener against Czech Vondrousova, who has struggled with injury since last summer.

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Olympic champions reunite to seal Australia’s Davis Cup win over Sweden

  • Australia defeat Sweden 3-1 to seal home tie in next round
  • Peers-Ebden beat Bergevi-Goransson 6-7 (7-9), 6-3, 6-2

Olympic champions John Peers and Matt Ebden have reunited to seal an emphatic Davis Cup triumph in Sweden and celebrate their Australian team earning a rare tie back on home soil.

With Lleyton Hewitt’s outfit 2-0 overnight in the first-round qualifying tie after the first-day singles in Stockholm, the golden veterans teamed up on Saturday for the first time since their Paris triumph to win the tie-clinching doubles rubber.

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Britain face Davis Cup relegation playoff after defeat to Japan in deciding match

  • Jacob Fearnley and Billy Harris lose final-day singles
  • Japan’s 3-2 win means GB face September playoff tie

Great Britain face a relegation playoff in the Davis Cup after a makeshift team were beaten 3-2 by Japan.

Debutant Jacob Fearnley’s impressive singles win on Friday had given Leon Smith’s side hope of victory despite being without grand slam semi-finalists Jack Draper and Cameron Norrie.

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Alex de Minaur powers Australia into Davis Cup lead against Sweden

  • World No 8 defeates Mikael Ymer 7-5, 6-1 in qualifier
  • Aleksandar Vukic beat Leo Borg 6-4, 6-4 for 2-0 lead

Trusty Davis Cup old hand Alex de Minaur and late-blooming new boy Aleksandar Vukic have put Australia well on the road to victory in their first-round qualifying tie against Sweden in Stockholm.

World No 8 de Minaur, in his first outing since his Australian Open quarter-final drubbing by Jannik Sinner, had to subdue comeback man Mikael Ymer before running away to a 7-5, 6-1 victory on Friday (Saturday AEDT).

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No Nick Kyrgios in Davis Cup team as Australia turn to Aleksandar Vukic

  • Kyrgios withdraws from Sweden tie due to more injury concerns
  • Jordan Thompson and Thanasi Kokkinakis also ruled out

Captain Lleyton Hewitt has not given up on a potential return to Davis Cup action for Nick Kyrgios despite the former Wimbledon finalist having predictably pulled out of Australia’s first-round qualifying tie with Sweden because of more injury concerns.

In the meantime, Hewitt is happy to rely on Alex de Minaur, a hungry newcomer Aleksandar Vukic and the veteran Olympic champion doubles pairing of Matt Ebden and John Peers to steer his side to victory in Stockholm.

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Emma Raducanu loses three-hour epic in first round of Singapore Open

  • Spain’s Cristina Bucsa beats Raducanu 5-7, 7-5, 7-5
  • Briton’s first match since split with coach Nick Cavaday

Emma Raducanu came up short in a three-hour marathon to crash out in the first round of the Singapore Open. The British No 2 lost 5-7, 7-5, 7-5 to Spain’s Cristina Bucsa in a match featuring 17 breaks of serve.

Raducanu, the world No 56, was playing in her first match since splitting with coach Nick Cavaday, who stepped down last week because of health issues. Instead, the 22-year-old had her mother Renee for company in the stands, as well as new fitness trainer Yutaka Nakamura. But Raducanu still flagged as the finish line approached at the end of a brutal encounter.

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Jannik Sinner beats Alexander Zverev in Australian Open 2025 men’s singles final – as it happened

Jannik Sinner beat Alexander Zverev with plenty to spare, winning the Australian Open for the second year in a row

Sinner is 94% on hard courts since winning in Australia in 2024, beating Zverev in their only meeting this year. Alcaraz gives him grief because of how quickly he plays, but he moves so well and hits so consistently, even a unique genius must play lights out to put one over on him.

So how will our match today go? Sinner is favourite partly because he knows he can do it, 2-0 in finals relative to Zverev’s 0-2. But he also hits more consistently and, tough both shots have improved, Zverev can struggle on forehand and volley with Sinner good enough to target both. I expect the champ to sit on the baseline, plant feet if he can, and look to keep Zverev moving and guessing; Zverev will, I think, hope to draw him in, in order to hit passes.

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Madison Keys says ‘lots of therapy’ helped her to Australian Open win – video

The American tennis player Madison Keys said that 'lots of therapy' helped her secure her Australian Open title, after she beat the world No 1, Aryna Sabalenka, in the final on Saturday. 'Actually getting help, talking to someone, not just about tennis but how I felt about myself,' she added. 'If I hadn't done that, I don't think I would be sitting here.'

At 29, Keys is the oldest first-time women's Australian Open champion in the Open era. 'I’m just really proud of myself,' Keys told a reporter. 'I didn’t always believe that I could get back to this point.'

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Patten and Hewett give Great Britain taste of Australian Open glory

  • Henry Patten and Harri Heliovaara win men’s doubles
  • Alfie Hewett claims title in men’s wheelchair final

Britain’s Henry Patten claimed his second grand slam doubles title alongside his Finnish partner, Harri Heliövaara, in a late-night epic in Melbourne.

The pair did not walk out on Rod Laver Arena until 10.30pm after a lengthy women’s singles final between Madison Keys Aryna Sabalenka. It took until past midnight for the first set against the Italian third seeds, Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori, to conclude.

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Give us our GOAT back: tribalism remains a bar to appreciating Djokovic’s greatness | Barney Ronay

It feels politically radical at this stage, a break from the phoney wars, to say can we just appreciate Djokovic for what he is?

Who knows, maybe one day Novak Djokovic and the people of Australia will stop mid-argument, bottom lips quivering, and just kiss it all out, right there in front of the cameras, while in the background the studio audience gasps and whoops and we cut tantalisingly to the break with a jaunty bass solo.

Perhaps not yet though. Judging by the scattered boos and jeers from the crowd as news filtered through that Djokovic was retiring with injury after the first set of his Australian Open semi-final on Friday , it seems there is still some way to go in that narrative arc.

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Raducanu on search for coach again after Cavaday quits over health issues

  • Player been criticised for chopping and changing coaches
  • British No 2 heading from Australian Open to Singapore

Emma Raducanu is searching for another coach after Nick Cavaday ended their partnership because of health issues. Raducanu first worked with Cavaday as a child and they resumed the relationship ahead of last season, where the 22-year-old returned to the top 100 following operations on both wrists and one ankle.

Raducanu spoke frequently about how positive the partnership had been and that she hoped it would be a long-term arrangement but it has now come to an end after 14 months. Their last tournament together was at the Australian Open, where Raducanu reached the third round, and the British No 2 said: “I’d like to thank Nick for a great partnership over the last year and a bit. Especially being post-surgeries, he helped get me back inside the world’s top 60. I wish him all the best in his next chapter and no doubt we’ll stay in touch.”

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‘I tried’: Novak Djokovic after retiring against Zverev at Australian Open – video

Novak Djokovic said he did 'everything I possibly can' to manage his injury before and during his Australian Open semi-final against Alexander Zverev. The 10-time champion retired hurt after losing the first set, and was booed off the court by some sections of the Rod Laver Arena. Djokovic suffered an injury to his groin area in his quarter-final against Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz on Tuesday.

The Serb took to the court on Friday with both dark tape and a white bandage enveloping his upper thigh. He revealed afterwards he had not hit a ball since his previous match, and the pain proved too much for him to play on after losing the first set on a tie-break. 'I want to keep going,' the 37-year-old added, but also admitted 'there is a chance' this could be his final appearance at Melbourne Park.

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Noisy fans add to sport’s spectacle but loss of perspective and anger soon follows | Emma John

Clashes between players and spectators at Australian Open are just another example of the shouty polarities of our age

Eva Asderaki-Moore probably loves her job. But there were times, during Novak Djokovic’s Australian Open win over Carlos Alcaraz on Tuesday, when the chair umpire clearly had it with the crowd. “Ladies and gentlemen, please,” she pleaded. And then “That’s e-nough!” – which she enunciated like a schoolteacher marshalling her charges on a very long, very noisy coach trip.

You had to feel for her. What is tennis thinking after all? It throws 15,000 people into an arena, whips them up into a state of delirium with some of the greatest feats of athleticism seen in a grand slam quarter-final, then expects pin-drop silence between points. At 1am? When some of these people have been drinking since lunchtime?

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