Sports
Donna Vekic wanted to quit tennis in May. She's one win from an Olympic medal
On the eve of the French Open in May, Donna Vekic had had enough. Her results hadn’t been great but it was more than that. Her energy and motivation had gone.
She told her coach, Nick Horvat, that she wanted to pull out of Roland Garros and that, at 27, she was thinking of quitting tennis altogether. She had thought about retiring two years earlier, following knee surgery, and she was back in that head space again.
The Croatian decided to have at least one more swing. She played that French Open, only to suffer a defeat to Olga Danilovic of Serbia in the third round that she described as “so, so painful”. After winning the opening set 6-0 and losing the second 5-7, Vekic squandered numerous break points in the third, and was broken when serving for the match on two consecutive occasions.
She then relinquished a 6-2 lead in the 10-point match tiebreak, losing 10-8. One set up against a player who had finished late the previous night, she again snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.
Two months on, Vekic, who has a phenomenally powerful serve and forehand, has upended that narrative. Back at the same venue for the 2024 Paris Olympics and ranked world No 21 (up from 40 before Roland Garros), she is into the semifinals and on the brink of a medal. This would be the biggest achievement of her career — her four titles have all been at the 250 level, the lowest rung of the WTA Tour.
During this run in Paris, Vekic has taken out the Team USA flagbearer Coco Gauff, keeping her cool after the world No 2 had a lengthy exchange with the chair umpire and tournament supervisor over a disputed call. Vekic backed that up on Wednesday night against Ukraine’s Marta Kostyuk, winning a typically up-and-down thriller 6-4, 2-6, 7-6(8) to ensure she will play in a medal match.
More on Coco Gauff…
This Olympic run also comes on the back of her best result at a Grand Slam. She reached the Wimbledon semifinals a few weeks ago — getting two points away from the final — at her 43rd major. Only four players had ever reached their first semifinal after more attempts.
Vekic’s Wimbledon run took her within two points of the final (Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)
As ever with Vekic, who turned 28 in June, mindset is crucial. After beating Lulu Sun in their Wimbledon quarterfinal, 22-time Grand Slam doubles champion Pam Shriver offered a window into Vekic’s achievements. Shriver, who is on her coaching team, explained that the ability to “reset” after a tough moment has been one of the key mantras for Vekic during this period of success.
It’s not been straightforward — so outwardly emotional, her matches are rarely stress-free — but this is how Vekic defied the doubts to become a Wimbledon and Olympic semifinalist.
Vekic was a hugely promising junior, and aged 16, she said she wanted to be the world No 1. She won her first WTA title, the 2014 Malaysian Open, at 17, and made steady if unspectacular progress for the next few years. After a few final defeats, it took until 2017 for her to win her second title — on the grass at Nottingham in the UK. She beat Britain’s Johanna Konta in the final, but then lost an epic to the same player at Wimbledon a couple of weeks later, 10-8 in the third set. It was an agonising defeat, but Vekic was showing her grass-court pedigree, and she cracked the world’s top 50 for the first time soon after.
The following year, Vekic reached the Wimbledon fourth round. Vekic said during last month’s Wimbledon run that she’s a “different person” from then, and has “matured more”. She ended 2019 at a career-high ranking of No 19 — now ranked No 21, she looks well set to beat that soon.
Vekic with the Nottingham title in 2017 (Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images for LTA)
Two years on, in January 2021, Vekic had knee surgery that kept her out until that year’s French Open. She thought seriously about quitting and at Wimbledon last month, she said, “Those couple of years were very tough. I didn’t think I was ever going to come back to the level that I even had last year.”
Vekic struggled on and got her reward at the Australian Open in January 2023 — though it ended in familiar heartbreak. Vekic battled to a second major quarterfinal, this time against Aryna Sabalenka, but appeared to freeze on the big stage. She served three double faults in the first game, nine in the first set and 13 overall, in what was a straight-sets defeat. Afterwards, she said that her serve “was all over the place”, before adding, with a rueful smile, “but I think mostly in the net”.
Vekic’s serve crumbled against eventual champion Sabalenka (William West / AFP via Getty Images)
That self-deprecation and sense of humour is an important part of the Vekic package.
Fast forward to this year, and after an indifferent run of results came that reckoning at Roland Garros.
“I didn’t have any energy, any motivation to keep practising, to keep pushing. The last couple months, I gave everything for tennis, and I wasn’t getting the results I expected,” she said.
“It was a very, very tough moment, but they (her team) were all there for me.”
Back on the grass, Vekic reached the final at Bad Homburg, changing her usual routine by playing an event the week before Wimbledon. It paid off.
She instantly looked comfortable at Wimbledon. Propelled by a bruising serve and beefy forehand, she bludgeoned (and drop-shotted) her way to the last four. Her three-set defeat to Paolini was the longest women’s semifinal in Wimbledon history and one of the tournament’s best matches, lasting nine minutes shy of three hours.
GO DEEPER
Jasmine Paolini beats Donna Vekic to reach Wimbledon final after knife-edge match tiebreak
Vekic’s ability to effectively employ the “reset” mantra defined her Wimbledon run as much as her tennis, and it’s been a key in Paris too. The Croatian actually pressed the reset button between Wimbledon and the Olympics, heading from London straight to the beach in her home country, where she could put the disappointment of the Paolini defeat behind her.
Against Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska in the third round, Vekic gave up the second set having held a match point. She appeared to be slipping to another disappointing defeat. Instead, she came out and won the decider 6-1.
“She did a great job of resetting,” said Shriver, who travels with Vekic for the biggest events of the year, but for the Olympics is doing what she can remotely from her home in Los Angeles.
In the next round, Vekic said she was “freaking out” but then used a rain delay when trailing Spain’s Paula Badosa 5-1 in the second set to gather herself. Shriver told Vekic: “Just trust yourself on this one. You know how to deal with it.”
By the time Vekic was in the quarterfinals, “She was just in that place where you want to be in the quarterfinals of a major, which is like with the blinders on,” Shriver said.
“And so Nick (Horvat, her main coach) and I were like, ‘We just sit back and let her do her thing’.”
Part of her thing is admitting that she does not have much of a poker face. Vekic’s emotions are almost always writ large, and even when up in matches, it feels as if she would rather be anywhere than on a tennis court. At Wimbledon, she recovered from breaking down in tears — from physical pain, rather than emotion — against Paolini to play a magnificently composed point when match point down, forcing a match tiebreak from a position in which she looked ready to crumble.
“She lets people know what she’s feeling,” Shriver said. “But that’s OK. She’s learned to use the time between points, and she’s letting the stress out and resetting.
“You have to apply those resetting skills at the right time. She’s doing really good things. It could be breathing. It could be anything.”
Vekic’s tears at Wimbledon were caused by injury rather than emotion (Francois Nel/Getty Images)
One of Vekic’s most obvious and effective resets at Wimbledon came in the quarterfinal against Sun, the New Zealand qualifier playing with the obvious freedom of having nothing to lose. Vekic generally served brilliantly in the match, but when she served for the second set she hit five double faults — the second-most in a game by any player in Wimbledon history.
She reset, won the next game to take the set, and then won the first 13 points of the decider.
“I was so angry. I was so angry at myself,” Vekic said after the match.
“I was like, ‘No, this is not happening right now’. I could hear Pam shouting, ‘Reset, reset’. I was like, ‘Reset what?’.”
Vekic then laughed as she relived the fury she was feeling. She laughed again when asked if she had benefited from the new rules that allow players to speak to their coaches.
“Probably not,” she said. “I told them to shut up five times during the match.”
Keeping the serve solid has been a priority for Vekic and her team. “We’ve talked about a lot of things that she can do, whether it’s hit the second serve first because she has an aggressive second serve,” Shriver said.
“Sometimes ‘up, up’ is a team mantra on the serve because if you’re not going up after it that’s not good. She’s getting to the point where she can do a lot of this on her own, as long as she has the clarity.”
Vekic recovered from a disastrous service game against Lulu Sun (Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)
This is where the emotional element comes in, with the mental stresses of a match affecting the serve like no other shot. Shriver, who reached eight major singles semifinals and one final, but couldn’t get over the line, can relate. “If it gets too emotional, then it’s hard to be clear,” she said. “And I know that 100 per cent because I was very emotional as a player. And I look back and I’m like, ‘Dang, that definitely hurt me’. I let the emotions have a domino effect.”
Vekic was able to resist that domino effect against Gauff. After going 4-2 up on that disputed break point, after which Gauff had a lengthy discussion with the chair umpire and tournament supervisor, Vekic quickly went down 0-40. After missing one serve, the crowd booed, still feeling aggrieved for the American. “It’s not my fault,” Vekic said to herself.
She saved the break points, and won that game and the next one to win the match.
More on Coco Gauff…
Vekic is always quick to pay tribute to her support team, led by her main coach Horvat. Shriver is a big admirer of Horvat too and said they work well together — speaking to each other during matches about who should send what message and when. They collaborate on opposition analysis, too, which starts as soon as the opponent is known. “But Donna’s the leader,” Shriver said.
That extends to Vekic and her team being straightforward about her previous shortcomings. “Part of the mindset training is like, ‘Don’t let the elephants in the room just go quiet’,” Shriver said.
“We’re addressing it a little bit more as a team.”
Vekic stayed calm against Gauff to record a stunning win (Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)
Against Kostyuk late at night in Paris, Vekic had to summon every ounce of the advice Shriver, Horvat, and her team had given her. She led 5-1 in a scintillating first set, before being reeled back to 5-4. She double-faulted when serving for the set, but closed it out.
She hit another double fault up match point in the third set, and was broken when serving for the match at 5-4, and again at 6-5 (when she also missed a match point), after breaking the Kostyuk serve at 5-5.
She went 4-0 down and then 5-2 down in the third-set tiebreak. She came back again. She went match point down. She hit a return winner inside-out. And after some more back-and-forth, it was fittingly an ace, delivered with the serve that has hampered her in the past, that secured victory. Vekic was involved in the best match of Wimbledon against Paolini, and here she was part of the best of the Olympics so far.
Her matches are often so full of emotion and plot twists that they make Andy Murray’s seem positively chilled out.
Always honest, Vekic is happy to admit that she doesn’t enjoy these big occasions. “No, not at all,” Vekic said at Wimbledon. “A lot of the times I’m like, ‘I just cannot wait for this match to be over’. It’s tough out there. Doesn’t matter if it’s first round, second round, quarterfinals, it’s tough to enjoy.”
She added: “The part that I do enjoy is playing on big courts with such an amazing crowd. That’s the part that I try to soak in while I’m playing. I have to always remind myself to enjoy it.”
As for her coaches, Vekic said, “What I like about her (Shriver) and everyone in my team, they always say it the way it is. They don’t try to sugarcoat things. They’re very direct, which I really appreciate.”
On Shriver, she added: “She’s an amazing person, amazing mentor. I’m really proud to have her in my team.”
Twelve years on from turning pro, this one-time prodigy is making good on her rich potential. And having considered retiring less than three months ago, Vekic is now all in — at 28, there’s nothing to hold back for.
“There’s a point in your career where you’re no longer the rising youngster, right?” said
Shriver, who herself was a teenage sensation, reaching the U.S. Open final as a 16-year-old. “You’ve been around long enough. You know your body well. So now it’s like, ‘OK, it’s not like you’re trying to protect a future 15-year career’. This also means not over-celebrating her achievements. This is the life of a tennis player — no matter what peak you scale, there’s always another match and tournament.
“She may well have other unbelievable opportunities. But the only one we want to concern ourselves with is this opportunity.”
Shriver was talking about Wimbledon but a few weeks on, those words are just as relevant to Vekic’s Olympics bid. All she needs to concern herself with is this opportunity. She is two wins away from a gold medal, which would have seemed impossible when she considered retirement at the same venue in May.
Additional reporting: Matthew Futterman
(Top photo: Patricia de Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images)
Sports
Russell Wilson not thinking about retirement, plans to play in 2026: ‘I know what I’m capable of’
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Russell Wilson went from starting quarterback of the New York Giants to third string just a few weeks into the 2025 season, leaving many to question if the 10-time Pro Bowler decides to play next season.
Wilson, 37, doesn’t sound like he’s mulling over his decision. He wants to play in 2026.
“I’m not blinking,” Wilson said, per SNY. “I know [what] I’m capable of. I think I showed that in Dallas, and I want to be able to do that again, you know, and just be ready to rock and roll, and be as healthy as possible and be ready to play ball.”
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
New York Giants’ Russell Wilson attempts to escape a sack by Dallas Cowboys defensive end James Houston (53) in the first half of an NFL football game Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (Julio Cortez/AP Photo)
Wilson signed a one-year, veteran minimum deal with the Giants this past offseason worth $10.5 million, which had tons of incentives if he were to play the entire season.
That same offseason, the Giants traded back into the first round to select Jaxson Dart out of Ole Miss, and he proved during training camp to have NFL-ready chops under center.
GIANTS STICK WITH GM JOE SCHOEN DESPITE ANOTHER LOSING SEASON, CITING NEED FOR ‘CONTINUITY AND STABILITY’
Still, then-head coach Brian Daboll was steadfast in his decision to start Wilson despite Dart’s success. But, after just three games, where the Giants went 0-3, a change was made.
Daboll went with Dart in Week 4 against the Los Angeles Chargers at home, and the rookie defeated Justin Herbert and company to not only get his first career win, but cement himself as the team’s starter moving forward.
Even then, Wilson remained positive, saying in interviews after practice that he understands the direction of the team and wanted to help Dart develop and grow in his new role.
New York Giants’ Russell Wilson, left, and Jaxson Dart, right, talk on the bench in the first half of an NFL football game against the Dallas Cowboys Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (Julio Cortez/AP Photo)
In his three starts for the Giants, Wilson threw for 831 yards with three touchdowns to three interceptions, though all of those touchdowns came in a Week 2 overtime heartbreaker for New York. Over half of Wilson’s passing yards also came in that game, throwing for 450 in the 40-37 loss.
Wilson also said that he tore his hamstring during that game against the Cowboys.
“I played that game, you know, I tore my hamstring on Friday in practice – the last play of practice. And I had a Grade 2 (tear). I couldn’t tell anybody. I had to go and play on it just because I knew the circumstance, I had to play on it, no matter what,” Wilson explained.
“I actually ended up going to the Dallas Mavericks’ facility, training. And you know, just kept it quiet, just trying to get treatment on it and just knowing that I probably couldn’t run from the goal line to the 10-yard line if I wanted to, but I feel like… I got to play this game.”
New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson (3) scans the field at the line against the New York Jets during the first half at MetLife Stadium. (Rich Barnes/Imagn Images)
It will be interesting to see if Wilson will land anywhere, and better yet, if a team is willing to try him out as a starter again.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Sports
Can Ravens’ Tyler Loop rebound from missed kick better than Scott Norwood or Mike Vanderjagt?
Those who snub Father Time like to say that 50 is the new 30. A different Father — Benedictine priest Maximilian Maxwell— sprinkled holy water in the end zone before his beloved Pittsburgh Steelers took on the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday with the AFC North title on the line.
Fifty is the new 30 also applies to field goals. More than 70% of kicks over 50 yards are successful these days, a dramatic increase in accuracy from only five years ago. Excuse Maxwell for thinking divine intervention might be necessary should a last-second missed kick determine the outcome.
A 44-yarder is a chip shot for most NFL kickers, including Ravens rookie Tyler Loop, who had made 90% of his attempts — including eight of eight from 40-49 yards — when the ball was snapped with three seconds to play and Baltimore trailing 26-24.
Two words coined when Scott Norwood missed a 47-yard attempt that cost the Buffalo Bills Super Bowl XXV in 1991 once again were screamed on a television broadcast: “Wide right!”
Another memorable miss came from a kicker regarded as the best in the NFL 20-some years ago. Brash, outspoken Mike Vanderjagt of the Indianapolis Colts led the league in scoring in 1999 and four years later became the first kicker in history to make every kick in a full season: 83 of 83 on field goals and extra points.
Yet he botched a boot with 21 seconds to play during a playoff game in 2006, enabling the Steelers to upset the Colts. Pittsburgh went on to win the Super Bowl and Vanderjagt was replaced by Adam Vinatieri. He never regained his form.
Here’s hoping Loop rebounds better than Vanderjagt or Norwood, who was released a year after the historic miss and never played again. Loop was All Pac-12 in 2023 at Arizona, where he holds records for longest field goal (62 yards) and success rate (83.75%). He was the Wildcats’ GOAT before becoming the Ravens’ goat.
Loop, 24, didn’t duck the media, leaving the impression that he won’t let this failure define him.
“Just want to say I’m super grateful to Baltimore, the organization and the city, just how they embraced me this year has been incredible,” he said. “Just for it to end like that, sucks, and I want to do better.
“Unfortunately, the nature of the job is you have makes, and those are awesome, and unfortunately, you have misses, and for that to happen tonight sucks.”
The specialized nature of kickers can place them on the periphery of team bonding, but Loop’s teammates and coaches were supportive in the aftermath of the season-ending loss.
Coach John Harbaugh walked alongside Loop from the field to the locker room, with his arm around his back comforting him. Quarterback Lamar Jackson downplayed the impact, telling reporters, “He’s a rookie, you know. It’s all good. Just leave it in the past.”
Only time will tell whether Loop can do just that.
Sports
Raiders dismiss longtime NFL head coach Pete Carroll after one season
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Longtime NFL head coach and Super Bowl champion Pete Carroll was fired after just one season with the Las Vegas Raiders, the team announced Monday.
The 74-year-old coach said after Sunday’s win over the Kansas City Chiefs that he “of course” would want to return for another season. But owner Mark Davis had different plans for the former Seattle Seahawks coach.
Las Vegas Raiders head coach Pete Carroll jogs on the field during a timeout in the first half of an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs in Las Vegas, on Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/John Locher)
“The Las Vegas Raiders have relieved Pete Carroll of his duties as head coach. We appreciate and wish him and his family all the best,” Davis said in a statement provided by the team.
“Moving forward, General Manager John Spytek will lead all football operations in close collaboration with Tom Brady, including the search for the club’s next head coach. Together, they will guide football decisions with a shared focus on leadership, culture, and alignment with the organization’s long-term vision and goals.”
The move marks a period of instability for the Raiders organization as they begin their third straight year on the hunt for a new coach.
Carroll, who won the Super Bowl with then-Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson in 2014, was brought in with the hopes of bringing that same playoff magic to the Raiders after the team dismissed Antonio Pierce.
Las Vegas Raiders head coach Pete Carroll watches his team warm up before an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs in Las Vegas, on Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/John Locher)
BROWNS FIRE HEAD COACH KEVIN STEFANSKI AFTER SIX SEASONS
Pierce was also fired after just one season – he served as the interim head coach in 2023, after Josh McDaniels was fired midseason.
But Carroll wasn’t able to live up to those expectations.
The Raiders went on a 10-game losing streak, Geno Smith finished with a league-high 17 interceptions and for the second season, the Raiders finished at the bottom of the AFC West with a 3-14 record.
Las Vegas Raiders head coach Pete Carroll speaks during a news conference following an NFL football game against the Kansas City Chiefs. The game was played in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/John Locher)
Carroll was animated after the team closed out the season with a 14-12 win over the Chiefs, but was immediately met in his postgame presser with questions about wanting to come back the following season and reports of retirement.
“Nobody’s talking to me about that,” he dismissed at the time.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
-
World1 week agoHamas builds new terror regime in Gaza, recruiting teens amid problematic election
-
Indianapolis, IN1 week agoIndianapolis Colts playoffs: Updated elimination scenario, AFC standings, playoff picture for Week 17
-
News1 week agoRoads could remain slick, icy Saturday morning in Philadelphia area, tracking another storm on the way
-
Politics1 week agoMost shocking examples of Chinese espionage uncovered by the US this year: ‘Just the tip of the iceberg’
-
World1 week agoPodcast: The 2025 EU-US relationship explained simply
-
News1 week agoFor those who help the poor, 2025 goes down as a year of chaos
-
News1 week agoWinter storm brings heavy snow and ice to busy holiday travel weekend
-
Politics1 week ago‘Unlucky’ Honduran woman arrested after allegedly running red light and crashing into ICE vehicle