Sports
'I consider myself lucky': Dominic Thiem and the agonising what-ifs of tennis
The greatest moment of Dominic Thiem’s tennis career came in an eerie vacuum in front of more than 20,000 empty seats.
As he collapsed to the ground after four hours on court against Alexander Zverev in the 2020 U.S. Open final, the noise he heard was the whirr of camera shutters and a smattering of applause, not the cacophony that normally greets a singles champion inside Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York City.
It didn’t matter. He had finally done it. He had his Grand Slam title.
It was not a final for the purists, regardless of the context, as tennis returned from a Covid-19-enforced hiatus to play before rows of empty seats. Thiem and Zverev were manacled by the weight of history and opportunity, first separately, and then both at once, their tennis labouring to reach something as yet unachievable. Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer had skipped the tournament; Novak Djokovic was defaulted in the fourth round for accidentally hitting a line judge with a ball. Having lived under the crushing dominance of that ‘Big Three‘, suddenly, there was a path.
Things started terribly that day for the Austrian, who had dropped only one set in reaching the final. He lost the first two against Zverev and looked set for a crushing defeat.
“I already felt before the match that something was not right,” Thiem tells The Athletic in a video interview from his home in Austria. “I wasn’t getting into the zone or the flow. And that’s how the first two sets went — they were way too tense, too nervous. Sascha (Zverev) was playing really well.
“The pressure was so high. I was thinking back to my previous finals. Maybe it’s less pressure to face the greatest players of all time. Because the U.S. Open, I had to win (in those circumstances), and that was really tough.”
It’s Dominic Thiem’s moment.
The point that made him a Grand Slam champion 👇 pic.twitter.com/uYMplH3TF7
— US Open Tennis (@usopen) September 14, 2020
Before winning in your fourth Grand Slam final, you have to lose three, and Thiem fell just short of two of the toughest feats in men’s tennis in all of them. He lost two French Open finals to 14-time Roland Garros champion Nadal, and one Australian Open to Djokovic, who has lifted the trophy in Melbourne 10 times. Along with Andy Murray and Stan Wawrinka, no player suffered from the supremacy of Nadal, Djokovic and Federer more than he did.
“Every Grand Slam final felt like it could be the last one, because the journey is really tough,” Thiem says. “You have to beat great players, you have to stay healthy. Many, many little things have to come together. When I played Sascha (that day in New York), it was like now or never.
“When I was two sets down, luckily I released a bit and he also started to think a bit more that he’s very close to the title.”
After Thiem clawed back that two-set deficit, Zverev served for the championship at 5-3, but Thiem broke to stay in the contest. The match went to a final-set tiebreak.
It remains a tough watch almost four years on.
In one corner is the exhausted Thiem, drenched in sweat, battling an Achilles tendon problem and suffering so badly from cramp he struggled to serve. In the other is Zverev, so gripped by nerves he could only muster a 68mph (109kph) second serve when down match point, as well as hitting two double faults.
Thiem won by seizing the initiative, ripping away a couple of decisive forehand winners. His fearlessness remains one of his defining characteristics, and it came to the fore at the most critical moment of his career. Former world No 4 Tim Henman said in commentary for Amazon Prime: “I’ve never seen anything like that. The legs had gone, but the belief hadn’t.”
The Austrian finally claimed a Grand Slam title at the fourth attempt (Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
Thiem’s moment had finally arrived but in the most surreal circumstances imaginable, with no fans in the crowd, just a small collection of tournament staff.
That U.S. Open was supposed to herald the start of something exciting for Thiem. Instead, it marked the beginning of the end.
This month, Thiem is back in New York as a wildcard, where he will face home hope Ben Shelton in the first round.
This will be his last Grand Slam tournament, and he is likely to be out of it by the time he turns 31 on September 3. Thiem has won just one of his eight ATP Tour matches in 2024, and is now 209th in the world rankings. This lack of competitiveness — defined by the after-effects of a serious wrist injury from 2021 — is why he is calling it a day. He has no interest in carrying on in such a diminished state, and does not think surgery would change anything.
“There wasn’t a particular moment I decided (to retire) but towards the end of last year I was working hard, putting in a lot of hours, doing a good job, giving it my all, and the steps in the right direction were just not satisfying for me,” he says. “I was not playing well enough, especially when I was comparing myself to three, four, five years ago.”
A wrist injury is just about the worst a tennis player can suffer — it is at the end of the kinetic chain and the part of the body most connected to the racket. Although it can be traced to an innocuous match against Adrian Mannarino in Mallorca, it came from the thrashing of the ball that was Thiem’s signature, as well as the effort of facing the greatest players of all time, largely all at once.
Thiem’s flashing, brutal groundstrokes were his signature (Julian Finney/Getty Images)
Thiem was not a tennis prodigy everyone assumed would win Grand Slams, as was the case with other children of the 1990s such as Zverev, Grigor Dimitrov and Stefanos Tsitsipas. He became the first of two players born in the 1990s to win a major — succeeded by Daniil Medvedev — thanks largely to unrelenting hard work. He became synonymous with the post-Wimbledon clay-court swing, a time when most top players put their feet up. In 2015, he set a personal record by entering 29 tournaments — 13 more than year-end world No 1 Djokovic.
With his youthful look, throwback 1990s haircuts, and the way he would occasionally berate himself after a missed shot, Thiem possessed a vulnerability that endeared himself to tennis fans.
It took a toll, especially as a mere mortal trying to compete with the sport’s three demigods.
“That contributed to the injury, definitely,” he says. “I was competing with the three greatest of all time. That was intense.
“But also, all the years before I always had a big load and intensity in my practice. That’s something the doctor and many other people said: that at one point the wrist broke because of all the shots I did, all the hard practice I did all those years before.
“I was always striving to get better and get even closer to the best players in the world.”
Rather than cursing his luck, he feels privileged to have faced the three greatest male players of all time in the biggest matches. Thiem had 35 meetings with the Big Three, boasting a 16-19 win-loss record, including beating Federer in five of their seven encounters.
Thiem defeated Federer to win Indian Wells in 2019 (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)
“I consider myself lucky to be in that timeline with the Big Three and all the other great players,” he says. “I came up into the top 100 way later than most; they came up when they were, like, 18, whereas I was 20 and a half. I didn’t think it would be possible that I’d be a Grand Slam champion and No 3 in the world.”
Thiem’s positive outlook made him one of the most popular players on the ATP Tour over the last decade. When he announced in Rome in May that he would retire on home soil at October’s Vienna Open, there was a palpable feeling of disappointment among the assembled players in the Italian capital.
His good friend Zverev, vanquished in that agonising five-set U.S. Open final, described him as extremely down-to-earth: “He hasn’t changed with success, which sometimes is difficult to do. On the court, the power he had, the way he played — he gave it 110 per cent every time. You could feel that as a player and as a spectator, and that made him very special.
“He’s one of my best friends on tour.”
That final sentiment is familiar — it became a running joke in the locker room that players would invariably choose Thiem when asked who their best pal on tour was.
Even if Thiem was relatively slow to reach the world’s top 100, he made up for lost time.
After reaching the French Open semifinals for the first time, he cracked the top 10 in June 2016. He lost to Djokovic in that semifinal, when he was en route to his fourth straight Grand Slam title. The Big Three brick wall started early.
Thiem grew up on clay, and the slower surface defined and suited his long, wound-up swings — especially on the backhand side. His single-handed backhand, with its mixture of beauty and violence, symbolises his game. Of his 17 ATP singles titles, Thiem won 10 on clay, one on grass, and six on hard courts.
Clay suited the athleticism of Thiem, who played football to a decent level, as a central midfielder, until he was 14. He eventually became the second-best clay-courter in the world, but it mattered little: the best was in a different galaxy. Thiem would twice beat Djokovic at the French Open, only to run into Nadal for three straight years between 2017 and 2019. He lost all three, winning a single set across one semifinal and back-to-back finals.
“The first one (2018), I was a bit overwhelmed from reaching a Grand Slam final,” Thiem says. “Maybe I was one or two per cent too satisfied, too happy already with being in the finals. And I paid the bill for that.”
Nadal won 6-4, 6-3, 6-2.
The following year, having won Indian Wells in the March, Thiem’s reward for beating Djokovic in a two-day semifinal was another meeting with Nadal. The Austrian took the second set to level the match, but Nadal raced away with the next two to claim a 12th Roland Garros title.
Thiem never got the better of Nadal at the French Open (Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)
“That time, I really went on the court with the belief to win,” Thiem says. “I had a great attitude in this match and played really well. But he was just on a different level. It was very painful in the beginning, but it was a great match against the greatest player at this tournament of all time.”
There was more pain at the 2019 French Open, but of a different kind.
The famously easygoing Thiem came off the court to a bizarre incident when he was forced out of the interview room by a furious Serena Williams. The 23-time Grand Slam singles champion wanted to do her press conference as quickly as possible after losing in the third round. A disbelieving Thiem was furious, saying, “What the hell? But it’s a joke, really,” as he was ushered out of the room.
He added that Williams had shown a “bad personality” and he was suddenly catching strays from luminaries, including Whoopi Goldberg. “Don’t blame her, stop being a bonehead,” the actor said on U.S. broadcaster NBC.
Reflecting on the incident now, Thiem laughs. His frustration was partly directed at his own stressful third-round match against Pablo Cuevas — and, there was a happy ending. “Looking back, it’s very funny, because a few weeks later, we met around the Wimbledon practice courts, and Serena came up to me and said sorry. I also said sorry, because I lost it a bit there. It was a very nice conversation.”
The 2019 French Open was his first major after splitting with long-term coach and manager Gunter Bresnik. Thiem replaced Bresnik, often associated with his punishing schedule, with the 2004 Olympic champion Nicolas Massu, who was there for the 2020 U.S. Open win.
Bresnik later sued Thiem for a share of his earnings in the period shortly after they had stopped working together. This was settled out of court in March 2021.
Thiem’s next big chance at a major was the 2020 Australian Open, where he led Djokovic, as formidable in Melbourne as Nadal was in Paris, by two sets to one in the final. He had a point to move up a break in the fourth set but couldn’t convert it and ended up losing in five sets.
Thiem, who beat Nadal en route to the final, believes this was the peak of his career: “That was the best I played; how I was moving, playing attacking tennis, the way I was serving and returning, which was not my biggest weapon. Losing was very painful as I had chances like never before in that final.”
At the 2020 Australian Open, Thiem lost the final to Djokovic in five sets (Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
Despite his incredible record and the challenges of playing his first three Grand Slam finals against two of the Big Three, Thiem was on the cusp of becoming a nearly-man. Beating one of Federer, Nadal or Djokovic was rarely enough, and they played each other so often that they continuously elevated each other’s level. The recently-retired Murray had a similar experience, losing his first four major finals to Federer (three times) and Djokovic. Thiem says that in retirement, he would like to get together with Murray and some of his other former rivals and “have a really deep conversation” over a beer.
Like Murray, Thiem broke the duck, but because of the pandemic that had turned his triumph into such a surreal occasion, he had no time to savour his victory. That year’s French Open had been moved from its May/June slot to late September/early October, meaning it started only two weeks after his U.S. Open triumph. Thiem reached the quarterfinals, and then the final of the year-end ATP Finals. He seemed on track to kick on — but he knew that something wasn’t right mentally.
“Straight after the U.S. Open, I thought, ‘Wow, it’s going to be so easy, because now I won’t put pressure on myself’. But I needed the pressure, I needed the stress, to be in the zone to play my best. I completely lost that feeling. It was pure emptiness going on court.”
Dimitrov hammered Thiem in the fourth round of the 2021 Australian Open and, after a few months in which he was slowly rediscovering his motivation, the wrist injury against Mannarino ended his season — meaning he couldn’t defend his U.S. Open title.
“I had that inner fire and inner drive again, the feeling to practise with 100 per cent intensity again — then the wrist injury happened,” he says.
Thiem and Djokovic played cat-and-mouse through the years (Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)
Since the injury, Thiem has never been able to go at full pelt. There have been some good results and entertaining matches — reaching the 2023 Kitzbuhel final in his homeland, and a close three-set defeat to Tsitsipas in Madrid a few months earlier — but he has never sustained any form.
Thiem felt relief in May when he publicly announced his plan to retire — he had been more emotional when the thought first entered his mind late last year. He had retained the belief he could find his old self for some time, but never wanted to go out feeling like it was unattainable.
Thiem showed some of the old ferocity at the 2023 Madrid Open (Javier Soriano/AFP)
“Maybe there would be one act or tournament that would change everything,” he says. “But it just didn’t happen. Even when I had good results, it was more because of the fighting spirit than the playing level. That was always unsatisfying, and it helped with the decision.”
In April, he posted on social media: “I’m not the player of 2020 anymore. I have to deal with the current situation, with the fact that my wrist doesn’t give me the strength it used to.”
The expectation was that Thiem, a two-time finalist, would be given a wildcard for the French Open a couple of weeks after his decision. Instead, he had to try to qualify, losing in the second round but receiving a special presentation on a packed Court Suzanne-Lenglen.
Thiem bears no ill will for the snub, cherishing instead the memory of his farewell on one of his favourite courts and adding: “I was very relaxed, because I had enough time to play myself into the top 100 and have a spot in the main draw. I didn’t take that chance. It was OK.”
Since then, Thiem has lost three straight matches as he seeks one last big performance in New York. While he looks ahead to life after tennis — dreaming of setting up a sustainable football club, like Forest Green Rovers, who play in the fifth tier of English football; starting a family with his partner, the circus performer Lili Paul-Roncalli; maybe commentary; maybe coaching — he knows watching the sport’s leading players, some of them older than him, doing what he used to do will be one of the realities of retirement.
Even that level feels distant now but, as with having to face the Big Three on court, Thiem is excited, not bitter.
To watch matches “without being worried about anything, just to enjoy the sport, which is unbelievably beautiful” is enough now.
And first, there is New York, the site of his surreal, but beautiful moment on Arthur Ashe.
(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)
Sports
Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo makes NBA history with 83-point game
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Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo made NBA history on Tuesday night.
Adebayo scored 83 points, all while setting league marks for free throws made and attempted in a game for the Miami Heat in a 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. It is the second-highest scoring game for a player ever, only to Wilt Chamberlain’s famed 100-point game.
“An absolutely surreal night,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters after the game.
Adebayo started with a 31-point first quarter. He was up to 43 at halftime, 62 by the end of the third quarter. And then came the fourth, when the milestones kept falling despite facing double-, triple- and what once appeared to be a quadruple-team from a Wizards defense that kept sending him to the foul line.
He finished 20 of 43 from the field, 36 of 43 from the foul line, 7 for 22 from 3-point range.
After the game, he was seen in tears while he hugged his mother, Marilyn Blount, before leaving the floor after the game.
“Welp won’t have the highest career high in the house anymore,” Adebayo’s girlfriend, four-time WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson, wrote on social media, “but at least it gives me something to go after.”
MAGIC’S ANTHONY BLACK MAKES INCREDIBLE DUNK OVER FOUR DEFENDERS IN HISTORIC NBA GAME
Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat celebrates during the fourth quarter of the game against the Washington Wizards at Kaseya Center on March 10, 2026, in Miami, Florida. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)
The NBA’s previous best this season was 56, by Nikola Jokic for Denver against Minnesota on Christmas night. The last player to have 62 points through three quarters: one of Adebayo’s basketball heroes, Kobe Bryant, who had exactly that many through three quarters for the Los Angeles Lakers against Dallas on Dec. 20, 2005.
He wound up passing Bryant for single-game scoring as well. Bryant’s career-best was 81 — a game that was the second-best on the NBA scoring list for two decades.
Adebayo scored 31 points in the opening quarter against the Wizards, breaking the Heat record for points in any quarter — and tying the team record for points in a first half before the second quarter even started.
He finished the first half with 43 points, a team record for any half and two points better than his previous career high — for a full game, that is — of 41, set Jan. 23, 2021, against Brooklyn.
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Adebayo’s season high entering Tuesday was 32. He matched that with a free throw with 5:53 left in the second quarter, breaking the Heat first-half scoring record.
Adebayo’s 43-point first half was the NBA’s second-best in at least the last 30 seasons — going back to the start of the digital play-by-play era that began in the 1996-97 season.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
Kings lose in overtime to the Boston Bruins
BOSTON — Charlie McAvoy scored 39 seconds into overtime and Jeremy Swayman stopped 14 shots on Tuesday night to earn the Boston Bruins their 13th straight victory at home, 2-1 over the Kings.
Mason Lohrei scored midway through the third period to break a scoreless tie. But the Kings tied it five minutes later when Drew Doughty’s shot from the blue line deflected off the heel of Bruins forward Elias Lindholm and into the net.
It was the seventh straight time the teams had gone to overtime in Boston.
In the overtime, Mark Kastelic blocked a shot in the defensive zone and made a long pass to David Pastrnak, who waited for McAvoy to come into the zone. The Bruins’ defenseman and U.S. Olympian, who went to the locker room at the end of the second period after taking a puck off his mouth, skated in on Darcy Kuemper and went to his backhand for the winner.
Kuemper stopped 21 shots for the Kings, who entered the night one point out of the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference. The victory kept Boston in possession of the East’s second wild-card spot.
Swayman tied his career high with his 25th win of the season. The Bruins haven’t lost at the TD Garden since before Christmas.
After the game, Kings forward and future Hall of Famer Anze Kopitar stayed on the ice to shake hands with the Bruins after what is expected to be his last game in Boston.
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Jon Jones requests UFC release after Dana White says legend was ‘never’ considered him for White House card
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Mixed martial arts legend Jon Jones ended his retirement from UFC simply because he wanted a spot on the “Freedom 250” fight card at the White House in June.
But, when UFC CEO Dana White announced the card during UFC 326 this past weekend, Jones wasn’t among the fighters. As a result, he has requested a release from his UFC contract.
White was candid when asked about Jones following the UFC 326 card.
Jon Jones of the United States of America reacts after his TKO victory against Stipe Miocic of the United States of America in the UFC heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden on Nov. 16, 2024 in New York City. ((Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images))
“Never, ever, ever, which I told you guys a hundred thousands times, was Jon Jones ever even remotely in my mind to fight at the White House,” White explained, per CBS Sports. “Some guy with Meta Glasses filmed him talking about his hips – that his hips are so bad. And I don’t know if you guys saw that flag football game where he can barely run. Jon Jones retired because of his hips. He’s got arthritis in his hips. Apparently, doctors say he should have a hip replacement.”
White added that “the Jon Jones thing is bulls—,” saying that he texted the fighter’s lawyer saying he would never be on the White House card despite Jones saying he was in negotiations for it.
UFC ANNOUNCES CARD FOR WHITE HOUSE EVENT
The Meta Glasses incident White is referring to came from a viral video, where Jones, unaware he was being filmed, discussed issues with his hips to a fan.
On Monday, Jones composed a thorough response to White’s comments about him and the White House Card. He previously posted and deleted social media explanations, but Monday’s appeared to be his final statement on the matter.
UFC President Dana White speaks after UFC Fight Night at Toyota Center on Feb. 21, 2026. (Troy Taormina/Imagn Images)
“Yes, I have arthritis in my hip and it’s painful, but that doesn’t mean I can’t fight,” Jones, who retired a heavyweight champion in 2025, said. “So let me get this straight, if I had accepted the lowball offer, suddenly my hip would be fine and I’d be on the White House card? That doesn’t make sense. I even received stem cell treatment last week to get ready for the White House card, and training camp was scheduled to start today. I was preparing to be ready.
“I understand business deals fall through sometimes, but going out publicly and saying things that aren’t true isn’t right. After everything I’ve given to the UFC, the years, the title defenses, the fights, hearing that I’m ‘done’ is disappointing. Especially when as recently as Friday UFC was calling me trying to get me on that White House card for a much lower number.”
Jones finished his statement by saying he “respectfully” asks to be released from his UFC contract.
Jon Jones enters the ring before facing Stipe Miocic in the UFC heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 309 event at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 2024 in New York City, New York. (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
“No more spins, no more games. Thank you to the real fans who know what’s up,” he wrote.
The UFC did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Fox News Digital.
Jones is considered one of the best UFC fighters of all time, owning a 28-1-1 record, which includes his last bout with Stipe Miocic, knocking him out to take the heavyweight title belt. He is also a two-time light heavyweight champion.
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