Sports
Taylor Fritz and Iga Swiatek Break Through at Indian Wells
INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Again within the day, Taylor Fritz and his father Man would drive north on the freeway from San Diego, come over the Santa Rosa Mountains and navigate the switchback turns all the way down to the Coachella Valley, the place the world’s greatest tennis gamers collect each March in Indian Wells.
Fritz, a gifted junior, was simply one other boy patrolling the courts and looking for enjoyable and autographs, together with Rafael Nadal’s, however Fritz’s father instructed him one thing extraordinary.
“He instructed me that I used to be going to win this event at some point,” Fritz mentioned.
On Sunday, Fritz, now 24, did simply that: holding off a diminished however nonetheless harmful Nadal, one of many best gamers in tennis’s lengthy historical past.
“That is severely like a childhood dream come true,” mentioned Fritz, combating off tears after combating off Nadal, 6-3, 7-6 (5). “Like a wild dream you by no means count on to truly occur.”
Man Fritz, who peaked at No. 301 within the ATP rankings in 1979, lengthy believed in his son, who has reached No. 13 with this victory. Nevertheless it has taken Taylor till now to develop the religion and the forehand to take out a champion like Nadal at such a event.
It’s a Masters 1000 occasion, a step beneath a Grand Slam event however the top-tier class on the common tour, and Indian Wells has develop into a signature cease. It has huge grounds, glorious amenities and strong attendance even when this 12 months’s complete of 329,764 followers, with vaccination required for spectators, was no match for the prepandemic determine of 475,372 in 2019.
The occasion additionally has robust backing from its billionaire proprietor Larry Ellison, who was sitting within the entrance row of his field on Sunday to observe Nadal, his pal and common houseguest, attempt to stay unbeaten in 2022.
Like Roger Federer, Nadal has endured and impressed lengthy sufficient to transcend nationality. A Spaniard, Nadal has been on tour for almost 20 years and received his document twenty first Grand Slam singles title at this 12 months’s Australian Open.
Fritz, who grew up in close by San Diego County within the elite enclave of Rancho Santa Fe, considers the BNP Paribas Open his “residence event,” and although he did get appreciable help, it typically felt like he was taking part in an away recreation in opposition to Nadal.
However Fritz wouldn’t be denied as he completed off the victory on his second match level, ripping a forehand method shot down the road that the lunging Nadal couldn’t deal with.
“No means!” the wide-eyed Fritz shouted repeatedly.
A title actually had regarded unlikely just a few hours earlier when Fritz walked onto the identical court docket and shouted in anguish as he tried to push off on his proper foot throughout a warm-up session that lasted only some minutes. “Like, the worst ache conceivable,” he mentioned. “I used to be actually upset, mainly nearly crying, as a result of I assumed I used to be going to have to drag out.”
After numbing the ankle with painkilling remedy, he went again out to hit on an out of doors court docket and felt higher. However his coaches, Michael Russell and Paul Annacone, and health coach, Wolfgang Oswald, all suggested in opposition to him taking part in within the closing, involved Fritz would possibly do longer-term harm to the ankle he had twisted within the semifinal on Saturday.
Fritz ignored the recommendation. “I really feel dangerous for these guys: I’m so cussed,” he mentioned. “I went on the market, and I severely performed the match with zero ache.”
Nonetheless, he has scheduled for Monday a magnetic resonance imaging scan on his ankle. It appears way more unlikely that he’ll play on this week’s Miami Open than it does for Iga Swiatek, who received the ladies’s singles title earlier on Sunday.
Swiatek, the 20-year-old Polish star who’s as considerate as she is highly effective, defeated Maria Sakkari, 6-4, 6-1, in what was a match for the title but additionally for the No. 2 rating.
Swiatek, now ranked solely behind Ashleigh Barty, was the extra dependable power within the gusting wind together with her heavy groundstrokes, significantly the forehand that she hits with excessive topspin, like her position mannequin Nadal. Till this 12 months, her largest titles have come on clay: above all of the 2020 French Open title that she received at age 19 with out dropping a set.
However Swiatek clearly has the talent and can to be No. 1 and an all-surface menace. After successful the WTA 1000 in Doha, Qatar on a hardcourt, she ran her successful streak to 11 matches by successful for the primary time in Indian Wells.
This event has been the positioning of massive breakthroughs lately: Naomi Osaka received in 2018 and went on to say her first main at that 12 months’s U.S. Open; Bianca Andreescu did the identical double in 2019.
Fritz, who had by no means reached a Masters 1000 closing till this event, required third-set tiebreakers to get previous Jaume Munar and Alex de Minaur and three units to defeat Miomir Kecmanovic earlier than discovering his kind and vary in opposition to Andrey Rublev on Saturday.
“His victory of yesterday is far larger than his victory of as we speak, as a result of he had a a lot harder opponent,” Nadal mentioned of the Rublev match.
Nadal’s glum remark was a reference to the ache that he started feeling in his chest late in his windblown semifinal victory over Spanish compatriot Carlos Alcaraz on Saturday.
Nadal needed to stretch and pressure to regulate his pictures to these unpredictable circumstances, and although he mentioned he had not but acquired a transparent prognosis, it was attainable that, in contorting himself within the wind in opposition to Alcaraz, he had strained a pectoral muscle or intercostal muscle close to his ribs.
“When I attempt to breathe, it’s painful and really uncomfortable,” mentioned Nadal, now 20-1 in 2022. “However that’s it no? It’s not the second to speak about that, actually. Even when it’s apparent that I used to be not in a position to do the traditional issues as we speak. That’s it. It’s a closing. I attempted. I misplaced in opposition to a terrific participant.”
Fritz’s dad and mom have been touring professionals who helped to form his recreation when he was younger. His mom Kathy Might was ranked as excessive as No. 10 in singles in 1977 on the WTA Tour and reached three Grand Slam singles quarterfinals throughout her profession.
After her son’s victory, Might spoke courtside with Martina Navratilova, whom Might as soon as defeated on tour, and later posed for pictures on court docket together with her son.
Fritz was married at 18 and is the daddy of a 5-year-old son Jordan however is now divorced and touring along with his girlfriend Morgan Riddle.
“She’s so dedicated to creating certain I’m doing all the suitable issues, like I’m going to mattress on time,” he mentioned in an interview. “It’s simply somebody who’s holding me accountable, who additionally desires the identical issues I would like, and it’s wonderful simply to have somebody who cares and who will help me do the suitable issues.”
What Fritz desires this season is a spot within the high 10. He was ranked No. 39 in early October however mentioned he tweaked his forehand approach after watching footage of a junior match he performed in opposition to Rublev. “We have been simply completely crushing the ball,” Fritz mentioned. “I watched precisely how I used to be hitting my forehand and simply tried to repeat it as a lot as attainable.”
He reached the semifinals in Indian Wells final 12 months when the event was delayed and performed in October, and he has been defeating high 20 gamers with regularity since then. He’s the primary American to win the singles in Indian Wells since 2001 when Andre Agassi received the boys’s title and Serena Williams received the ladies’s title.
Fritz was 3 on the time. However Indian Wells quickly turned an everyday a part of his life and when he returned this 12 months, he regarded up on the massive {photograph} of reigning males’s champion Cameron Norrie on the wall of the gamers’ lounge and imagined his personal photograph taking its place.
“All week, I used to be like, it will be so cool for that to be my image,” he mentioned.
Mission achieved, and a long-ago prediction has additionally come true.
“He was simply actually, actually happy with me,” Fritz mentioned of his father, tearing up as he smiled. “It’s actually robust to get a praise out of him.”
Sports
Footballers’ shin pads – the piece of equipment some pros prefer not to wear
Michael Olise does not like shin pads.
So much so that when the France winger was being brought on for Leroy Sane during Bayern Munich’s 1-0 win over Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League in November, he was not wearing any.
This was spotted by the game’s fourth official Florin Andrei, who instructed the 23-year-old to put some on. Olise reluctantly tucked some into his socks before slinging them out again when officials looked away.
As Michael Olise prepared to come off the bench for Bayern in their Champions League game vs. PSG, he appeared to have a brief exchange with the fourth official.
Moments later, Olise was seen putting his shinpads into his socks, but then slyly removed his left guard and tossed… pic.twitter.com/ep0mqMLG79
— ESPN FC (@ESPNFC) November 28, 2024
The International Football Association Board (IFAB) laws of the game state that shin pads must be worn by all players. There are no specific rules regarding size but Law 4 states that they “must be made of a suitable material and be of an appropriate size to provide reasonable protection, and be covered by the socks”.
For years, many footballers have been playing fast and loose with their interpretation of the rules. The low socks and micro shin pads trend made cool by the likes of Manchester City’s Jack Grealish and Chelsea’s Lauren James has become vastly popular in recent years.
GO DEEPER
The art of the football sock
“I don’t wear shin pads,” Olise told a fan who tried to gift him a pair recently, although the PSG incident may have been a one-off, with the 23-year-old usually spotted wearing shin protection in matches.
The former Crystal Palace player is not the only professional footballer who would prefer to enter games shin pad free if it was up to him.
“I don’t really like wearing shin pads — we never wear shin pads in the training,” former Sheffield United striker Oli McBurnie told The Athletic in November. “I want to feel how I train every day, so I wear normal socks. I cut my socks and roll them down, and then have little bits of foam that I put in like padding just to feel as comfortable.”
Sam Weller Widdowson is credited with inventing shin pads back in 1874. He was a cricketer as well as a footballer for Nottingham Forest, later becoming the club’s chairman and a player once capped by England. It is said that Weller Widdowson cut down a pair of cricket pads and started wearing them to protect him during football matches, and that his idea soon caught on.
Shin guards in sport have been heavily influenced by greaves, an ancient armour fashioned by soldiers dating back to the Bronze Age that protected the shinbone, which has little but skin to protect it.
It was in 1990 when FIFA (making use of IFAB’s laws) ruled that shin guards must be worn by all players in every game. Before that, players could pick and choose whether they protected their shins and ankles. Back then, shin guards were clunky and protected both a player’s ankle as well as their shin.
They have slimmed down somewhat in the past three decades. Now players can source credit card — or, if you like, biscuit-sized shin guards. This trend has become a worry for grassroots football clubs, some of whom have now sought to enforce bans on young players wearing them.
Penistone Church, a team from Barnsley in South Yorkshire, made headlines last August when they put a ban in place after a 15-year-old player named Alfie suffered a double leg break when getting into a challenge while wearing miniature shin pads.
“It’s not worth the extra bit of speed to have you knocked out of football for months and months. It’s not worth the risk,” Alfie told the BBC after a 50-50 tackle left him nursing a broken tibia and fibular. The shin pads the teen was wearing at the time of the tackle measured just 3cm (1.1in) by 9cm (3.5in).
@officialbhafc The world’s smallest shin pad… 🤣 #BHAFC #AFC #PL ♬ original sound – Brighton & Hove Albion FC
Warrington Town defender Peter Clarke is 25 games away from reaching his 1,000th senior appearance since his Everton debut in the Premier League in January 2001. At 42 years of age, he says he can remember the cumbersome and bulky shin pads of the late 80s, 90s and early 2000s, with their built-in ankle protectors and velcro straps. And while he wears smaller guards than the ones he started his career with, plenty of on-pitch experiences have ensured that he has never downsized too much.
“The ones I wear now are carbon fibre and they have chips and scratches in which, when I look at them, I’m glad to be wearing them,” the centre-back, who also played for Huddersfield Town, Oldham Athletic and Tranmere Rovers, says.
“Twenty years ago, tackles would fly in a lot more. I remember going into a full-blown tackle and getting hit on the shin. As the game wore on, I realised there was blood on my sock — the studs had gone right through the shin pad and left a two-inch cut down my shin. It is a contact sport and it is wise to be well protected rather than wearing the smallest shin pads possible.”
His longevity means Clarke is playing in the National League North alongside team-mates at Warrington who were born after he made his first professional appearance. What does he think is the reason that more players are opting for tiny shin pads these days?
“I don’t like the feel of them slipping around, so I wear sleeves to prevent that,” Clarke says. “Whether it is that or whether it is how an individual looks when they are playing; but I’m not sure a seven-inch piece of plastic or carbon fibre is going to slow an individual down that much. I’m not entirely sure but things have certainly changed and it is not for the best in terms of player safety.”
Clarke estimates he has used five or six pairs of shin pads throughout a career that has spanned more than 25 years and saw him defend against Thierry Henry (then of Arsenal) and Cristiano Ronaldo (then of Manchester United). He makes sure his daughter and son wear adequately-sized shin pads for their own protection when playing and encourages others to do the same.
While he has opted for plainer efforts, his children have customised guards with pictures of themselves and their family on. That is something a lot of players at all levels are opting for now, with some elite players even having pictures of just themselves on their own shin pads.
Manchester City and Brazil goalkeeper Ederson, and Crystal Palace and France striker Jean-Philippe Mateta are among those who do take to the pitch with images of their own faces tucked inside their socks.
For every Luka Modric, who wears one with photos of himself playing for Croatia and winning the Champions League with Real Madrid and the other of his wife and children, which he often kisses before stepping onto the pitch, there’s a Declan Rice who prefers to keep things simple with plain shock-absorbing material guards.
England and Arsenal striker Alessia Russo has a selfie with her parents printed at the bottom of hers and above is an image of her iconic backheel nutmeg goal against Sweden at the European Championship in 2022, which was nominated for the Puskas award that same year.
For players, shin pads can serve not just as protection but as positive homages to help psych themselves up before a game.
Some footballers opt to have their shin guards specially fitted. When former Wales international Gareth Bale was at Real Madrid, he wore a pair made by Podoactiva, a Biotechnology company that specialises in podiatry and biomechanics. It also designs custom-fitted insoles for players’ boots.
Ultimately, shin pads are there to protect players from serious injury but have also become a fashion statement — and, believe it or not, some shin pads are now supporting some players in sourcing moves in the transfer window.
Italy and Lazio striker Martina Piemonte moved from AC Milan to Everton in 2023 and put the transfer to the Women’s Super League in part down to the data her XSEED shin guards, created by Italian analytics company Soccerment, helped her collect during matches.
Aldo Comi is co-founder and CEO of the wearable technology company who have been fine-tuning their artificially intelligent shin guards since the product’s official launch in 2022. They now have approximately 3,000 players wearing XSEED and using the adjacent app, which allows players to interpret their own data. As brand ambassador, Inter Milan full-back Federico Dimarco is one of the more high-profile male footballers wearing the shin guards.
“We try to give the player ownership of their data so that they can use it to improve, to be faster and better, but then also to gain visibility,” Comi says. Soccerment’s shin pads measure a player’s speed, sprints, shots, crosses, passes and more. They also became the first wearable technology to provide expected goals (xG) metrics.
Soccerment recently spent six days in California at the Major League Soccer youth tournament MLS NEXT Fest. “For six days, we datafied the 35 matches and more than 220 players,” Comi explains. “And basically, what we did there was create a scouting platform at the event.”
Comi says they were able to create a data breakdown in order to scout players (one of their goals is to create a worldwide scouting platform from this data) who outperformed their peers in various areas. The company has noticed the recent trend in shrinking shin guards, though, particularly among youth players — and are already reacting to it.
“The past two years, the trend has been having smaller and smaller shin guards. In some cases, players don’t even wear them,” he says. “You can see a lot of professional footballers are faking it by using these little sponges underneath their socks which, in my view, is dangerous. What we need to do (at Soccerment) is respond to this trend, which is why we are working on resizing our shin guards and making them smaller and lighter.”
But Soccerment is first off focused on creating shin guards that — before capturing data and protecting the technology within each pad — protect the player.
“We wanted to have them certified as a protective equipment and that is why we had to select the premium materials. For example, we went for a copolymer, which is also used in the aerospace sector for its ability to absorb shocks. It’s been expensive for us but it makes the shin guards really protective.
“And that should be the main purpose of a shin guard: to protect your shins.”
(Top photo: Pau Barrena/Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)
Sports
Texas star Arch Manning will take reins after Quinn Ewers declares for draft
The Arch Manning era has begun in Texas.
With Quinn Ewers declaring for the NFL Draft on Wednesday, Manning is set to get the keys to the Lamborghini for the foreseeable future. He is very likely to be the starting quarterback for at least the 2025 season and possibly 2026 if he doesn’t decide to turn pro.
He is the son of Cooper Manning, the grandson of former NFL star quarterback Archie Manning and the nephew of Eli and Peyton Manning. He passed for 939 yards and nine touchdowns this season. He also showcased his mobility with four rushing touchdowns.
“This offseason, this is a time for him to attack,” former Texas star Colt McCoy said, via Underdog Fantasy Sports. “To work on some of the things he knows he needs to work on. He played three games. What were some things I wasn’t good at? What were some things I was good at? How can I get better? How can I have a great spring?…
“There’s a lot to build on if you’re looking at the entirety of the Texas football team, but for Arch, there’s a great opportunity that he’s walking into. Don’t put too much pressure on yourself, go out there and be you. Play to your strengths.
NOTRE DAME’S RILEY LEONARD CREDITS OPEN FAITH FOR BRINGING TEAM, OHIO STATE TOGETHER FOR NATIONAL TITLE
“We’re all different as quarterbacks, we all have an edge somehow. And I think if Arch is smart, he’ll figure out ‘what’s my edge?’”
Manning was mostly used in run-pass option packages for the Longhorns, giving defenses a different weapon to deal with. He started against Louisiana-Monroe and Mississippi State when Ewers went down with an injury.
Manning had 258 passing yards, two touchdown passes in a 51-3 win against Louisiana-Monroe. He then had 325 passing yards and two touchdown passes against Mississippi State in a 35-13 win. But he was back to the backup role after Ewers returned.
The offense overall will take a hit. Top receivers Matthew Golden and Isaiah Bond declared for the draft and senior tight end Gunnar Helm is finished his eligibility.
Running back Jaydon Blue and offensive linemen Kelvin Banks Jr. and Cam Williams also declared for the NFL.
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Sports
LeBron James waved at young fan sitting courtside at Lakers game. Then she cried tears of joy
LeBron James made a young Lakers fan’s night Wednesday at Crypto.com Arena. And then for good measure, he did it again.
During the first quarter of the Lakers’ game against the Miami Heat, James noticed a girl sitting courtside and wearing a replica of his jersey. So he gave her a wave, then turned his attention back to the game.
James didn’t notice the girl’s priceless reaction at the time, but the camera operators at Spectrum SportsNet did. The station’s clip of the youngster crying tears of joy while smiling from ear to ear after being acknowledged by the NBA’s all-time leading scorer quickly went viral — so much so that James actually saw it during the intermission.
“Family friends sent me the clip at halftime,” James told reporters after the game. “Thank goodness that I actually looked at my phone at halftime or I wouldn’t have even seen the reaction when I waved to her in the first half. …
“To have that type of connection with someone, where they can have that type of reaction, I think that’s what it’s all about, you know? I’ve always tried to be a role model and someone that kids can look up to.”
He added: “That was a super-dope moment.”
James had an even doper moment in store for the kid after the game.
The Lakers trailed by 12 at halftime but mounted a furious comeback in the second half. After James hit a three-pointer to pull the Lakers to within one at the 6:40 mark of the third quarter, the girl was on her feet cheering and then yelled, “Yeah, LeBron!”
After the Lakers’ 117-108 win, James made it a point to find the girl, give her one of his foundation’s I Promise wristbands and pose for a photo in what was clearly another memorable moment for the fan.
“I think it’ll be something that hopefully she will never forget,” said James, who finished the game with 22 points, four rebounds and nine assists. “I’m happy to be a part of her life now and that small little moment was such a bigger moment. And hopefully she brags about it in school.”
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