Saudi Tennis Federation aims to inspire a million players when Riyadh hosts 2024 WTA Finals

The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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The Saudi Tennis Federation has revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030. (AN Photo/Huda Bashatah)
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Updated 27 June 2024
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Saudi Tennis Federation aims to inspire a million players when Riyadh hosts 2024 WTA Finals

Saudi Tennis Federation aims to inspire a million players when Riyadh hosts 2024 WTA Finals
  • The ambitious plan was revealed at the official launch of the event, which will take place Nov. 2-9 in Riyadh and feature the world’s top eight singles players and doubles teams

RIYADH: The Saudi Tennis Federation on Wednesday revealed ambitious plans to ignite a passion for tennis among 1 million people in the Kingdom by 2030.

It came as the STF, in collaboration with the Saudi Ministry of Sport and the Women’s Tennis Association, revealed the logo for the 2024 WTA Finals during the official launch ceremony for the event. The competition will take place in Riyadh from Nov. 2 to 9 at King Saud University and feature the world’s top eight singles players and doubles teams.

Arij Mutabagani, the president of the STF, said: “Hosting the WTA Finals in Saudi Arabia is a dream come true, offering our aspiring tennis players, both boys and girls, the chance to witness world-class athletes firsthand.”

Describing the federation’s ambitious plans for hosting the event she added: “We are working closely with the WTA and Judy Murray to expand tennis programs in schools, develop coaches and officials, nurture talent from grassroots levels, and enhance the overall tennis ecosystem.”

Reflecting on the personal significance of this milestone for tennis in the Kingdom, Mutabagani said: “For me, playing tennis as a child and rising to this position today is truly a dream come true. Witnessing the rapid development in sports that has brought us to this achievement is beyond what I could have imagined. Leading the federation to this point fills me with immense joy and pride.”

The launch on Wednesday marked the first visit to the Kingdom by the event’s newly appointed tournament director, Garbine Muguruza, and its community ambassador, Judy Murray. It will be followed by a series of nationwide tennis clinics to help develop and enhance local talent and broaden the appeal of the sport in the country.

Tennis is growing increasingly popular among a Saudi population in which 20 million people are under the age of 30. The STF’s “Tennis for All” initiative aims to introduce 60,000 young people to the sport in schools nationwide, as part of efforts to achieve the ambitious goal of turning 1 million people into tennis fans by 2030.

Steve Simon, the chair and CEO of the WTA, hailed the upcoming finals in Riyadh as a significant moment for women’s tennis.

“Bringing the WTA Finals to Saudi Arabia marks an exciting milestone for our sport, inspiring new players and fans in the region with top-level women’s tennis,” he said.

“This event allows the women’s game to complement the commitment to the growth of tennis in the Kingdom through inspiring new players and fans in the region, as they experience top-level women’s tennis for the first time.

“Alongside our Saudi Tennis Federation partners, we are counting down the days until the world’s best players descend on Riyadh for what we believe will be a thrilling season-ending finale.”

The three-year partnership between the WTA and STF is in line with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030, national development and diversification plan, to leverage sports in an effort to engage with the nation’s youth and foster community development.


Andy Murray will only play doubles at the Paris Olympic Games, withdraws from singles

Andy Murray will only play doubles at the Paris Olympic Games, withdraws from singles
Updated 25 July 2024
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Andy Murray will only play doubles at the Paris Olympic Games, withdraws from singles

Andy Murray will only play doubles at the Paris Olympic Games, withdraws from singles
  • Murray pulled out of singles at Wimbledon this month and played one match in doubles alongside his older brother, Jamie

PARIS: Two-time Olympic tennis gold medalist Andy Murray pulled out of singles at the Paris Games on Thursday and only will compete in doubles with Dan Evans.
Murray, a 37-year-old from Britain, has said these Olympics will be the final event of his career.
He’s dealt with a series of injuries, including a hip replacement in 2019, and most recently needed surgery last month to remove a cyst from his spine.
Murray pulled out of singles at Wimbledon this month and played one match in doubles alongside his older brother, Jamie.
“I’ve take the decision to withdraw from the singles to concentrate on the doubles with Dan. Our practice has been great and we’re playing well together,” Murray said Thursday. “Really looking forward to getting started and representing GB one more time.”
His withdrawal announcement came shortly before the draw for the Olympics tennis tournament. Play begins Saturday.
Murray won singles gold medals at London in 2012 and Rio de Janeiro in 2016, making him the only tennis player with two.


Iga Swiatek: Clay queen targets Olympic gold

Iga Swiatek: Clay queen targets Olympic gold
Updated 25 July 2024
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Iga Swiatek: Clay queen targets Olympic gold

Iga Swiatek: Clay queen targets Olympic gold
  • The Polish world No. 1 has been dominant on the red clay of Paris, winning four of the past five tournaments
  • Swiatek has sporting pedigree — her father Tomasz represented Poland in rowing at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul

PARIS: Iga Swiatek is returning to a happy hunting ground as she seeks a first Olympic crown to add to her four French Open titles at Roland Garros.

The Polish world No. 1 has been dominant on the red clay of Paris, winning four of the past five tournaments and is unbeaten there since a quarterfinal loss to Greece’s Maria Sakkari in 2021.

The five-time Grand Slam champion, who won the US Open in 2022, is seeking to go much further than she did at the Tokyo Games in 2021, where she lost to Paula Badosa in the second round.

Swiatek, 23, has had plenty of time to prepare for the Paris Olympics after her early exit from Wimbledon, where she lost in the third round to Yulia Putintseva.

The painful defeat on the grass at the All England Club brought Swiatek’s 21-match winning streak to a shuddering halt.

She was asked afterwards how she would prepare for the Olympics in Paris.

“For sure I’m going to take a lesson and rest a bit more,” she said. “I don’t know, I feel like even though I didn’t perform well at this tournament, because of how the whole season is looking, I deserve it.

“I should literally do it better because I’m not going to be able to go through the whole season playing good tennis.”

In 2020, Swiatek announced herself to the tennis world when she won the French Open without dropping a set.

She was the first Polish player, male or female, to win a Grand Slam singles title and has dominated the event since, with her one blip coming three years ago.

Last month she beat Italy’s Jasmine Paolini in a one-sided final, becoming the fourth woman in the modern era to lift the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen four times after Justine Henin, Chris Evert and Steffi Graf.

The world No. 1 also completed a Madrid-Rome-Roland Garros clay treble. The only other woman in history to do it in the same season is Serena Williams.

Swiatek has sporting pedigree — her father Tomasz represented Poland in rowing at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul.

“Normally a small child has trouble hitting even one or two balls but she could keep it going for dozens of shots,” recalls Artur Szostaczko, her first coach.

“She was a fighter.... I knew that if it went to a super tie-break, there was no need to worry — Iga wouldn’t crack under the pressure.”

Szostaczko taught Swiatek until she was 10 years old.

She was then coached by Michal Kaznowski, who remembers that Swiatek always wanted to be treated on an equal footing with her hard-working big sister Agata.

“Iga got really mad at me because I proposed some basic drill where I would feed Agata eight balls but only six to Iga because she was younger,” he said

“That made her angry. She went to her dad and said she wants just as many as Agata.”

Swiatek will hope that determination carries her all the way to the gold medal on her favorite courts in Paris.
 


No flags but plenty of fire for Medvedev at Paris Olympics

No flags but plenty of fire for Medvedev at Paris Olympics
Updated 24 July 2024
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No flags but plenty of fire for Medvedev at Paris Olympics

No flags but plenty of fire for Medvedev at Paris Olympics
  • The tennis star, along with other Russian and Belarusians at the Games, has to compete as a neutral following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine
  • Despite his fiery personality the chess-playing and fluent French-speaking Medvedev has reached the peaks of the sport

PARIS: There will be no flags or fanfare for Daniil Medvedev at the Paris Olympics but Russia’s highest-profile athlete in the French capital is unlikely to be far from the headlines.

The tennis star, along with other Russian and Belarusians at the Games, has to compete as a neutral following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Having demonstrated that they have not supported the war and have no links to the military, they have been allowed to compete but cannot fly their national flags.

The two countries’ national anthems are also banned and should Medvedev win an Olympic medal for the first time, the achievement will not be recognized in the medals table.

“When I’m 40, if I can say I played in the Tokyo Olympics, Paris Olympics and Los Angeles Olympics, I had a lot of fun in my life, my career, I’m going to be happy,” said Medvedev.

The 28-year-old world No. 5 is one of the most controversial players in tennis.

The 1.98m (6ft 6ins) giant came close to being disqualified from his Wimbledon semifinal against Carlos Alcaraz this month for a foul-mouthed rant at the chair umpire, before escaping with a warning.

Medvedev explained that he had called the official “a small cat.”

His explosive temperament has seen him feud with rivals Stefanos Tsitsipas and Alexander Zverev.

In Miami in 2018, after Tsitsipas made a foul-mouthed remark about Medvedev, the Russian dismissed the Greek as a “small kid who doesn’t know how to play.”

His rivalry with Zverev peaked at Monte Carlo last year when Medvedev saved two match points in a tense last-16 victory.

Germany’s Zverev lashed out at Medvedev for taking a bathroom break at a key moment in the tie, blasting the Russian as “one of the most unfair players in the world.”

Medvedev hit back, telling the current world No. 4 to “take a look at yourself in the mirror.”

In the Netflix series “Break Point,” Zverev accused Medvedev of playing “dirty games” and added: “He’s somebody that knows how to play with the head of the opponent.”

Crowds around the world have not escaped the wrath of Medvedev.

At the Paris Masters last year, he branded fans “stupid” for jeering during one of his matches.

Despite suggesting that he would halt his match, he agreed to continue, but warned his tormentors “shut your mouths, okay!“

Despite his fiery personality the chess-playing and fluent French-speaking Medvedev has reached the peaks of the sport.

At the 2021 US Open he claimed his only major title, easily defeating Novak Djokovic in the final and denying the Serb a rare calendar Grand Slam.

True to his unorthodox nature, Medvedev celebrated his New York victory by falling to the floor of the Arthur Ashe Stadium and imitating the “dead fish” celebration from a FIFA video game.

Medvedev has come agonizingly close to adding to his majors collection.

In this year’s Australian Open final he surrendered a two-set lead to lose to Jannik Sinner.

Two years ago in Melbourne he had opened a two-sets lead over Rafael Nadal only again to lose in five.

Nadal also got the better of him at the 2019 US Open final over another five-setter.

Away from the Slams, Medvedev is one of just six men to have captured six or more Masters titles, joining Djokovic, Roger Federer, Nadal, Andre Agassi and Andy Murray.

When he spent 16 weeks as world No. 1 in 2022, he was the first man other than Djokovic, Federer, Murray and Nadal in 18 years to attain top spot.

At the Paris Olympics, which open on Friday, Medvedev believes his best chance of a medal will be in doubles rather than singles, on a clay-court surface which has often been alien to his game.

“I’m going to prepare a lot for doubles and mixed doubles because I do believe I have more chances there than in Roland Garros singles,” he said.


Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics

Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics
Updated 23 July 2024
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Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics

Andy Murray confirms retirement after Paris Olympics
  • Former world number one has twice won an Olympic gold medal in singles

PARIS: Former world number one and three-time Grand Slam title winner Andy Murray confirmed on Tuesday that he will retire after the Paris Olympics.
“Arrived in Paris for my last ever tennis tournament @Olympics. Competing for Great Britain have been by far the most memorable weeks of my career and I’m extremely proud to get do it one final time,” the 37-year-old wrote on social media.
Murray has twice won an Olympic gold medal in singles — at the 2012 Games in London and successfully defending the title four years later at Rio.


Nadal ‘not comfortable’ ahead of Olympics bid

Nadal ‘not comfortable’ ahead of Olympics bid
Updated 22 July 2024
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Nadal ‘not comfortable’ ahead of Olympics bid

Nadal ‘not comfortable’ ahead of Olympics bid

BASTED, Sweden: Rafael Nadal will head to the Paris Olympics chasing a third gold medal but admitted his “level was so far from what it should be” after losing in the Bastad clay-court final on Sunday.

The 38-year-old Spanish great went down to a straight-sets defeat to Portuguese journeyman Nuno Borges in his first final since capturing a 14th French Open in 2022.

“The level was so far from what it should be. Probably the energy too,” said Nadal.

“It has been a long week with long matches. Even if my body, I don’t have damage, that’s important — but mentally and physically, I am not used to playing four days in a row and playing long matches.”

Nadal was playing his first tournament since an opening round exit at the French Open in May.

He skipped Wimbledon to focus on his clay-court bag of tricks ahead of the Olympics which are being played at Roland Garros, the site of 14 of his 22 Grand Slam triumphs.

At the Games, Nadal will be looking to add to his singles gold from the 2008 Olympics in Beijing and doubles victory at Rio in 2016.

As well as singles, in Paris he will team up with French Open and Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz.

“I played the final, that’s positive. I was able to play long matches without having an injury, that’s good,” added Nadal of his week in Sweden.

The former world number one has played just six tournaments in 2024 due to injury while his ranking has slumped to 261.

“In some way I felt that I arrived here practicing much better than what I played on the tournament during the whole week. That’s something that I am not satisfied with,” he explained.

“I arrived here with the feeling that I was playing a good level and I was not able to show that during the whole week. That is something that I am not happy with.

“Anyway it’s a final, so I can’t say it’s a bad result because it’s the first final since a long time ago. But I was not able to feel myself comfortable enough during the whole week to be satisfied with the week of tennis that I played.”