Following the US Open’s efforts to attract a wider audience through a revamped mixed doubles format, the 2026 Australian Open is taking innovation to an entirely new, controversial level. Tournament ...
Tennis sensation Carlos Alcaraz, already a legend in his sport, is also rapidly improving his golf skills. Now 22, he holds six Grand Slam titles and is widely regarded as one of the game’s all-time ...
Russian Daniil Medvedev finally secured a win over Learner Tien in the round of 16 at the Shanghai Masters on Wednesday - his first victory over him in three meetings ...
The tennis world is in China this month with fans getting the chance to cheer on some of the sport’s biggest stars. Chinese fans often give popular players nicknames, usually puns based on a Chinese ...
Chinese tennis fans have creatively nicknamed international stars using homophones and puns. Players like Alcaraz ('Duck'), Djokovic ('Chicken'), and ...
Carlos Alcaraz seems to be taking a page out of the classic “rest is the best medicine” playbook. After a minor ankle scare at the Japan Open, the tennis prodigy wisely decided to skip the Shanghai ...
Danone, the French food giant, and Itau Unibanco, one of South America's leading financial institutions, have joined Alcaraz's list of sponsors. Thus, they follow brands like Nike, Babolat, Rolex, BMW ...
Young Czech star Linda Noskova has also impressed recently, reaching her first WTA 1000 final at the China Open. There is another young star, ranked outside the top 200, who could be set to challenge ...
EXCLUSIVE: Leading injury prevention expert Stephen Smith speaks to Tennis365 and suggests Carlos Alcaraz's physio is an underrated asset.
Federer wants quicker conditions at Laver Cup, joining a growing number of players asking to halt the rise of slower courts.
Federer's words were also reiterated by current world number 3 Alexander Zverev at the start of the Shanghai Masters 1000, but the German champion was accused of just wanting to justify himself ...
Roger Federer set tongues wagging when he said tournament directors like uniformly slow courts but are his instincts right?