Year in review: Federer rolls on as Woods seeks Majors

Roger Federer defied age and injury to lift the Wimbledon single's trophy, he second Grand Slam of the year. (Reuters)
Updated 08 February 2019
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Year in review: Federer rolls on as Woods seeks Majors

LONDON: One of the best books I read this year was "Federer and Me – A Story of Obsession" by William Skidelsky. In it the British journalist and author explored what it is about the Swiss sensation that mesmerizes him, the part beauty plays in tennis and sport as a whole, and the psychology of fandom.

Written two years ago it was also, in part, an ode to the greatest tennis player of his generation, if not ever. It was Skidelsky’s love letter to a star that had brought him pleasure and relief from everyday life’s grinds and challenges. Federer, so the accepted wisdom went, was a shadow of his former, majestic self, he was on the wane and never to win another Grand Slam. Skidelsky’s book was, for many who read it, a fitting tribute to one of sport’s all-time greats as he departed the autumn of his career and meandered into winter and eventual retirement.

All of which makes the events of this year even more remarkable. The Swiss started the year having only just returned from six months out with a knee injury, without a Grand Slam title in nearly five years and fast heading toward the pack labelled also-rans.

He ended it, having dealt a forehand smash to that accepted wisdom, with two Slam successes, three Masters titles, seven tour titles and a record of 52-5. Federer’s win at the Australian Open gave the year its best match (see boxout), and his record eighth Wimbledon crown was achieved without losing a set. It was Federer at his most dominant and serene. A throwback to when he was without question the best on the planet. That he set new records, playing at a level most, even Skidelsky, assumed was now beyond him has only added to his legend and proved once and for all the Swiss is the greatest player to ever lift a racquet.

Statistically it was Federer’s best season since 2007, which is what the tennis world felt like throughout the year. It was not just the Swiss who turned back time, but also his arch-rival Rafael Nadal. The Spaniard goes into 2018 as world No. 1 having won a record 10th French Open title and the US Open – his 16th Grand Slam title overall, to leave him just three behind Federer’s record 19.

The peerless pair dominated the season while their natural heirs – Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray – both had a year to forget. Both were supposed to battle it out for the No. 1 and confirm themselves, along with Stan Wawrinka, as the dominant forces in the game. But injuries to all three dealt aces to their hopes of not only challenging for top spot, but also match wins and titles. An elbow injury has meant that Djokovic has not played since July and Murray has had six months out with hip problems.

It was not just in the men’s game where it seemed more like 2007 than 2017. The Australian Open final saw Serena Williams play her sister Venus. It was the first time the pair had faced off in a Grand Slam final in eight years and with Federer and Nadal playing in the men’s final 24 hours later only underlined the sense of déjà vu that permeated the tennis year. Having set the record for the most slams in the open era when she claimed her 23rd title beating Venus, Serena announced she was pregnant and did not play for the rest of 2017. However, her sister ended the year as leading money winner on tour in a season which ended with Romania’s Simona Halep as world No. 1.

Serena is set to return to the courts in the new year and it cannot come soon enough. Without her the women’s game failed to seize the public imagination and that Maria Sharapova’s return after a drug ban was seen as a huge positive for the sport said a lot both about the state of a Serena-less game and tennis’ attitude toward doping.

Meanwhile, on the fairways and greens golf did its very best to prove it did not need Tiger Woods to generate stories and headlines to sell the sport to the world. A new generation of young American big-hitters dominated the Majors with only Sergio Garcia’s victory at the Masters – his first ever Major victory (see boxout) – preventing a clean sweep for the stars and stripes. But while the wins for Brooks Koepka (US Open), Jordan Spieth (The Open) and Justin Thomas (US PGA) underlined the talent, and sheer big-hitting ability of the young guns, the year ended with a familiar big beast returning to action.

During the summer many were predicting Woods’ career was over. Mugshots of the golf’s biggest ever star were beamed across the world after the 41-year-old was arrested for driving under the influence in May. It was found that Woods was suffering from the effects of painkillers and sleeping tablets; he later pleaded guilty to reckless driving. But the episode only served to underline his fall from grace — in pain and incapable of ever returning to the fairways, let alone dominating in the way he once did.

Or so the story went.

The year ended with Woods back in action at his own Hero World Challenge tournament finishing ninth in a field of 18. While it was not the biggest event out there the field was very good – Tiger beat Dustin Johnson and Justin Thomas – and it was the manner of his play that really caught the eye and got, as if any invitation were needed, tongues once again wagging about whether he can climb back to the top of the sport.

In his first competitive start in 10 months, and after his fourth spinal surgery, Tiger was hitting the ball 315 yards off the tee with the ball speed touching 180mph. Those are the numbers of a golfer neither in pain nor making up the numbers.

While it is perhaps too much to expect him to ever dominate in the manner he once did if he can keep in shape, admittedly a big if, get some tournaments under his belt then you never know that elusive 15th Major – he knows his way around Augusta and will always have a chance at The Open – could be his.

Wishful thinking? Perhaps, but if this year has taught us anything it is that the passage of time need not bunker hopes of unlikely success and that nous, experience and undoubted ability are still commodities worth something in top-level sport. That is the lesson dished out by Federer and you do not need to be an obsessive on the level of Skidelsky to admit that 2017 belonged to the Swiss sensation.

TENNIS: BEST TENNIS MATCH OF THE YEAR – Australian Open final, Roger Federer vs Rafael Nadal
Two players who were past it and for whom sporting obituaries had already been penned served up not just the best match of the year, but one of the all-time great finals. It had been six years since they met in a Grand Slam final and at two sets all and a break down Federer was letting surely his chance of a last slam title slip. But he stormed back to claim the last five matches to win 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. It was the first time Federer had beaten his arch-rival in a Grand Slam final away from Wimbledon and set up what was to be a thrilling year for both supposed ‘has-beens’. It was sporting romance at its most seductive and entertaining – simply superb.

GOLF: MOST ROMANTIC VICTORY OF THE YEAR – Sergio Garcia at the Masters
Depending on who you speak to you can get two versions of Sergio Garcia. The fun-loving, joyful, effervescent, popular golfer who lit up the sport when he ran Tiger Woods close at the 1999 US PGA Championship, or the sullen Spaniard who blamed his lack of Major titles on lady luck. Whichever one you subscribed to you had to have had a heart of stone or no soul, or both, not for a little part of you to be happy Garcia won the famous Green Jacket. Sport, especially individual ones like golf, is as much about mental fortitude and dealing with failure and mental anguish as it is about talent and titles. Garcia was supposed to have won a sackful of Majors by now, that he had to wait until he was 37, and the smile on his face once the winning putt went in, made it all the more memorable.

GOLF: GUTSY DISPLAY OF THE YEAR – Jordan Spieth at The Open
Jordan Spieth is many things: An all-American hero, a fine upstanding young man, golf’s hottest talent, a multiple Major winner aged just 24. What many did not have him down as, and this was as much to do with his career being relatively young, was as a grit and determination kind of guy; a golfer who can look adversity in the face, smile and punch it in the face. But that is exactly what he did at Royal Birkdale. Barely a year after he sank his hopes of another Masters title at Augusta’s infamous 12th Spieth was once again looking at a final round disaster with victory in sight. He drove the ball wildly on Birkdale’s 13th and had to take an unplayable lie. After nearly 20 minutes deliberation with rules officials he took a drop in a practice area as much as 50 meters right of the fairway with huge dunes between him and the unsighted green. He escaped with no more than a bogey and gained five shots over the next four holes to claim the Claret Jug – gutsy does not begin to cover it.

TENNIS: UPSET OF THE YEAR – Sloane Stephens winning the US Open
In some ways it is very hard to have an upset in the women’s game when Serena is not playing, such is the open nature of competition and multitude of potential (some may say average) winners. But Stephens’ victory at Flushing Meadows was ultimately a triumph of the human spirit and endeavour over injuries and loss of form. Just six weeks before the final the American was ranked as low as 957th in the world having only comeback from 11 months out with a foot injury at Wimbledon. But she found the sort of form that saw her become one of the sport’s hottest young talents in in the early part of the decade, to reach the final beating 15th seed Madison Keys 6-3, 6-0. The 24-year-old became only the fifth unseeded woman to win a Grand Slam in the Open era and the first American woman from outside the Williams family to win a major singles title since Jennifer Capriati at the 2002 Australian Open.

GOLF: MUST DO BETTER IN 2018 – Rory McIlroy
This time last year the Northern Irishman was ranked No. 2 in the world and focused on finally landing the career Grand Slam by winning the elusive US Masters title. Today he finds himself at No. 10 in the rankings, his lowest for several years and without any title all year, let alone a Green Jacket. Granted he was affected by a rib injury which ultimately put an early end to his season. But even taking that into account there is little avoiding that the tale of 2017 on the fairways is not the one he or anyone else would have expected or desired. In the meantime, the talent pool at the top of the game has grown with Brooks Koepka and Justin Thomas, to name only two, joining the ever-expanding list of genuine contenders before every Major. McIlroy, though, has talent few others possess and he will doubtless be raring to go in 2018, not least because he has a lot of time to make up for.


Leicester relegated from the Premier League as Liverpool close in on title

Updated 25 sec ago
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Leicester relegated from the Premier League as Liverpool close in on title

LEICESTER: Leicester City were relegated from the Premier League as Liverpool moved to within one win of the title on Sunday with a 1-0 victory at the King Power.
Trent Alexander-Arnold came off the bench to score the only goal 14 minutes from time as the Reds moved to the brink of a record-equalling 20th English top-flight title.
Liverpool could be crowned champions on Wednesday should Arsenal lose at home to Crystal Palace.
If the Gunners avoid defeat, Arne Slot’s men have the chance to seal the deal when Tottenham visit Anfield next Sunday.
Leicester have not scored a single goal at home since December as nine consecutive defeats at the King Power have taken Ruud van Nistelrooy’s men down.
Alexander-Arnold appears to be coming toward the end of his time at his boyhood club.
The England international is reportedly close to joining Real Madrid when his contract expires at the end of the season.
Unlike Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk, who have signed new deals in recent weeks to prolong their stay at Anfield, Alexander-Arnold has just weeks to run on his current deal.
“I’ve said all season, I’m not going to speak on my situation,” Alexander-Arnold told Sky Sports.
“But these days like today are always special.
“Scoring goals, playing, winning games, being close to winning titles as well as being in title races. They’re special moments that will be with me forever and I’m glad to be a part of them.”
A Liverpool cruise seemed in store when Mohamed Salah hit both posts with a glorious chance inside the first two minutes.
But after storming clear of the chasing pack in Slot’s early months in charge to build a near unassailable lead, Liverpool have slowed in recent weeks as the finish line approaches.
“Normally we’re a bit better if we create chances that we score goals. Today, it took us a long time, and of course, a great moment for Trent,” said Slot.
Wilfred Ndidi came close to ending Leicester’s barren run with a low strike that came back off the post.
Liverpool struggled to create from open play in what remained of the first half.
Ibrahima Konate came closest to breaking the deadlock when Ndidi hooked clear his goalbound header from a corner.
Leicester did finally have the ball in the net in the second half but Patson Daka had fouled Alisson Becker before Connor Coady headed into an unguarded net.
Slot introduced Alexander-Arnold for the final 20 minutes on his return from a five-week absence due to an ankle injury.
The right-back took just five minutes to score his 23rd and potentially last goal for his boyhood club.
Salah and Diogo Jota somehow contrived to hit the woodwork rather than the net from point-blank range as Leicester struggled to clear a corner.
The loose ball broke to Alexander-Arnold, whose shot went straight through the grasp of Mads Hermansen.
Leicester still had a chance to snatch an unlikely point.
But Facundo Buonanotte’s wasteful finish with just Alisson to beat summed up their season to forget.
Champions of England just nine years ago, the Foxes have found life back in the top-flight far too much of a step up in class after romping to the Championship title last season.
“I think you see among the promoted sides it’s such a mountain to climb to stay in the Premier League,” said Van Nistelrooy, who has won just two of his 20 league games since taking charge in December.
Leicester join Southampton, whose relegation was confirmed with a record seven games to go, in an immediate return to the second tier.
Ipswich, who are 15 points adrift with five games to go, are set to follow as for the second consecutive season all three promoted sides will fail to avoid the drop.

Piastri wins Saudi Arabian Grand Prix from Verstappen to take F1 lead

Updated 8 min 23 sec ago
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Piastri wins Saudi Arabian Grand Prix from Verstappen to take F1 lead

JEDDAH: Oscar Piastri won the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on Sunday to seize the lead in the Formula One world championship from McLaren teammate Lando Norris with his third win in five races.
Red Bull’s four-times champion Max Verstappen was runner-up, 2.843 seconds behind the Australian, after starting from pole at Jeddah’s Corniche circuit but collecting a five-second penalty for a first corner clash with Piastri.
Charles Leclerc was third for Ferrari’s first podium of the campaign and Norris clawed his way from 10th on the grid to fourth.
Victory made Piastri, triumphant in Bahrain last weekend and China last month, the first Australian to lead the championship since his manager Mark Webber in 2010 and also the first back-to-back winner this season.
He now leads Norris, whose race was heavily compromised by a crash in qualifying, by 10 points after starting the night three behind.
Piastri has 99 points to Norris’s 89 and Verstappen’s 87. Champions McLaren stretched their lead over Mercedes in the constructors’ standings to 77 points.
“It was a pretty tough race. I’m very, very happy to have won. Made the difference at the start. Made my case into Turn One, and that was enough,” said the happy winner.
“Definitely one of the toughest races I’ve had in my career,” he added after 50 laps in 30 degree temperatures around a super-fast track.
George Russell was fifth for Mercedes with Italian teammate Kimi Antonelli sixth and seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton seventh for Ferrari.
Williams had Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon eighth and ninth with Racing Bulls’ French rookie Isack Hadjar the final points scorer in 10th.

FIRST CORNER
There was immediate controversy at the start as Verstappen and Piastri went side-by-side into the first corner, with the Red Bull emerging ahead after cutting across the runoff.
“He needs to give that back, I was ahead,” Piastri told McLaren over the team radio. “He was never going to make that corner regardless of whether he was there or not.”
Verstappen gave his version in similar fashion to Red Bull: “He just forced me off, there was no intention of him to make that corner.”
Stewards decided the champion was at fault and handed him the penalty, with Verstappen reacting by saying sarcastically “Oh, that is lovely’.
Red Bull boss Christian Horner did not let it lie after the chequered flag either, complimenting Verstappen and adding: “That first corner we’ve all got our opinions on.”
The safety car continued a sequence of appearing at all five races in Saudi Arabia so far with an appearance at the end of the opening lap after Verstappen’s teammate Yuki Tsunoda and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly collided and crashed.
Both drivers retired, Tsunoda after getting his car back to the pits.


Verschoor storms to F2 victory as Weug claims historic win in F1 Academy in Jeddah

Updated 20 April 2025
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Verschoor storms to F2 victory as Weug claims historic win in F1 Academy in Jeddah

  • The victory moves Verschoor into the lead of the F2 Drivers’ Championship
  • With her victory, Weug also snatched a narrow lead at the top of the F1 Academy standings

JEDDAH: Richard Verschoor produced a masterclass in tire management and racecraft to win the Formula 2 feature race in Jeddah, fighting back from ninth on the grid to claim victory for MP Motorsport.

The Dutch driver rebounded impressively after heartbreak in Saturday’s Sprint Race, where he crossed the line first but was demoted to second by a five-second penalty for an earlier incident.

Determined to make amends, Verschoor ran the alternative strategy, starting on medium tires and extending his first stint deep into the race.

Despite his aging rubber, Verschoor consistently set fastest laps, showing blistering pace while others pitted early for fresher tires.

His strategy paid off, and after switching to supersofts, he rejoined the track just a few seconds behind leader Jak Crawford with four laps to go.

Once his tires were up to temperature, Verschoor rapidly hunted down the DAMS Lucas Oil driver, closing within DRS range and executing a clinical move into Turn 1 on the final lap to secure a stunning win.

The victory moves Verschoor into the lead of the Drivers’ Championship, with Josep Maria Marti — who finished fifth in the Feature Race — second overall and Leonardo Fornaroli third.

Earlier in the day, Maya Weug made history by becoming the first Ferrari driver to win an F1 Academy race in Jeddah, prevailing in a dramatic and incident-packed Race 2.

Starting from pole for the first time in the series, Chloe Chambers looked to have the race under control after a clean getaway, keeping ahead of a fierce scrap for second between Weug and Mercedes’ Doriane Pin. Amid soaring track temperatures, Weug showed relentless pace, reeling Chambers in and battling wheel-to-wheel for the lead by Lap 3.

Weug briefly seized the lead before being forced wide by Chambers, who was later handed a five-second penalty for the incident. That opened the door for an intense battle between Weug and Pin, with the two repeatedly exchanging P2 as Chambers tried to maintain her advantage.

Despite crossing the finish line first, Chambers’ time penalty demoted her to second, handing victory to Weug. Pin completed the podium for Mercedes.

The race saw further drama as Rafaela Ferreira was hit with a 10-second penalty for spinning Emma Felbermayr of Kick Sauber, dropping both out of the points contention.

Behind the front three, Alisha Palmowski secured fourth place, with Alba Larsen fifth and Aston Martin’s Tina Hausmann sixth. Alpine’s Nina Gademan finished seventh, while Ella Lloyd was promoted to eighth after Ferreira’s penalty. Joanne Ciconte and Chloe Chong rounded out the points-scoring positions.

With her victory, Weug also snatched a narrow lead at the top of the F1 Academy standings, setting up an intriguing battle for the rest of the season.


Kohli, Rohit star as Bengaluru and Mumbai win in IPL

Updated 45 min 27 sec ago
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Kohli, Rohit star as Bengaluru and Mumbai win in IPL

  • Bengaluru avenged their loss to Punjab at home on Friday and the two teams, both seeking their first IPL title, are level on points

MUMBAI: Virat Kohli smashed an unbeaten 73 and Rohit Sharma struck form with 76 not out in match-winning knocks for Royal Challengers Bengaluru and Mumbai Indians in an IPL super Sunday.
The in-form Kohli hit his fourth half-century of this edition of the popular T20 tournament to anchor Bengaluru’s chase of 158 in a seven-wicket win over Punjab Kings at Mullanpur, near Chandigarh.
Another Indian veteran Rohit struck form with his first fifty this season in the second match of the day to lead Mumbai’s nine-wicket hammering of Chennai Super Kings in a battle of heavyweights.
Rohit, 37, put on 114 runs with Suryakumar Yadav, who hit 68 off 30 balls, as they steered the five-time champions’ chase of 177, getting there with 26 balls to spare.
Rohit, 37, came in as impact substitute in the chase and put on 63 with Ryan Rickleton, who fell for 24 off Ravindra Jadeja, to lay the foundations of Mumbai’s third straight win.
“After being here for such a long period of time, it’s easy to start doubting yourself and start doing different things,” Rohit said after being named player of the match.
“For me, it was important to do simple things and have a clear mindset. It was important for me to hold my shape and extend my arms, and when the ball was in my area, I had to do what I have been doing.”
Rohit struggled for form until this knock with just 82 runs in his previous six innings but found his groove with trademark flicks and pulls.
He reached his fifty in 33 balls but Suryakumar was in a hurry and his knock included some audacious shots behind the wicket raised his half-ton in 26 deliveries.
Rohit and Suryakumar smashed 11 sixes between them.
Bowlers set up victory after Jasprit Bumrah’s 2-25 and spinner Mitchell Santner’s 1-14 kept Chennai down to 176-5.
Shivam Dube, who made 50, and Jadeja, who hit an unbeaten 53, put on 79 runs for the fourth wicket and 17-year-old Ayush Mhatre smashed 32 off 15 balls after being the youngest player to debut for Chennai.
Five-time winners Chennai, led by M.S. Dhoni after regular skipper Ruturaj Gaikwad pulled out injured mid-season, crashed to their sixth defeat in eight matches to stay bottom of the 10-team table.
In the first match of the day, Bengaluru were propelled by a 103-run second-wicket stand between Kohli and Devdutt Padikkal, who hit 61, to reach their target with seven balls to spare.
Bengaluru avenged their loss to Punjab at home on Friday and the two teams, both seeking their first IPL title, are level on points.
“Very important game for us,” said player of the match Kohli. “When you go from eight (points) to 10, it makes a massive difference.”
Kohli on his anchor role said: “One partnership is good enough in T20 cricket during run chase. I can accelerate, but I want to understand the strengths of other players.
“Holding one end up at the moment, that’s working for us.”
The in-form Kohli, 36, struck his fourth half-ton of the season and surpassed Australia’s David Warner for the most 50-plus scores in the popular T20 tournament.
Kohli has now made it past the 50-mark 67 times, including eight centuries.
Left-handed Padikkal struck his first fifty of the season, after Bengaluru lost opener Phil Salt in the first over to Arshdeep Singh.
Padikkal fell to Harpreet Brar, leaving Kohli to play the anchor in a 54-ball knock laced with seven fours and a six.
Bengaluru spinners Krunal Pandya and Suyash Sharma took two wickets each to set up victory as they helped restrict Punjab to 157-6.


De Bruyne ‘surprised’ over Man City exit

Updated 20 April 2025
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De Bruyne ‘surprised’ over Man City exit

  • Kevin De Bruyne has revealed he was “a bit surprised” to be told his glittering Manchester City career will finish at the end of this season

LONDON: Kevin De Bruyne has revealed he was “a bit surprised” to be told his glittering Manchester City career will finish at the end of this season.
De Bruyne recently announced he will leave the Etihad Stadium once the current campaign is over, bringing the curtain down on a memorable era in Manchester for the Belgian midfielder.
The 33-year-old arrived from German club Wolfsburg in 2015 and has been instrumental in City’s incredible success during boss Pep Guardiola’s reign.
De Bruyne has won six Premier League titles, two FA Cups, five League Cups and the 2023 Champions League — which capped an incredible treble-winning season.
Guardiola hinted it was his decision to end De Bruyne’s stay after the playmaker’s struggles with injuries and inconsistent form over the last two seasons.
City have dipped dramatically this term, surrendering their four-year spell as champions and were reduced to focussing on the battle to qualify for the Champions League.
But De Bruyne admitted he was shocked not to receive a new contract offer because he believes he can still shine at the highest level.
“I have not had any offer the whole year, they just took a decision,” he said after City’s 2-0 win at Everton on Saturday.
“Obviously, I was a bit surprised but I just have to accept it. Honestly I still think I can perform at this level like I’m showing but I understand clubs have to make decisions.
“Maybe if the team didn’t struggle and I came back like I did this year and bedded in like normal then maybe they take another decision.”
De Bruyne said he has not made any decisions about his future as he is concentrating on the race to secure a top-five spot to extend City’s run in the Champions League into a 15th successive season.
He has already been linked with moves to Major League Soccer in the United States but he hasn’t ruled out staying in the Premier League or joining a major European club.
“I feel like I still have a lot to give. Obviously I know I’m not 25 any more but I still feel like I can do my job,” he said.
“I’m open for anything. I have to look at the whole picture. I’m looking at sporting, family, everything together, what makes the most sense for me and my family.
“I like to compete. That’s what I feel so I can’t say that I want to quit because I still feel that whenever I’m in training I want to beat the guys.
“I feel like I’m doing really well and that’s why I’ve also played a lot lately.”
De Bruyne applauded off at Goodison Park after Saturday’s win, with his performance a bright spot in another spluttering City display.
“It’s something really rare to come out and get an applause from another team so I just want to say thank you to them. I think they appreciate the way that I play,” he said.