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Iga Swiatek stays under radar at Wimbledon with win against McNally to reach third round

about 13 hours ago
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It should not really be possible for someone who has won five grand slam titles and been world No 1 for 125 weeks to slip under the radar,But at Wimbledon, where she has made the quarter-finals only once and where grass-court nous is still a work in progress, Iga Swiatek somehow seems to go about her business almost unnoticed,If she loses early, it’s quickly shaken off; if she goes deep, it’s bonus territory and a sign that all is well in her world,On Thursday, the Pole, seeded eighth after dropping down the rankings in the first half of this year, shrugged off a poor end to the first set to beat the American Caty McNally 5-7, 6-2, 6-1 for a place in the third round,Ranked 208 but in the draw on a protected ranking after a long time off due to elbow surgery, McNally chipped and charged and came forward with purpose as she pinched the first set from 4-1 down.

But Swiatek steadied the ship quickly and dominated the second and third sets for another morale‑boosting victory,Having struggled in the first part of the clay season, Swiatek started to find her game at Roland Garros, where she has won the title four times,Defeat by Aryna Sabalenka in the semi-finals hurt but she reached her first grass-court final in Bad Homburg and she is just the third woman this century, after Amélie Mauresmo and Serena Williams, to make the third round or better at 22 or more slams,Against McNally, she did not panic when the first set slipped away and in the end she was a comfortable winner,“I started well so I knew my game was there,” Swiatek said, explaining how she turned things around.

“I just needed to use it, to be more intense and more accurate with my preparation.I’m happy I was able to do it.”There is a lot about grass-court tennis that Swiatek has yet to master.Though her volleys are technically sound, the transition from the baseline to the net is often tentative, still moving backwards at times to let the ball bounce when a smash would be easier.But when her serve is working smoothly, as it was for the most part against McNally, she is still very hard to beat.

Swiatek and McNally know each other well, having won the junior doubles title together at Roland Garros in 2018,Swiatek won the junior Wimbledon title that year, but lost to McNally in the semis in Paris, a defeat she described on Thursday as “one of the most heartbreaking of my junior career”,The two women embraced fondly at the net and Swiatek was delighted to see her on court again,“I’m happy she’s back,” she said,“For sure she’s got the game to do well.

”Next up for Swiatek is Danielle Collins, the hard-hitting American who handed her a painful defeat on clay in Rome last time out.Win that, and she’s likely to find herself up against Elena Rybakina, the 2022 champion, who eased past Maria Sakkari 6-3, 6-1.The defending champion, Barbora Krejcikova, was made to work before beating Caroline Dolehide 6-4, 3-6, 6-2, setting up a clash with the 10th seed, Emma Navarro, a quarter-finalist here last year.The No 7 seed, Mirra Andreeva, in the same section of the draw, beat Lucia Bronzetti 6-1, 7-6 (4).“In the beginning I felt like I was playing great, taking the ball early, playing aggressive, but in the second set she also started to play better and I got a little bit nervous,” the Russian said.

“I’m just super-happy that I managed to push myself to fight until the end.”
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Trump celebrates tax bill passing, Reeves must boost headroom to £30bn, says ex-Bank of England deputy – business live

It is a rather weak open for stock markets in Europe this morning. In the UK, the blue chip FTSE 100 index has slipped 0.3% in early trading.The German Dax index slipped 0.5%, while the French Cac 40 index dropped by 0

16 minutes ago
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‘An unjust transition’? Teesside locals divided over net zero after deindustrialisation

“We’re basically going through a deindustrialisation of the country at the moment and I think we’re losing a lot of jobs,” says John Mac, over a pot of tea in a bustling Caffè Nero in the centre of Stockton-on-Tees.The local candidate for Reform UK worked for years at the Billingham plant of Imperial Chemical Industries’s (ICI), before taking voluntary redundancy in the 1990s.Having witnessed decades of industrial decline on Teesside first-hand, including the dismantling of the once-mighty industrial behemoth, Nigel Farage’s pivot to court the working class is speaking Mac’s language.The Reform leader is targeting voters in post-industrial communities across Britain, outlined in a Guardian series showing how Farage views the “next Brexit” as reversing net zero to create a manufacturing renaissance.This, the third in the series, looks at the future of another of Britain’s industrial heartlands

about 2 hours ago
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Skirting the issue: Designer dress goes missing from Bezos-Sánchez wedding

Lauren Sánchez packed 27 designer dresses for her wedding to the billionaire Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, in Venice last week, but left with only 26 after one went missing.The couple, who are now honeymooning in Taormina, Sicily, were wed during a star-studded three-day celebration in the lagoon city.They left Venice on Sunday, but mystery over the missing dress has generated chatter in Venice, with Corriere della Sera claiming that it was stolen, possibly by someone who evaded security and gatecrashed a party on the tiny island of San Giorgio, where the couple exchanged rings, on Friday. The newspaper said the number of gatecrashers to the event was such that officers from the local unit of Italy’s anti-terrorism squad, Digos, were called to the island.The newspaper also alleged a vintage Dolce & Gabbana-designed dress, either worn by the bride or wedding guest Ivanka Trump, was torn and caught fire during another party

about 17 hours ago
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Fears AI factcheckers on X could increase promotion of conspiracy theories

A decision by Elon Musk’s X social media platform to enlist artificial intelligence chatbots to draft factchecks risks increasing the promotion of “lies and conspiracy theories”, a former UK technology minister has warned.Damian Collins accused Musk’s firm of “leaving it to bots to edit the news” after X announced on Tuesday that it would allow large language models to write community notes to clarify or correct contentious posts, before users approve them for publication. The notes have previously been written by humans.X said using AI to write factchecking notes – which sit beneath some X posts – “advances the state of the art in improving information quality on the internet”.Keith Coleman, the vice-president of product at X, said humans would review AI-generated notes and the note would appear only if people with a variety of viewpoints found it useful

1 day ago
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Russians absent from world chess top 10 for first time since official lists began

It would have been inconceivable in the glory days of the Soviet chess empire. For the first time since 1971 when Fide, the world chess body, began publishing its rating lists – then annually and now monthly – there are no Russians ranked in the classical world top 10. Bobby Fischer was No 1 in the first Fide list, published on the eve of his Reykjavik match with Boris Spassky, but after Fischer gave up active play Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov took over.In 1970, when the USSR team defeated the Rest of the World, or in the decades when Mikhail Botvinnik, Karpov, and Kasparov were the game’s supreme masters, it would have been a joke to suggest that Russian supremacy would disappear within half a century and be replaced by a rivalry between India and the United States.The final nail in the coffin came last week when Ian Nepomniachtchi, the double world title challenger, dropped from 10th to 14th after a poor performance at Tashkent, where he finished next to last and appeared disinterested

about 1 hour ago
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The Tour de France’s version of VAR? Get ready for yellow card controversy

The 2025 Tour de France could see yellow cards issued for bad behaviour by riders thanks to cycling’s answer to football’s VAR. Every touch of shoulders, switch of wheels, dramatic acceleration and multilingual insult in the peloton will be scrutinised by a growing number of in-race cameras and UCI commissaires.As part of the UCI’s bid to expand its repertoire of disciplinary and investigative tools, cards can be awarded for everything from celebrating a teammate’s win to riding on the pavement. The card system was trialled last year and is now being integrated into World Tour racing.If, during this year’s Tour, a rider is given two yellow cards during the race, he may be disqualified and suspended for seven days, while any rider accumulating three cards in 30 days is liable to be suspended for 14 days

about 1 hour ago
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‘A billion people backing you’: China transfixed as Musk turns against Trump

2 days ago
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AI companies start winning the copyright fight

3 days ago
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China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match

3 days ago
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Whitehall’s ambition to cut costs using AI is fraught with risk

3 days ago
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Musk vows to unseat lawmakers who support Trump’s sweeping spending bill

3 days ago
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Gov.uk smartphone app to launch with limited functionality

3 days ago