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Tennis civil war erupts with details of initial peace deal revealed for first time

about 9 hours ago
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The civil war engulfing tennis has been laid bare on the opening day of the first grand slam event this year, with details of Tennis Australia’s peace deal with the Professional Tennis Players’ Association published for the first time.The PTPA launched an anti-trust lawsuit against the four grand slam tournaments, the ATP Tour, WTA Tour, and the International Tennis Federation last year, accusing them of collaborating to reduce prize money, impose a restrictive ranking system and repress player promotional opportunities, but Tennis Australia was dropped from the claim last month after reaching a settlement agreement with the players’ union.In a filing appearing to be timed to cause maximum discomfort to the three remaining grand slam tournaments and the sport’s three governing bodies, the details of that settlement were published on Saturday in the New York district court.The court documents say Tennis Australia has agreed to cooperate with the PTPA against the other grand slam tournaments, including providing confidential financial information, in return for being removed from the claim and avoiding liability for potential damages that could reach tens of millions of pounds.“Tennis Australia will begin providing valuable discovery that [the plaintiffs] may or may not have been ultimately able to obtain from Tennis Australia, which damages class plaintiffs can use in litigating their claims well in advance of court-ordered discovery against ATP and WTA,” the PTPA’s lawyers claim in a court filing.

“In exchange for a release of liability for monetary damages, Tennis Australia agrees to provide damages class plaintiffs with materials, facts, and other information known to Tennis Australia relevant to plaintiffs’ claims against the Tour defendants and grand slam defendants, including information regarding: financial books and records; tournament prize money; player name, image and likeness (“NIL”) rights and uses; player sponsorship and endorsement opportunities; tour scheduling requirements; player ranking points; player participation in non-Tour events; player claim enforcement mechanisms; and communications or agreements.”The disclosure of the documents will increase tensions between Tennis Australia and the other grand slam tournaments, and is likely to dominate off-court conversations in Melbourne over the next fortnight.One source at the WTA Tour, which along with the ATP is also a co‑defendant, said that the timing of the release was an aggressive move that would lead to an escalation of the dispute.The PTPA is seeking increased prize money and greater consultation for players over tournament scheduling, as well as more commercial freedom.In its legal submission it claims the deal with Tennis Australia has been designed to put pressure on the other grand slam tournaments to settle.

“By narrowing the number of defendants liable for damages in this case, damages class plaintiffs believe that other of the remaining defendants may be incentivized to engage in settlement negotiations as well,” the PTPA’s lawyers wrote.“Damages class plaintiffs are confident that the substantial cooperation provided by Tennis Australia will help damages class plaintiffs litigate the antitrust claims to a successful jury verdict.”In another inflammatory move, the PTPA issued a statement on the deal half an hour before Novak Djokovic’s pre-tournament press conference in Melbourne.The Serb co‑founded the union alongside the Canadian former player Vasek Pospisil in 2020, but announced his decision to step away from the organisation last month.In a strongly worded statement the PTPA accused the governing bodies of presiding over a broken system and operating a cartel.

“The agreement provides invaluable consultation on the future of the tennis industry and litigation cooperation, strengthening our case,” the PTPA said.“The settlement demonstrates the merits of our claims and signals that the remaining defendants may find it in their interest to engage promptly with reform.“Our lawsuit challenges a broken system artificially suppressing player compensation, dictating punishing schedules, enforcing restrictive participation requirements, and limiting sponsorship opportunities.This systematic suppression stifles growth, innovation, and fairness across tennis.“Players at every level recognise the current system fails them.

They also recognise reform benefits everyone: players, tournaments, sponsors, fans, and the sport itself.“Our legal case is backed by comprehensive funding sufficient to last through trial.We have the resources, leadership, strategy, and resolve to prove professional tennis has engaged in unlawful restraints of trade, violating antitrust law.“History shows transformative change in professional sports comes through sustained pressure on anticompetitive structures.The window for reform is now.

The choice is stark: shape the future or defend a hopelessly problematic and entangled cartel,This is a generational opportunity to reshape professional tennis for the better,”Djokovic said he remained supportive of the PTPA’s objectives, but confirmed he had issues with its leadership,“I didn’t like how the leadership was taking the direction of the PTPA, and so I decided to step out,” he said,“Does that mean that I’m not supporting PTPA? No, I am.

I am still wishing them all the best, because I think that there is room and there is a need for 100% players-only representation organisation existing in our ecosystem.”The ATP and WTA have previously dismissed the lawsuit as “baseless and misguided” and in conjunction with the other three grand slam tournaments are expected to continue to defend their position.The prize money on offer at all four mmajor tournaments has grown significantly in recent years, with the Australian Open increasing the overall prize pot by 16% this year while, as reported by the Guardian last year, they have also indicated a willingness to give players a formal role in decision making through the formation of a player council.
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Woolworths online delivery platforms tested: which is cheapest and how do they compare with in-store shopping?

Australia’s biggest supermarket has added yet another online delivery option, offering more choice – but perhaps also complexity and confusion – for Woolworths shoppers.The delivery platform DoorDash has emailed customers to let them know it is now delivering the supermarket’s groceries, promising “more choice for last-minute top-ups, weekly shops and everything in-between”.This gives Woolworths customers four main delivery options: the supermarket’s own website, DoorDash, UberEats and Milkrun, which Woolworths acquired in 2023.So which Woolworths option is cheapest? And how do prices compare to buying in store? Guardian Australia tested it out.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailWoolworths started using DoorDash soon after rival Coles severed its arrangement with the platform to partner exclusively with UberEats

about 8 hours ago
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World stock markets brace for turbulence after Trump’s latest tariff shock

Global stock markets are bracing for falls when trading resumes on Monday after Donald Trump threatened eight European countries with fresh tariffs until they support his ambition to acquire Greenland.The US president’s plan to impose new trade levies of 10% on goods from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland from 1 February, rising to 25% on 1 June, is creating fear in the markets, and among European businesses.Trading on the brokerage IG’s weekend markets suggest there will be losses on the London Stock Exchange when it reopens on Monday, while rising geopolitical fears could drive precious metal prices towards new record highs. Wall Street, which reopens on Tuesday, is also on track for a fall.“This latest flashpoint has heightened concerns over a potential unravelling of Nato alliances and the disruption of last year’s trade agreements with several European nations, driving risk-off sentiment in stocks and boosting safe-haven demand for gold and silver,” said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG

about 9 hours ago
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Deactivate your X account – you won’t miss it when it’s gone | Letter

As a past follower of Marie Le Conte (AKA the Young Vulgarian) on X, I read her column on leaving the platform with interest, complete empathy and self-reflection (To anybody still using X: sexual abuse content is the final straw, it’s time to leave, 12 January).I joined X – or rather, Twitter – in 2007 after reading a Guardian article on the five next hit websites. Needless to say, most of the others have been forgotten. I was bored in my uni halls and it sounded the most interesting.In those days one could sit and watch the global feed – every tweet being posted in the world – with notable seconds between posts

about 4 hours ago
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‘Still here!’: X’s Grok AI tool accessible in Malaysia and Indonesia despite ban

Days after Malaysia made global headlines by announcing it would temporarily ban Grok over its ability to generate “grossly offensive and nonconsensual manipulated images”, the generative AI tool was conversing breezily with accounts registered in the country.“Still here! That DNS block in Malaysia is pretty lightweight – easy to bypass with a VPN or DNS tweak,” Grok’s account on X said in response to a question from a user.Grok’s ability to allow users to create sexually explicit images, including images of children, has created a global outcry over recent weeks, with regulators and politicians around the world launching investigations. Indonesia and Malaysia became the first two countries to announce blocks on the technology, with Malaysia’s regulatory body saying last Sunday it had “directed a temporary restriction” on access to Grok, effective as of 11 January 2026. Officials in the Philippines have said they too plan to ban the technology

about 12 hours ago
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Houston Texans v New England Patriots: AFC Divisional Round NFL playoff – live

So I have just been listening to Patriots owner Robert Kraft say his team are BACK. A little strong but he’s hardly going to say he’s not sure when asked if they are. New England have certainly been very good after cooking up a brilliant 14-3 season while just missing out on the AFC’s top seed. They certainly seem like they are on more solid ground now with Drake Maye at the controls with club man Mike Vrabel coaching compared to the very false dawn they had with Mac Jones.Jones, now backing up Brock Purdy in San Francisco, helped earn New England’s most recent playoff visit after Tom Brady left the building

about 2 hours ago
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Not bowled over by male sports chat | Brief letters

I’m fed up with reading Guardian articles that make use of male sporting analogies. I have absolutely no idea who Stuart Broad is and I guarantee the majority of women reading your editorial (16 January) wouldn’t either. Therefore your analogy is incomprehensible. Guys, just stop this blokey, pub-style chat and wake up to your female readership, for pity’s sake! It’s well past time.Kathy DalwoodLondon It’s not only north and south that are relative concepts (Letters, 15 January) – so is one’s country … at least on football terraces

about 4 hours ago
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‘It feels like gruel’: Lib Dem MPs growing frustrated by Ed Davey approach

about 8 hours ago
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Leaked Jenrick defection plan calls him ‘the new sheriff in town’

about 11 hours ago
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Tech companies’ access to UK ministers dwarfs that of child safety groups

1 day ago
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‘I have lost a friend’: Tories in Jenrick’s constituency shocked by defection to Reform

1 day ago
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Tories to step up attacks on Reform economic policy after Jenrick acrimony

2 days ago
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Jenrick’s incredible journey – from self-centred halfwit to self-centred halfwit | John Crace

2 days ago