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Nick Kyrgios may be resigned to tennis fringes as singles career fizzles out

1 day ago
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Nick Kyrgios appears set for little more than a peripheral role during Australia’s summer of tennis after a brisk, anticlimactic and – for fans of the 30-year-old – worrying defeat at the Brisbane International in his first competitive singles outing in almost 10 months,The Canberran, who is recovering from knee and wrist surgeries and played only five times on the ATP Tour in 2025, offered little resistance against American Aleksandar Kovacevic in the first round at the Pat Rafter Arena on Tuesday,The 27-year-old American, ranked 58 in the world, breezed past the Australian 6-3 6-4 in just 66 minutes, without giving up a break point opportunity,The match disappointed the capacity crowd in Pat Rafter Arena, who had hoped a first singles ATP Tour match since March for the sport’s self-styled maverick would springboard Kyrgios back to relevance, after a promising doubles performance on Sunday,Instead, it vindicated the ongoing reluctance of Australian Open officials to hand the former world No 13 a precious place at the Melbourne Park grand slam starting on 18 January.

Kyrgios’ preparation for the summer has been limited to a series of exhibitions, including the Battle of the Sexes against Aryna Sabalenka, and the doubles match in Brisbane alongside friend Thanasi Kokkinakis.But his lack of competitiveness on Tuesday appeared to surprise even Kovacevic, the University of Illinois graduate with a powerful all-round game.“To be honest, I was expecting a little more than that in terms of adversity today,” he told the on-court announcer after the match.“[It was] tough to scout him recently because he hasn’t been on tour for a while playing serious matches, so I didn’t really know what to expect.”Kyrgios was broken twice by Kovacevic, and the Australian struggled with his mobility and return, winning just a single point on his opponent’s first serve.

He is now far from the athlete he was at his peak, and the seven-time tour winner wore an ankle brace, a taped wrist and a plaster on his face,After serving midway through the first set, he winced and looked skywards twice, as he clutched at his right elbow in obvious physical discomfort,The Battle of the Sexes winner was only playing singles in Brisbane thanks to a wildcard,However, Australian Open organisers have resisted giving Kyrgios the equivalent invitation for the main draw at Melbourne Park, even as lower-profile countrymen such as Rinky Hijikata and James Duckworth have been afforded places,With just three wildcards still available for the men’s singles, there is concern over whether Kyrgios’ conditioning warrants an entry, given he has done little to show he is ready for best-of-five tennis.

In 2025 he was eliminated in the first round in three sets against Britain’s Jacob Fearnley, and said afterwards: “Realistically, I probably can’t see myself playing a singles match here again.” Kyrgios still has at least one doubles match in Brisbane, as well as a scheduled appearance at Kooyong next week, to convince tournament organisers that that line was premature.But the situation also presents an unusual opportunity for Tennis Australia.The organisation has been looking to maximise the appeal of “Opening Week” in recent years, which usually features exhibitions, concerts and three rounds of qualifying featuring mainly tour battlers and local prospects.This year sees the introduction of the latest innovation: the One Point Slam, offering $1m to amateurs, celebrities and tour professionals in a knockout where each round is decided by a single back-and-forth.

Kyrgios has already committed to being part of that novelty, but he told journalists this week he would also be prepared to enter Australian Open qualifying if a main draw wildcard was not forthcoming.Three classic Kyrgios matches in that first week – even if they were in qualifying rounds – might instantly do what officials have been trying to for years, and transform two weeks of elite tennis at Melbourne Park into a three-week smorgasbord of sport-slash-entertainment.That may be – for a man who is more profile than play – a fitting legacy.
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Oil prices fall after Trump says Venezuela will send up to 50m barrels to US

Global oil prices have fallen by more than 1% after Donald Trump said Venezuela would hand over 30m to 50m barrels of the country’s blockaded crude to the US.The deal would give the US president the power to sell up to $3bn (£2.2bn) worth of Venezuelan crude stranded in tankers and storage facilities into an already oversupplied global market.The move threatens to drag on oil prices, which last year recorded their steepest annual fall since the Covid pandemic and could plummet further as oil producers continue to pump more crude than needed by the global economy.The international benchmark, Brent crude, fell to just over $60 a barrel on Wednesday, while the US oil price fell by 1

about 11 hours ago
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Australia Post apologises for losing Aboriginal artist’s painting worth $4,000

Just before Christmas, Aboriginal artist Bobbi Lockyer packed up a precious painting she had spent more than a hundred hours on and sent it to her client.What arrived at the other end was an empty package.“It’s heartbreaking,” Lockyer, a Ngarluma, Kariyarra, Nyulnyul and Yawuru woman says. The award-winning artist is also angry at what she described as a “cut and paste” response from Australia Post.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailShe says a staff member instructed her on how to pack the $4,000 canvas, and that she sent it express post, with tracking

about 16 hours ago
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AI consciousness is a red herring in the safety debate | Letters

The concern expressed by Yoshua Bengio that advanced AI systems might one day resist being shut down deserves careful consideration (AI showing signs of self-preservation and humans should be ready to pull plug, says pioneer, 30 December). But treating such behaviour as evidence of consciousness is dangerous: it encourages anthropomorphism and distracts from the human design and governance choices that actually determine AI behaviour.Many systems can protect their continued operation. A laptop’s low-battery warning is a form of self-preservation in this sense, yet no one takes it as evidence that the laptop wants to live: the behaviour is purely instrumental, without experience or awareness. Linking self-preservation to consciousness reflects a human tendency to ascribe intentions and feelings to artefacts and not any intrinsic consciousness

1 day ago
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Wave of Grok AI fake images of women and girls appalling, says UK minister

The UK technology secretary has called a wave of images of women and children with their clothes digitally removed generated by Elon Musk’s Grok AI “appalling and unacceptable in decent society”.After thousands of intimate deepfakes circulated online, Liz Kendall said X, Musk’s social media platform, needed to “deal with this urgently” and she backed the UK regulator Ofcom to “take any enforcement action it deems necessary”.“We cannot and will not allow the proliferation of these demeaning and degrading images, which are disproportionately aimed at women and girls,” she said. “Make no mistake, the UK will not tolerate the endless proliferation of disgusting and abusive material online. We must all come together to stamp it out

1 day ago
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Jacob Bethell plays starring role in Ashes Wars Episode 5: A New Hope | Barney Ronay

Et in dystopia ego. In the midst of death, we are in life. On a throbbingly hot deep blue afternoon in Sydney, as this ghost ship of an England Ashes tour creaked towards its final dock, the fourth day of the fifth Test produced an unexpected late plot twist. Something good happened.Jacob Bethell batted for six hours from mid-morning to close of play and scored a hundred of rare beauty at the SCG

about 11 hours ago
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Bethell’s elegant first Test century presses pause on Australia’s Ashes party

It was good. So good. So unbelievably good. On the penultimate day of a tour packed with regret for England, a star was born as Jacob Bethell, 22 years young, compiled a truly golden hundred that offered hope for the future.There were no histrionics upon getting there either, no suggestion this was a maiden first-class century compiled in the heat of an Ashes Test

about 12 hours ago
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I May Destroy You helped me confront being spiked

5 days ago
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From Song Sung Blue to Theatre Picasso: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Forget Keanu: Ulster Scots translation of Beckett classic takes on spate of celebrity Godots

6 days ago
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Demon Slayer economics: how the anime juggernaut became a saviour

8 days ago
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The year of the self-mocking man sketch: ‘Dumb masculinity is very funny’

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‘An Arab in a post-9/11 world’: Khalid Abdalla’s one-man play about belonging comes to Australia

9 days ago