Sabalenka may avoid championships in Dubai after ‘ridiculous’ comment

A picture


Aryna Sabalenka says she may never return to compete at the Dubai Tennis Championships after she and Iga Swiatek were harshly criticised by the tournament director for their withdrawals from the tournament last month.“I think it’s ridiculous,” Sabalenka said during her pre-tournament press conference at the Miami Open.“I don’t think he showed himself in the best way possible.For me it’s actually so sad to see that the tournament directors and the tournaments are not protecting us as a player.They just care about their sellings, about their tournament and that’s it.

His comment was ridiculous.I’m not sure if I ever want to go there after his comment.For me it’s too much.”After the top two players withdrew from the tournament shortly before it began, the tournament director Salah Tahlak argued that top players should receive stronger penalties for last-minute withdrawals from events, including ranking points deductions.“I think there should be a harsher punishment on the players, not just fines, they should be docked ranking points.

”In her press conference on Tuesday at the Miami Open, however, the women’s No 1 said her decision not to compete in February was based on her determination to remain physically and mentally sound in a “crazy” tennis schedule.Sabalenka opted not to compete at all in February, withdrawing from both the Dubai and Doha WTA 1000 events, both of which took place before the US-Israel war on Iran and the subsequent crisis in the region.Sabalenka’s decision paid off last week as she won the Indian Wells title for the first time in her career.“Going into this season, we decided we were going to prioritise my health and make sure that we have these little gaps in the schedule where I can just reset, recharge, work and be better prepared for bigger tournaments.I feel like scheduling is going crazy and I feel like that’s why you see so many players are injured, always taped and not delivering the best quality matches because it’s almost impossible,” she said.

Jack Draper is one such player who has been unable to handle the rigours of the gruelling tennis calendar.He continues his comeback this week at the Miami Open after being sidelined for seven months because of bone bruising in his left arm.Draper accepts that it will take a long process to return to the top even after making significant progress at Indian Wells, where he produced one of the most memorable victories by defeating Novak Djokovic in a high-quality three-set night match en route to the quarter-finals.“When you have the injury you had, you start to look ahead, you start to think big picture.It’s easy to play week after week after week, and chase the points and chase the ranking and what you need to do, but at the end of the day I want to have a long career.

I want to be able to achieve all the things I want to, and I won’t be able to do that if ultimately my body’s not where I want it to be,” he said.“I think it will be a process for a little while for me and I’ve accepted that and that’s OK.Who knows how I’ll get on with my tennis, I think I’m improving all the time, I’m getting better.I’m not putting too much pressure on myself to feel a certain way or to be getting the kind of results that maybe I wanted to early on last year when I was really climbing, but I know that will come soon.”Despite his brilliant performance at Indian Wells, Draper’s failure to defend his title meant he has fallen out of the top 20.

Having been ranked men’s world No 4 before his injury, the 24-year-old is the 25th seed at the Miami Open this week, where he has received a first-round bye.With Cameron Norrie also performing extremely well at Indian Wells, reaching the quarter-finals after a win over the No 6 Alex de Minaur, Norrie has also leapfrogged Draper as the British No 1 this week.Their rankings battle was the source of some good-natured banter in California.“In the press after I played Novak, they said: ‘You’re still going to be British No 1, and that was the first time I thought about it.’ So I messaged him and said I’m still holding on to it for a little bit longer,” Draper said.

“It’s not like a competition, I’m really happy to see Cam back playing good tennis and playing at a great level,”
societySee all
A picture

‘It’s like Covid II’: Canterbury’s student hangouts left empty by meningitis scare

At The Cricketers pub in the centre of Canterbury, staff had been geared up for lively St Patrick’s Day celebrations. The pub’s “Paddy shots” were on offer: two for £7. Irish music played in the background. But, on Tuesday lunchtime, there were few revellers.“Normally, as soon as the doors open on St Patrick’s Day, we’re full,” said the manager, Ash Bolonghe, casting his arm around the near-empty pub, with only a handful of matinee theatre-goers sitting by the window for a pre-performance snack

A picture

Meningitis B: what are the symptoms, how is it spread and is there a vaccine?

Health officials have confirmed that meningitis B is the strain identified in some of the cases in Kent, in an outbreak that has killed two young people and left 15 others seriously ill.Meningitis is an infection of the protective lining of the brain and spinal cord. It is caused by different bacteria and viruses. Meningitis B, known as MenB, is the most common form of invasive meningococcal disease. It is caused by the Neisseria meningitidis bacteria, also known as the meningococcus

A picture

Sally Berry obituary

My friend and former colleague, Sally Berry, was a psychotherapist who spent many years engaged in two pioneering projects in London – at the Arbours Association, where she lived and worked with people with emotional difficulties, and at the Women’s Therapy Centre, where she provided counselling to women experiencing struggles in their personal lives.Sally, who has died aged 85, began living and working at the Arbours Association in one of their homes in Crouch End, north London, in 1971, and eventually headed up one of the Arbours houses elsewhere in London while also serving as chair of its training committee, which oversaw the mentoring of therapists and residents alike.In 1976 she also joined the Women’s Therapy Centre, where I was a co-founder with Luise Eichenbaum, as a one-day-a-week psychotherapist, juggling that role with her continued presence at the Arbours community and becoming the centre’s part-time clinical director in the late 1980s. The Women’s Therapy Centre closed in 2005 and she retired from the Arbours Association in 2018, after which she ran her own small private practice until 2021.Born in Oklahoma City in the US, Sally was the daughter of Alma (nee Payne) and Max Berry, a broker for a grocery store

A picture

Kent meningitis outbreak: a timeline of the health authorities’ response

Two young people have died in an outbreak of meningitis in Kent as private supplies of vaccines run out. Here’s what we know about how the disease spread and what the authorities did to tackle it.All the cases of the meningitis outbreak are linked to those who attended the Club Chemistry nightclub in Canterbury, Kent, on 5, 6 or 7 March. The club has since closed voluntarily. Anyone who attended the club on these dates or who believes they were in close contact with someone who was, has been urged to take up the offer of antibiotics

A picture

I help people with psychosis off the streets. Sometimes, their minds won’t let them leave

The apartment came up on the city’s alert system: a studio on a leafy street, one block from Prospect Park in Brooklyn.The location is extremely desirable – it would be a score for any single person hunting for their first New York rental, let alone someone who had spent years in the shelter system.But Diane, my client, rejects it outright.“As I’ve told you,” she says, “the prophecy apartment is on 40th and Amsterdam.”I remind her again that the intersection of 40th Street and Amsterdam Avenue does not exist in New York City

A picture

Tell us: how is the meningitis outbreak in Canterbury being handled?

A meningitis outbreak in Kent has been linked to a strain that most young people are not routinely vaccinated against, with two people confirmed to have died and 11 more in hospital. Health officials have offered antibiotics to those at risk, as authorities work to contain the spread.We want to hear from people living in Canterbury and the surrounding area whether the outbreak is being well managed by the authorities.How is it affecting you and your community? How has the response from the university, schools and health authorities been handled? How are people around you feeling, and what support is available? Have you or someone you know been affected?You can share your responses with us in the form below or by messaging us. We will contact you first before we use your submission