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Aryna Sabalenka shocked by Sorana Cirstea’s comeback win at Italian Open

about 10 hours ago
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Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1, suffered her earliest defeat in more than a year as she was toppled in the third round of the Italian Open by the soaring Romanian veteran Sorana Cirstea, who brilliantly held her nerve to close out a 2-6, 6-3, 7-5 win,The defeat marks a second successive surprise loss for Sabalenka, who started the clay-court season in some of the best form of her career after consecutive victories at the WTA 1000 events at Indian Wells and Miami,Until her quarter-final defeat to Hailey Baptiste at the Madrid Open last week, where Baptiste spectacularly saved six match points, Sabalenka had started the year by winning 26 of her first 27 matches,This is also the first time Sabalenka has lost before the quarter-final stage at any tournament since February 2025 and she will head to the French Open having failed to reach the semi-final in any clay-court tournament this year,Sabalenka also has fresh injury concerns to address after struggling with a lower back injury in the final stages of the match.

Cirstea, meanwhile, continues to save the best tennis of her entire career for her farewell tour,Cirstea, 36, will retire from professional tennis at the end of this season but she has performed at a consistently high level from the start of the season,Despite being a constant presence near the top of the sport for 17 years, Cirstea has never broken the top 20, peaking at No 21 in 2013,She sits at No 14 in the live WTA Race and this is the first time that Cirstea has ever beaten a No 1 player,She had lost all 12 sets in prior meetings with the No 1 player.

As was the case with Novak Djokovic a day earlier during his surprise three-set defeat to the men’s No 79, Dino Prizmic, this result seemed unlikely early on as Sabalenka rolled through the first set.However, Cirstea recovered impressively, playing with fearless aggression in the final two sets as she controlled the majority of points and forced an erratic Sabalenka behind the baseline.Down a break at 3-4 in the final set, Sabalenka received a medical timeout on her lower back.Even as she visibly struggled with her back, Sabalenka fought hard and she provided herself with an opportunity to turn the match around, pulling Cirstea back to 5-5 from 3-5 down.Cirstea composed herself and then forced herself back on to the front foot, winning the final two games to close out an enormous victory.

Although tennis players are mandated to participate in a press conference if they are requested by the media, Sabalenka’s back injury meant she simply provided some quick quotes to a WTA representative.“I feel like I didn’t play well from the beginning till the end,” she said.“I started really well, but then I kind of dropped the level.Felt like my body was limiting me from performing on the highest level.She stepped in and played incredible tennis.

Didn’t really give me many opportunities,Yeah, that was a tough one,But I guess we never lose; we only learn, so it’s OK,”Sabalenka said she would use the coming days to address the physical discomfort she struggled with,“I’d say that probably it’s like my lower back, connected to the hip, which was kind of like limiting me from full rotation.

I guess we are just going to have some days off.We’re going to spend it on recovery.That’s the plan I believe for now,” she said.Jannik Sinner began his pursuit of a record-extending sixth consecutive Masters 1000 title by easing through his second-round match with a comfortable 6-3, 6-4 win over Sebastian Ofner of Austria.Sinner, who is also attempting to follow Djokovic by becoming the second man in history to win every Masters 1000 title, had few problems adjusting to slow, heavy conditions at night in front of a packed home crowd.

The men’s No 1 broke Ofner’s serve early in both sets and navigated his service games with ease, facing no break points in the match.He will face either Jakub Mensik or Alexei Popyrin in round three.Cameron Norrie, meanwhile, believes he is still well positioned for a strong performance at the French Open despite being shocked by his standard of play during Saturday’s frustrating 6-3, 7-5 loss to Thiago Agustín Tirante in the second round of the Italian Open.Norrie, the British No 1, started the match with a slew of unforced errors, immediately falling 3-0 behind.Those tense early struggles set the tone for a difficult day against one of the most explosive players on the tour.

Tirante’s massive first serve consistently scaled 140mph, peaking at 148mph, which the world No 69 backed up by dominating the baseline with his heavy forehand.Norrie, who had beaten Tirante two weeks ago at the Madrid Open, will next compete at the Geneva Open, which takes place a week before the French Open main draw begins.“I’m feeling so good physically, mentally,” he said.“This loss is just going to make me hungry, I think, but I was shocked with my level because I’ve been playing so well in practice, I can’t prepare better.So I’m excited and ready to play again.

“I would’ve liked to stay here and play and have a chance to win the tournament.I felt my level was there, but it’s OK.I’ll learn from that and next time I’ll be a bit more brave and trust my tennis and trust how well I’m playing.”
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City & Guilds London Institute trustees accused of stalling inquiry into £166m sale

The trustees of City & Guilds London Institute have been accused of attempting to dodge accountability for a “catastrophic failure of governance” by stalling on the launch of an independent inquiry into the £166m sale of the vocational charity’s training and accreditation business last October.Members of the 148-year-old body voted overwhelmingly last month for the trustee board to trigger what would be the third investigation into how the foundation sold its operations to the private operator PeopleCert in October.However, members complained that the process then seemed to have stalled.The poll followed the Charity Commission opening a statutory inquiry in January, which was mirrored a day later by PeopleCert commissioning its own internal investigation into the deal.Neil Bates, an elected member of the City & Guilds council, which appoints and advises the trustees, said: “Why would they not be accountable for decisions made if everything was above board? It is shocking there has been such a catastrophic failure of governance – and subsequently a failure of accountability

about 20 hours ago
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Worried Britons ‘prepping’ for major disruption with stash of tins and cash, survey shows

Millions of Britons are “prepping” for a potential “major disruptive event” by keeping a stash of cash at home, stockpiling tinned goods or ensuring they have a battery-powered torch close to hand, new data suggests.With war raging in the Middle East and Ukraine, extreme weather becoming more frequent, and warnings that the UK’s critical infrastructure is at risk from cyber-attacks and power outages, many people feel the world has become a more dangerous and chaotic place.While some are taking steps to make sure they are not left high and dry in the event of a bank IT failure, others are preparing for a possible natural disaster, or even a societal collapse. UK experts recently advised people to have an emergency store of food in their home in case something happens that causes shortages.Link, the UK’s ATM network, tracks how people are using, and thinking about, cash and, for the first time, its researchers have asked the public about what “contingency planning” they are doing to prepare for an event that would cause “major disruption to normal services”

1 day ago
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Google developers significantly misstate carbon emissions of proposed UK datacentres

Developers working for Google have significantly misstated how much carbon two proposed AI datacentres will contribute to the UK’s total emissions in planning documents reviewed by the Guardian.The tech company wants to build two huge datacentres – one 52-hectare (130 acre) project in Thurrock and another at an airfield in North Weald, both in Essex. To do so, developers are required to submit planning documents calculating how much carbon these projects will emit as a proportion of the UK’s total carbon footprint.In both cases, they appear to have compared one year of the proposed datacentre’s emissions with the UK’s entire five-year carbon budget, understating the significance of their emissions by a factor of five, according to experts at the tech justice nonprofit Foxglove.Greystoke, a company planning to build another datacentre in north Lincolnshire, one of the largest in the UK, also appears to have misstated the emissions of its project in the same way

about 13 hours ago
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What I saw at the Musk-OpenAI trial: petty billionaires, protests and a stern judge

For the past couple of weeks, on the fourth floor of a courthouse on a quiet street in downtown Oakland, the world’s richest man and one of the world’s most valuable startups have been at war over the future of artificial intelligence.Being one of the reporters in the room has felt like watching an updated, opposite-coast version of Tom Wolfe’s The Bonfire of the Vanities – ambition, ego, greed and the spectrum of social class on full display. The supporting cast has included Elon Musk fanboys, a stern judge and a who’s-who of Silicon Valley’s most influential people.All courtroom battles are theatre, but this one has proved to be a unique spectacle, with the judge chastising the lawyers for leading the witness, raising meritless objections and even too much coughing. With Musk on the stand, he griped that an opposing attorney had asked a leading question, to which the judge told him to “tell the jury you’re not a lawyer”

about 13 hours ago
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Daniel Dubois stops Fabio Wardley in bloody epic to win WBO heavyweight title

Daniel Dubois completed his latest resurgence with brutal efficiency when he became the WBO world heavyweight champion after stopping Fabio Wardley early in the 11th round of a dramatic and blood-soaked contest. Howard Foster, whose pale blue shirt had turned crimson as if he worked in an abattoir rather than in a boxing ring as a referee, jumped between the courageous fighters to rescue Wardley 28 seconds into the penultimate round.It was a merciful stoppage because the fallen champion, with his face a mask of blood pouring from his badly cut and broken nose, had been examined twice before by the ringside doctor. Both fighters emerged with enormous credit after an epic battle. Dubois was knocked down twice in the fight, and dropped for the first time 10 seconds after the opening bell, but he came back with commendable resolve

about 6 hours ago
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Glamorgan’s Norton claims hat-trick on debut, Sibley on song for Surrey: county cricket – as it happened

Eighteen-year-old Tom Norton charged about Sophia Gardens chased by cock-a-hoop Glamorgan teammates, who clapped his back and rubbed his beard, as he became the youngest County Championship debutant to take a hat-trick, ruining Somerset’s innings in the process. Norton first removed James Rew for a duck, in what will count as a failed experiment to push him up the order, before Tom Lammonby pecked behind and Archie Vaughan doddered in front of his stumps.“I don’t think I can put it into words to be honest. It’s the most mental 45 minutes I’ve ever had on a cricket field,” said Norton, the first championship debutant to take a hat-trick since 1906.“I never thought this would happen

about 10 hours ago
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US consumer confidence hits record low as Americans fret about rising prices; jobs report beats forecasts – as it happened

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UK borrowing costs fall and pound rises after Starmer says he will stay as PM

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Who is Louis Mosley, the man tasked with defending Palantir against its critics?

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AI-powered surveillance company Palantir created a chore coat. Great, now I have no choice but to burn mine | Van Badham

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Aryna Sabalenka shocked by Sorana Cirstea’s comeback win at Italian Open

about 10 hours ago
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Bobby Cox, Hall of Fame manager and Atlanta Braves icon, dies at 84

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