Rublev ‘putting emotions in right direction’ after beating Fritz to reach final

Andrey Rublev said his impressive run to the Madrid Open final is down to improved mental strength after eliminating Taylor Fritz in the last four.

The world No. 8, who is known for displaying his emotions on court, was on a four-match losing streak heading into the ATP Masters 1000 tournament.

But he has only dropped one set on his way to the final in the Spanish capital, overcoming Fritz 6-4 6-3 in a dominant 73-minute semi-final performance on Friday.

Fritz started well, breaking Rublev in the opening game of the encounter. But the seventh seed responded quickly, targeting his opponent’s second serve to immediately reclaim the break.

Rublev hardly looked back, breaking Fritz again in the 10th game to take the first set.

The second set lasted just over half an hour as Rublev kept his opponent at bay, building on an impressive quarter-final victory against home favourite Carlos Alcaraz.

“Mentally I was feeling much better and I was able to perform,” said Rublev, when asked for the reason behind his resurgence in form.

“Putting emotions in the right direction. For sure it has helped me to reach the final. Without this, I would not be in the final.”

Standing in the way of Rublev and a second career Masters 1000 title is Felix Auger-Aliassime, who progressed to the final after his opponent Jiri Lehecka was forced to retire with a back injury.

Just six games had gone by when Lehecka left the court for treatment from a physio, throwing in the towel shortly afterwards.

It meant that Auger-Aliassime has played just three full matches to reach his maiden Masters final. Jakub Mensik retired in the second set of their third-round match, while Jannik Sinner was unable to play their quarter-final clash due to a hip injury.

“It’s crazy. I don’t know if it’s ever happened to a player before,” said Auger-Aliassime. “It’s kind of a weird situation to be in on my part.

“It’s never happened to me in my career so far, a withdrawal or a walkover or retirement of this sort, and back-to-back like this. I couldn’t believe what was happening when I saw his back locked on him.

“I feel really bad for him. I’ve had injuries myself, and we can all imagine how it feels to come out on a night like this, hoping to win to go through, having a battle with your opponent, and not being able to play.

“I have a lot of empathy for Jiri, and I can’t do anything but try to prepare for Sunday.”

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Luton Town v Everton – Premier League LIVE

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Luton held by Everton to remain in relegation zone

Luton’s hopes of survival are dwindling by the game. A hard-fought 1-1 draw with Everton at Kenilworth Road was not enough to move them out of the relegation zone, and now they have played a game more than the teams around them.

Everton clinched survival last weekend, which many felt increased Luton’s chances of victory, though there were never much danger of a Sean Dyche team phoning it in. They defended resolutely, heading away cross after cross, and ensured Jordan Pickford had a relatively quiet night.

Dominic Calvert-Lewin put them ahead in the first half, clipping a penalty straight down the middle after Teden Mengi was penalised for trying to bear hug Jarrad Branthwaite at a corner.

Elijah Adebayo, starting for the first time since February, equalised with a terrific goal in the 31st minute.

But though Luton dominated the second half, they struggled to create any clear chances and only really threatened a winner during a pulsating injury-time onslaught.

The draw continues a desperate run of form for Luton. They have won only one of their last 15 league games, picking up only seven points in that time. It has left them needing favours from elsewhere – starting tomorrow when Nottingham Forest go to Sheffield United and Burnley host Newcastle.

More to follow.

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Muzic outsprints Vollering to victory in thrilling Stage 6 finish

Evita Muzic (FDJ-Suez) put in a heroic display to hold off Demi Vollering (SD Worx-Protime) and sprint to victory on Stage 6 of La Vuelta Femenina.

The Frenchwoman stuck close to Vollering on the final climb and timed her attack with 75 metres to go to hit the front and take the win.

It was the 24-year-old’s fifth career victory, which now sits neatly in her palmarès alongside her Giro d’Italia final stage victory from 2020.

Vollering successfully defended her lead in the general classification with her second-place finish keeping Elisa Longo Borghini (Lidl-Trek) 56 seconds behind in the race for the red jersey.

Marianne Vos (Team Visma-Lease a Bike) added to her lead in the points classification with maximum points in the day’s intermediate sprint to go into stage seven 37 points ahead of Blanka Vas (SD Worx-Protime).

Karlijn Swinkels (UAE Team ADQ) also retained her Queen of the Mountains jersey, but is now tied on points with general classification leader Vollering.

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‘I wanted a big victory, now I have it’ – Muzic delighted after pipping Vollering to Stage 6 win

Before the start of the stage, Lidl-Trek’s Gaia Realini withdrew due to “minor concussion” as well as pain in her elbow and chest from a crash the day before. In addition, Canyon//SRAM’s Kasia Niewiadoma also didn’t start due to illness.

During the stage, a crash in the 63rd kilometre forced Aniek van Alphen (Fenix-Deceuninck) to abandon the race after a bottle caught her back wheel in her approach to the feed zone which resulted in a crash.

Multiple attacks from within the peloton kick-started the action on stage six of La Vuelta Femenina, but it was an attack from Claudia San Justo (Eneicat – CMTeam) and Laura Molenaar (VolkerWessels Women’s Pro Cycling Team) which sparked the lengthiest breakaway of the day with 85km to go.

They were joined by Fauve Bastiaenssen (Lotto Dstny Ladies) a couple of kilometres later before their ranks increased to four with the addition of Aurela Nerlo (Winspace). The four remained as a breakaway group for much of the race before they were dispersed with just under 20km left ahead.

San Justo and Nerlo were the first to be absorbed by the peloton but Bastiaenssen and Molenaar were determined to stay ahead for as long as possible. The two battled with each other as well as the rapidly approaching peloton and played cat and mouse before a last-ditch attack from Bastiaenssen saw her survive the longest as Molenaar was the next to rejoin the bunch.

With Bastiaenssen caught with 17.7km to go, focus then turned to the intermediate sprint and the final climb. After Vos took maximum points in the sprint to retain her green jersey, the remaining points were earned by Elena Cecchini (SD Worx – Protime), Brodie Chapman (Lidl-Trek), Riejanne Markus (Visma-Lease a Bike), and Juliette Labous (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL).

Lidl-Trek led the peloton as the Fenix-Deceuninck, UAE Team ADQ, FDJ-SUEZ, and Movistar also began to line themselves up at the front of the race. The teams at the head of the race switched with EF Education-Cannondale, led by stage two winner Alison Jackson, and Visma-Lease a Bike, fronted by stage three winner Vos. Both worked in domestique roles for their teams and as with others working in the same capacity for their stage win hopefuls dropped off when their work was completed.

With 6km left in the race Muzic’s FDJ-SUEZ teammate Grace Brown took control at the front of the race, a role she had also performed valiantly in the stage prior, to up the intensity and begin to thin out the group. The Australian’s pace dropped multiple riders before Vollering took over at the front with 3.8km to go.

As she did in stage five, Vollering’s powerful climb also successfully dropped more riders from the group, but she kept SD Worx – Protime teammates Marlen Reusser and Niamh Fisher-Black with her to ballast her hopes of a second successive summit victory.

Yara Kastelijn (Fenix-Deceuninck), who had finished the day before, and Longo Borghini, who took third place in stage five, remained close behind Vollering in scenes reminiscent of those in the previous stage before Reusser took over to provide some respite for Vollering.

Pauliena Rooijakkers (Fenix-Deceuninck) attacked within the final two kilometres to force a reaction from Vollering, who closed her fellow countrywoman down quickly to return to the front of the race.

Another attack, this time from Kastelijn, was also rapidly diffused by the general classification leader who then led the group through the Flamme Rouge.

A seated acceleration, not dissimilar to the one that had catapulted her into the leader’s jersey the day prior, created a cap for Vollering with just under 700m remaining, but Muzic was determined to stay with her.

The Frenchwoman did just that and sat in second wheel while she waited for the perfect moment to attack as the two went clear from those behind them. With 75 metres until the summit finish at La Laguna Negra she pushed forward and went out of the saddle as she overtook the Tour de France Femmes 2023 winner to take the victory by two seconds.

Kastelijn added another impressive podium finish at La Vuelta Femenina as she crossed the line 15 seconds later in third, followed by Markus and Longo Borghini to make up the top five.

Ricarda Bauernfeind (Canyon//SRAM Racing) finished sixth before Labous, Rooijakkers, Fisher-Black, and Kim Cadzow (EF Education-Cannondale) completed the top ten.

Stage seven of La Vuelta Femenina will cover 138.6km from San Esteban de Gormaz – Sigüenza. This flatter stage in comparison to stage six will ramp up in the final 500m reaching a 10% gradient at one point, and looks to be one for powerful riders such as Vos.

La Vuelta Femenina Stage 6 LIVE – Can Vollering make further dent in rivals?

LIVE: Tarazona – La Laguna Negra de Vinuesa

La Vuelta Femenina – May 3rd, 2024

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Is the World Championship really heading for a ‘shock’ winner?

Three qualifiers have reached the semi-finals of the World Championship for the first time since the tournament was first held at the Crucible in 1977, but anybody who believes the 48th staging of the sport’s biggest tournament is heading for a “shock” winner hasn’t been paying attention.

World No. 12 Kyren Wilson is the only player from the top 16 still competing at the event, but he is far from an outstanding favourite to win the title for the first time amid a quartet of semi-finalists all boasting strong pedigrees in Sheffield.

Wilson’s opponent David Gilbert reached the last four in 2019 – defeating the then defending champion Mark Williams (13-9) and Wilson (13-8) – and was only denied a spot in the final by four-time world champion John Higgins producing a rousing comeback from 11-6 behind in an epic 17-16 win.

Wilson himself enjoyed a run to the final in 2020 defeating Trump 13-9 in the last eight and Anthony McGill 17-16 in the semi-finals before succumbing 18-8 to snooker GOAT Ronnie O’Sullivan in a tournament delayed and hampered by viewing restrictions due to Covid-19 restrictions.

The Kettering man also lost a semi-final 17-13 to Higgins in 2018 and was 10-4 clear of Shaun Murphy in the 2021 semi-finals, but lost 13 of the final 15 frames in a crushing 17-12 defeat.

In the bottom half of the draw, Stuart Bingham is also appearing in his third Crucible semi-final having lifted the title in 2015, a tournament that saw him defeat former world champions Graeme Dott, O’Sullivan, Trump and Murphy on his way to the trophy.

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‘Just chill’ – O’Sullivan and referee clash amid crowd noise

Having ended Stephen Hendry’s quest for an eighth title in 2000 with a 10-7 win in the first round, Bingham has also reached two quarter-finals at the Crucible and could become the oldest world champion of the modern era on Monday aged 47.

“Everyone will be looking at the draw thinking: ‘This is my chance to be world champion’,” said Bingham after his taut 13-10 win over O’Sullivan on Wednesday. “I can’t take anything for granted and though I’m the only one to have got my hands on that trophy, I don’t know if it’ll count for much.”

Meanwhile, provisional world No. 25 Jak Jones – the lowest ranked figure left in the World Championship having started at 44 – has quickly established a proven record at the event as a no-nonsense match player, having become the first qualifier to reach a quarter-final and semi-final on his first two appearances at the tournament since his fellow Welshman Matthew Stevens reached back-to-back quarter-finals in the late 1990s.

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Watch as Maguire eats fly off table during quarter-final at Crucible

Jones enjoyed wins over two-time finalist Ali Carter and 2010 world champion Neil Robertson last year and has so far defeated International champion Zhang Anda, last year’s semi-finalist Si Jiahui and 2019 winner Trump this time out.

It has certainly been a surprise to see a host of leading players – including defending champion Luca Brecel, O’Sullivan, Trump, new world No. 1 Mark Allen and Selby – suffer exits long before the business end of the tournament, but that does not mean it has been a tournament full of startling shocks.

A win for Bingham, Gilbert or Jones would see them join Terry Griffiths (1979) and Murphy (2005) as the only qualifiers to go all the way to the title. Yet all four semi-finalists will end the event inside the world’s top 25.

And as the Crucible form guide from recent history illustrates, it would not be a major upset if any of the remaining four players become world champion on bank holiday Monday.

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‘Thank God Mark Selby is out this year’ – Crowd erupts with laughter after Wilson quip

World Championship semi-final latest

  • Kyren Wilson 6-6 David Gilbert
  • Stuart Bingham 4-4 Jak Jones
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