Tennis Drama: Dominic Thiem blasts Serena Williams’ ‘bad personality’
Roger Federer, meanwhile, leapt to the defence of Thiem, describing him as “a superstar, a male superstar”.
Roger Federer, meanwhile, leapt to the defence of Thiem, describing him as “a superstar, a male superstar”.
When my editor asked if I fancied going on a six-day trip to Paris for a Lacoste event, all I could say was, “Oui.”
If there was one incident on the tennis court I still can’t quite forget, it was one involving a father and his young daughter training, obviously for age-group events. He was screaming at her, hurling invectives and curses at her, as she hit the balls harder and harder with a trainer.
The bubbly is made exclusively with grapes from the 1998 harvest, in tribute to the year that Federer first launched his professional career.
Roger Federer is one of those masterworks of nature that defy explanation. It may be possible—but, again, only by very subjective and very general approximation—to describe him and what he is able to do in human terms, in the context, say, of certain sciences, like geometry, physics and physiology. And I’d like to do that, if only to affirm to myself—and console myself, too—that he somehow belongs in my species and also that he might not mind my being a bit familiar by calling him Roger.
What’s seems to be a hot statement this season is pink—and it’s worn by the guys in the most acid-bright hues.
When Dr. George John calls 2012 US Open tennis champion Andy Murray “very moody,” runner-up Novak Djokovic “a crazy guy,” seven-time Wimbledon champ Roger Federer “very formal,” and seven-time French Open champ Rafael Nadal “a good guy,” he is describing them not just through the eyes of a loyal fan.
I once asked my boss what the best event he’d ever covered was. I expected him to rattle off a catalogue of major events like the Fifa World Cup, the Olympic Games or the ICC Cricket World Cup.
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