Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarterfinals in MontrealNew Foto - Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarterfinals in Montreal

Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko delivered the biggest victory of her career on Saturday when she dominated top-seeded Coco Gauff 6-1, 6-4 to advance to the quarterfinals of the National Bank Open in Montreal. Mboko needed just 62 minutes to dispose of the two-time Grand Slam champion. "It's incredible," Mboko said in French in her on-court interview, according to the WTA. "I'm so happy to beat such a great champion." Mboko, 18, received a wild card entry into the tournament and has dropped just one set in four matches. She is the youngest Canadian quarterfinalist at this event since 17-year-old Helen Kelesi in 1987. Mboko began the year ranked No. 333. She was at No. 85 entering this event and rose to No. 53 with the win over Gauff. Mboko, a Toronto resident, saved all five of her break-point opportunities and converted 4 of 5 against Gauff. She won 15 of 27 points (55.6 percent) against Gauff's second serve. "Coming into the match, I was so locked in," Mboko said in a postmatch interview with Sportsnet. "I tried to keep my composure as much as I could, especially playing in front of so many people. This is a very special experience for me." In May, Gauff lost the first set in a second-round match in Rome against Mboko before rallying to win the next two. The second meeting belonged to Mboko. "I'm sure we're going to have many more battles in the future," Gauff said after the loss. "Yeah, I think she's going to have a lot of success on tour." Gauff again had troubles with her serve as she committed six double faults for a three-match tournament total of 43. In the second round, she had 23 while narrowly beating Danielle Collins in a third-set tiebreaker in the second round and then followed up with 14 in a three-set, third-round win over Russia's Veronika Kudermetova. Mkobo will face unseeded Jessica Bouzas Maneiro in the quarters. The Spaniard beat China's Lin Zhu 7-5, 1-6, 6-2. Bouzas Maneiro had all seven of the match's aces and saved half of the 16 break points she faced while converting nine of the 13 chances she had to break Zhu. No. 9 seed Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan advanced to the quarterfinals with a 5-7, 6-2, 7-5 victory over No. 30 Dayana Yastremska of Ukraine. Rybakina overcame nine double faults while recording seven aces and converting 5 of 9 break points. Yastremska was one game away from winning before Rybakina won the final three games. The clincher came when she converted her fourth-match point attempt of the decisive game. Yastremska had four aces against seven double faults. Rybakina will face No. 24 seed Marta Kostyuk on Monday. The Ukrainian rallied for a 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 victory over No. 28 McCartney Kessler. Both players had substantial serving issues. Kostyuk scored the lone ace of the match but had 10 double faults. Kessler was worse with 12. Kessler pulled within 4-3 in the third set before Kostyuk won the final two games to sew up the win. --Field Level Media

Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarterfinals in Montreal

Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarterfinals in Montreal Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko delivered the biggest victory of her car...
12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of cautionNew Foto - 12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution

HONG KONG —A 12-year-old Chinese swimmerhas become a global sensation with her history-making times, even as observers and fans back homecaution against overhypingthe young athlete. On Thursday, Yu Zidi became the youngest-ever medalistat the World Aquatics Championships, which are being held in Singapore this year. Yu was part of the Chinese team that took bronze in the women's 4x200-meter freestyle relay, withthe United Stateswinning silver andAustraliawinning gold. Though she did not compete in the final, she received a medal because she swam in the qualifying race. "I was really excited to join the relay. It felt great," Yu told reporters Thursday. "The World Championships are fun, and I hope to swim faster." The Chinese prodigy began swimming around age 6 just to beat the heat in her home province of Hebei. She said she never thought about becoming a professional athlete until a coach approached her at a swimming pool one day. "At the time, I thought: why not give training a try?" Yu told Xinhua, China's state-run news agency, in May. Yu, who is also the youngest person to medal at a major international competition since 1936, could earn an individual medal on Sunday in the women's 400-meter medley. Her times are so fast that they allowed her to compete at the World Aquatics Championships even though the minimum age requirement is usually 14. She has already come close to medaling in two other events in Singapore, missing the podium by 0.06 seconds in the women's 200-meter medley on Monday and 0.31 seconds in the women's 200-meter butterfly on Thursday. At the Chinese national championships in May, Yu finished the 200-meter individual medley with a time of 2:10.63, winning a silver medal and setting a world record in the event for any 12-year-old, male or female. Hailed as the world's greatest swimmer her age, Yu has been compared to phenoms such asKatie Ledeckyof the United States andSummer McIntoshof Canada, with times that would have put her on the verge of medalingat the 2024 Paris Olympics. Already, Yu is swimming the 400-meter individual medley about 15 seconds faster than McIntosh was at the same age. Her stunning performance before she's even a teenager has many wondering how she might shape competitive swimming in the years to come. But some Chinese sports fans and commentators have urged the public not to overhype the preteen rising star. Yu's sudden fame may expose her to "disproportionate" pressure that could keep her from achieving her full potential, the state-backed digital news outlet Shanghai Observer said in an editorial Thursday. "We must let this 12-year-old grow her splash slowly into a wave," it said, adding that there is "no need to rush into hero worship." The warning hinted at a shift in how China promotes its elite athletes in the wake ofpersistent doping allegationsand what has been criticized as a "toxic" fan culture. Success at the highest levels of sport has been central to China's construction of national identity, with the government focused on dominating medal tables at the Olympics and other events. But the push for gold medals also puts a lot of stress on the countries' star athletes, as does the intensity of public scrutiny. Organized sports fandom first emerged around 2016 when Chinese social media users, jaded by sex scandals that had tarnished the wholesome image of pop stars they previously adored, began following Olympic athletes instead, said Zhang Bin, a veteran sports commentator in China. The new fans brought "sophisticated strategies" from the entertainment industry, setting off "fandom wars" among different groups that tried to outdo each other in supporting their athletes, Zhang said. China's extreme sports fan culture, which can include fan mobs, cyberbullying of athletes and heckling behavior at sports events, was especially visible around the Paris Olympics last year. When gold-medal-winning diver Quan Hongchan returned to her hometown, visitors flocked to her home for days. Some livestreamed with their phones while others flew drones, and travel agencies even started offering tours of her village. Pan Zhanle, an Olympic champion swimmer, was praised for disbanding his official fan group after his success at the Paris Games overwhelmed him with a surge of new followers. The Chinese government has been cracking down, with its cyberspace watchdog saying in April that it had shut down over 3,700 social media accounts with illegal or noncompliant content aimed at Chinese athletes. But sometimes the frenzy goes beyond the internet. Chinese table tennis player Fan Zhendong, an Olympic gold medalist, said he was traumatized when a stranger sneaked into his hotel room in 2023. "I never thought, as an athlete, I would have to go through something like this," he told Phoenix TV last week, adding that organized online abuse had caused him "severe" mental stress that contributed to several unexpected losses. Since sports prodigies naturally attract followers, fan groups could also be a concern for Yu in the future, said Zhang, who was at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore. China is often overprotective of its athletes, but it "may not be a good thing if Yu is living in isolation like protected giant pandas," he said. "For athletes, learning to interact with the media is a necessary part of their development," Zhang added. Jessie Zhou, 23, a graduate student inHong Kongwho closely follows table tennis star Fan, said it was a "good call" for Chinese media to cover Yu in a "restrained tone" while extreme sports fandom remains unresolved. "Just let the kid stay focused on training," Zhou said.

12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution

12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution HONG KONG —A 12-year-old Chinese swimmerhas become a global...
Daryl Dike hurts thigh, latest setback for American forward on West BromNew Foto - Daryl Dike hurts thigh, latest setback for American forward on West Brom

Daryl Dike will miss the start of West Bromwich Albion's season because of a thigh injury, the latest in a string of health setbacks for the 25-year-old American forward. The team said Friday that Dike was hurt in practice and will resume training after the international break in early September. Dikeruptured right Achilles tendon against Stoke on April 15, 2023, and returned on Jan. 7, 2024, when he played the first half in an FA Cup match against Aldershot. Hetore his left Achilles against Ipswich that Feb. 10,just five games after coming back. Dikereturned last Feb. 15 against Millwallin the first of 10 substitute appearances and started the season finale against Luton on May 3. Dike joined West Brom from Major League Soccer's Orlando in January 2022. Hesustained a season-ending hamstring injury in his first start, against Peterborough on Jan. 22, 2022, andtore a thigh muscle in the 2022-23 openeragainst Stoke on July 30, 2022. Hereturned that Nov. 12in West Brom's last game before the World Cup break, then tore his right Achilles tendon the following spring. Dike has three goals in 10 appearances for the U.S. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Daryl Dike hurts thigh, latest setback for American forward on West Brom

Daryl Dike hurts thigh, latest setback for American forward on West Brom Daryl Dike will miss the start of West Bromwich Albion's season...
Dem governors call for redistricting amid Texas pushNew Foto - Dem governors call for redistricting amid Texas push

Multiple Democratic governors are supportive of their colleagues' interests in redrawing their state's Congressional maps to benefit Democratic Party candidates ahead of the 2026 midterms, responding to a push from President Trump and others to draw newlinesin Texas to be more favorable to GOP candidates. Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly (D) said she is supportive of California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and other Democratic governors who haveshownopenness to altering district maps to benefit Democratic candidates next year. "I have never believed in unilateral disarmament, and so while I may not want to participate in certain activities, if I have to, in order to level the playing field, I would support my Democratic colleagues who decide to answer in kind," Kelly said in an interview with ABC News that waspublishedSaturday morning. "If the other side is going to pursue this, regardless of the obvious unconstitutionality of it, then I don't think we have any other choice but to go there. You just don't go to the front lines without your bullets," Kelly told the outlet, adding that her "preference" would be for the courts to step in. Kelly, the chair of the Democratic Governors Association, along with Wisconsin's Gov. Tony Evers (D) and other Democratic governors, was in Madison, Wisc., for a summer policy retreat. Trump wants Republicans to pick up five seats in Texas. Redistricting typically happens every 10 years, but the effort by Texas could help Republicans yield five spots and ultimately help the party hold the majority in the House. On Saturday, the Texas House Select Committee on Congressional Redistrictingadvancedproposed congressional maps that would give the GOP an opportunity to snatch five House seats next year. Democrats have pushed back, including Texas Democrats who haveaccusedthe GOP of "trying to rig the midterms." Evers, who said that Wisconsin will not be changing its Congressional lines, argued that Democrats need to do more to push back against Republicans. "We're not changing our maps. Here in the state of Wisconsin, we worked hard to get fair maps, and we're going to continue to do so … in my heart of hearts, this is where we have to be. But when … you have a gun against your head, you got to do something," Evers said, according to ABC. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D), who was ex-Vice President Harris's running mate during the 2024 presidential election, said that Democrats are not dealing with a "normal administration." "We're playing with one that is throwing all the rules out. I think it is incumbent upon states that have the capacity or the ability to make sure that we are responding in kind," Walz said on Friday,accordingto the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. "It is a terrible spot we're in as a county, but not responding is going to make it even worse." Floridamightfollow Texas' footsteps as a growing number of Republicans in the state are showing support for altering Congressional district lines. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Dem governors call for redistricting amid Texas push

Dem governors call for redistricting amid Texas push Multiple Democratic governors are supportive of their colleagues' interests in redr...
Ex-Trump prosecutor Jack Smith under investigation by government watchdog Office of Special CounselNew Foto - Ex-Trump prosecutor Jack Smith under investigation by government watchdog Office of Special Counsel

The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC) is investigating former special counsel Jack Smith, the OSC has confirmed to Fox News. Smith was tapped in 2022 by then-Attorney General Merrick Garland to serve as special counsel regarding two probes pertaining to then-former PresidentDonald Trump. While the specific scope of the investigation is not clear, the OSC may be looking at whether Smith potentially violated the Hatch Act, which bars government employees from partaking in political activities. It is not a criminal investigation. Trump's Nominee To Lead Us Office Of Special Counsel Refutes Antisemitic Claims And Ties To Holocaust Denier The OSC is not the same as a special counsel appointed by an attorney general, as Smith was, but "is an independent federal investigative and prosecutorial agency," according to its website. "OSC's statutory authority comes from four federal laws: the Civil Service Reform Act, the Whistleblower Protection Act, the Hatch Act, and the Uniformed Services Employment & Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA)," the website explains. Read On The Fox News App Trump Calls Jack Smith 'Desperate' After Special Counsel Report Is Released After Midnight Sen.Tom Cotton, R-Ark., recently asked the OSC to look into whether Smith illegally engaged in political activity to influence the 2024 election against Trump. "I write requesting the Office of Special Counsel to investigate whether Jack Smith, Special Counsel for Attorney General Merrick Garland, unlawfully took political actions to influence the 2024 election to harm then-candidate President Donald Trump," Cotton wrote in a July 30letterto Acting Special Counsel Jamieson Greer. Top Gop Senator Demands Probe Into Whether Jack Smith 'Unlawfully' Tried To Influence 2024 Election "President Trump of course vanquished Joe Biden, Jack Smith, every Democrat who weaponized the law against him, but President Trump's astounding victory doesn't excuse Smith of responsibility for his unlawful election interference. I therefore ask the Office of Special Counsel to investigate whether Jack Smith or any members of his team unlawfully acted for political purposes," Cotton wrote. Fox News' David Spunt contributed to this report. Original article source:Ex-Trump prosecutor Jack Smith under investigation by government watchdog Office of Special Counsel

Ex-Trump prosecutor Jack Smith under investigation by government watchdog Office of Special Counsel

Ex-Trump prosecutor Jack Smith under investigation by government watchdog Office of Special Counsel The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC)...

 

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