Nadal's 20-match win streak ends in loss to American Taylor Fritz
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El deporte no escapa a una inflexible realidad: hasta las fuerzas más poderosas son efímeras en cierto modo. Las leyendas lo son porque algún día dejamos de verlas, se despojan de esas capacidades para tomarnos por sorpresa y pasan a poblar nuestro recuerdo. Nadie escapa de este proceso, aunque tantas veces nos cueste imaginar algo distinto del presente.
Roger Federer says he will be donating $500,000 (£379,223) to help children affected by the war in Ukraine.
LONDON (AP) — Roger Federer is offering financial help to Ukrainians during Russia's invasion.
A "heartbroken" and "horrified" Roger Federer vowed to donate $500000 through his foundation "to establish access to continued schooling for Ukrainian children," who have been facing the hardships of the Russian invasion. "My family and I are horrified seeing pictures from Ukraine and heartbroken for the innocent people who have been so terribly affected. We stand for peace," the former world number 1 tweeted.
Some records are meant to be broken. Some are not. The record for the longest tennis match in history now looks likelier than ever to stand the test of time after all four Grand Slams moved to hold first-to-10 tie-breaks at 6-6 in the fifth set.
Retired Ukraine tennis player Alexandr Dolgopolov has returned home to take up arms and defend his native city Kyiv from the Russian invasion.
In 2013 he achieved one of the great shocks in tennis history, knocking defending champion Roger Federer out of Wimbledon. Today, the Ukranian player Sergiy Stakhovsky is a volunteer fighter on a military patrol in Kyiv, which he vows to defend "to the end" against Russian forces. Now 36, he looks much the same as the journeyman player ranked 116 in the world who lay stretched out in his tennis whites on the hallowed London turf after toppling Federer in the second round nine years ago. But his outfit now could not be more different as he patrols Maidan Square, symbol of Ukraine's "fight for democracy", armed with a Kalashnikov, a pistol in his belt and his 1.93 metre (6 ft 4 in) frame dressed in khaki camouflage.