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Former Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova handed four-year ban – here’s why | Tennis News
NEW DELHI: Former Wimbledon champion Marketa Vondrousova has been handed a four-year ban after refusing to take an anti-doping test at her home in December 2025. The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) said an independent tribunal found the Czech player guilty of violating anti-doping rules. Her suspension will run until June 21, 2030, although she has the option to appeal the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.Vondrousova, who made history by becoming the first unseeded woman to win Wimbledon in 2023, said the incident happened during a difficult period in her life and linked her actions to struggles with her mental health.“It is very tough for me to talk about this, but I want to be transparent with you about my mental health,” Vondrousova said. “The recent doping control incident happened because I reached a breaking point after months of physical and mental stress.”The 26-year-old had earlier said she refused the test because of “mental stress” and fear when the testing official “rang my door late at night without properly identifying themselves.”According to the ITIA, Vondrousova “did not submit a sample when notified by a Doping Control Officer (DCO) during an out-of-competition test attempt at her home at around 8 p.m. on 3 December 2025.”Vondrousova was represented by lawyer Howard Jacobs, who previously helped Simona Halep reduce her own four-year ban. The Czech star now joins a list of leading players linked to doping cases in recent years, including Halep, Jannik Sinner and Iga Swiatek.The decision comes just days before the start of Wimbledon.
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Carey Price’s journey to Hall of Fame paved by awe-inspiring greatness
MONTREAL — It was one of many defining moments in Carey Price’s career, though it came after a devastating loss rather than one of the many triumphs that ultimately landed him in the Hockey Hall of Fame on Monday.
It was the spring of 2015, in Tampa Bay, where the Montreal Canadiens were attempting to avoid a 3-0 deficit in their second-round series versus the Lightning. Price allowed the game’s first goal to Alex Killorn 12 minutes into the first period but rebounded spectacularly before Brendan Gallagher tied things up midway through the third period.
Six more shots got through the Canadiens after Gallagher tied the game, but they didn’t get past Price. He was square and in control, singlehandedly keeping hope alive until the final second.
But that’s when Tyler Johnson dashed it, arriving on the doorstep of Price’s crease on a two-on-one and tapping home the game-winner with less than a second to go in regulation.
The Canadiens’ room felt like a morgue after that. Long faces and 1,000-yard stares dominated fruitless scrums.
The players were understandably dismayed by a very successful season on the verge of being flushed away so convincingly by a team they had swept in the previous playoffs. None more so than Price — a man of few words typically spoken in hushed tones.
He had even less to say than usual. His scrum might have lasted a minute, and it felt like a minute wasted.
But right after it ended, as Price was headed towards the showers, the Montreal Gazette’s Pat Hickey, in his inimitable style, blurted out, “Hey Carey, do you think you should have stopped that last one?”
We all tensed up, but Price turned back towards us and coolly responded, “I believe I should stop all of them.”
Price’s rise from relative obscurity in Anahim Lake, B.C. — population 2,000, if you include the fish — to star under the brightest spotlight of hockey-mad Montreal was built on that mentality. Coupled with his exceptional athleticism, it initially got him drafted fifth overall and eventually got him elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame.
In between, we were treated to awe-inspiring greatness.
It was in Leksand, Sweden, in 2007, with Canada seeking a third consecutive gold medal at the world junior championship and the United States threatening to end their run in the semifinal, that Price delivered his first dose of it.
“Back of my mind, I was panicking,” said Canada team member Karl Alzner when we rehashed the memory with him last summer, in anticipation of Price getting into the Hall on the first ballot. “I think we had won two in a row and, of course, you never want to lose to the U.S. So, I was nervous about the game, but I would say there were two things that were making me feel a lot better about it. One was knowing how good Jonathan Toews was in the shootout, and the other thing was seeing how calm Carey looked.”
Price had made 22 saves in regulation before coming up with 12 in the 10-minute overtime. And after both teams emerged tied from the first three rounds of the shootout, it got to sudden death.
Brian Little missed for Canada and left Price facing Patrick Kane to stave off elimination.
Kane came barreling in and threw two fakes before attempting to put the puck through Price’s pads, but the goaltender remained patient and clicked his heels together at the goal line to keep the game even.
Two Toews goals bookended one from Andrew Cogliano after the Americans got goals from Peter Mueller and Jack Johnson. Then Mueller had one last chance to keep the shootout going.
Canada beat Russia 4-2 in the final and Price was named tournament MVP after posting a .961 save percentage, a 1.14 goals-against average and two shutouts in six games.
He believed he should stop all the shots. He almost did.
“You could tell even in practice, where the shots were often harder to stop than in games because they were uninterrupted and undefended, that he would get really frustrated about the few that would squeak in, and that’s the mentality the greats have,” said Alzner. “If you were to ask the top scorers right now if they expect to score every game, they probably in their heads are thinking, ‘Yes.’ All the top shutdown defencemen think, ‘No one can get past me, not even McDavid.’
“Carey was always cool and calm, but he also always had that mentality of being able to stop everything. He was secretly one of the most competitive people there was. It was the case back then (at the 2007 world junior), and you look at his career and ask anybody who played in his era and they would say one of the scariest players to play against was Scary Carey.”
Those players considered Price the best player in the world in 2015, selecting him as the Ted Lindsay Award recipient shortly after the Canadiens ended up losing that series to Tampa in six games.
Price also captured the Hart, Vezina and Jennings Trophies that year, after he won 44 games, posted a .933 save percentage and a 1.96 goals-against average behind a Canadiens team that finished with the second-most points in the league but landed in the bottom third in goals for, power-play efficiency and shots on goal per game.
It was a lot of silverware added to Price’s mantle after he helped Canada earn gold at the 2014 Sochi Olympics. He got to play behind one of the greatest defences ever assembled, but he also stopped all but three of the 106 shots he faced to earn top goaltender honours in the tournament.
Price came up huge in a pressure-packed, 2-1 win over Latvia in the quarterfinals before delivering a 1-0 shutout against the U.S.A. in the semifinal and a 3-0 shutout against Sweden in the final.
Two years later, at the 2016 World Cup of Hockey, Price put up a wall, going 5-0-0 and posting a .957 save percentage and 1.40 goals-against average. And that was after he missed all but 12 games of the 2015-16 NHL season with ligament damage in his knee.
Price returned to play 62 games the following year, but ultimately ended up on injury reserve far too frequently between 2017 and 2023, when it was finally determined — long after his last appearance in an NHL game — his knee could no longer withstand the rigours of NHL hockey.
Before coming to terms with that reality, Price faced another harsh one, checking himself into the NHL/NHLPA Players’ Assistance Program in the fall of 2021.
He later revealed he had been abusing alcohol and neglecting his mental health for years.
Price persevered, though, returning from the program and pushing through exhaustive rehab on his knee to play five of the final games of the 2022 season and capture the Bill Masterton Trophy.
The games Price played to close out the 2021 season were far more memorable.
That was when Price experienced some of the highest highs of his life, backstopping the Canadiens to the Stanley Cup Final before falling just three wins short of helping them beat the Lightning.
When asked what he thought was the difference in the five-game loss, Price said, “At the end of the day, I just don’t think I played well enough at the start of the series.” Just like when he was asked in 2015 about Johnson’s unstoppable shot, he shouldered blame that didn’t belong to him.
If not for Price, the Canadiens would’ve never found themselves in Tampa for the final to begin with.
“With the playoffs, he was obviously our MVP,” said Jake Evans via text message. “Such a calming presence back there. Made every save on the whole run look so easy and clearly frustrated/deflated opponents over the series with them knowing how hard it would be to score even one against him.”
The Toronto Maple Leafs got two against Price in a bid to eliminate the Canadiens in Game 6 of the first round.
But he made 13 saves in overtime before Jesperi Kotkaniemi scored to force Game 7.
Price then allowed only one goal in the clinching game in Toronto before allowing only six in a four-game sweep over the Winnipeg Jets in Round 2.
In Round 3, Price stopped 180 of 193 shots in a six-game win over the Vegas Golden Knights. And in Round 4, against the Lightning, the Canadiens were overmatched and overwhelmed in front of him.
Still, Price stopped 61 of the last 64 shots he faced in the series. But he came away feeling his best — and last — opportunity to win the Cup was lost because he didn’t come up with the saves he expected to make earlier.
“To come so close and not win, it’s pretty heart-wrenching,” Price said in a recent interview. “Results aside, the experience was something I’ll cherish forever.”
Price’s backup for the 2021 run, Jake Allen, told us that the experience of battling alongside Price was “a main highlight” of his career.
“He was a natural,” Allen texted. “He also had the combination of patience, mental clarity and confidence that is tough to teach or experience to understand.
“He was at a tier not many can reach, and that was noted through the league by his goalie peers and also (by) players. He was at a status not many can reach, and still has presence to this day.”
On this day, Price became the 44th goaltender elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame.
It’s an honour he earned by always believing he should stop every shot.
Sports
Paige VanZant, Mickey Gall join pro wrestler Vinny Pacifico in new anthology film
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The schedule of an independent professional wrestler is already jam packed with shows, travel, media interviews, training and everything else in between. Adding anything else onto their plates would be a near-impossible task to manage.
Pro wrestling star Vinny Pacifico is taking the challenge head on. He will be in a new movie called “The Hours that Keep Us,” which features a talented cast from the sports and entertainment industries. The Tommy Dwyer-directed film will feature MMA stars Paige VanZant and Mickey Gall as well as actors Zack Ward and Chelsea Bray.
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Vinny Pacifico flexes for the crowd. (Vinny Pacifico)
Pacifico, who was in “Mr. Reset and the Society of Turnbuckle & Bone” and “The Forsaken Few,” told Fox News Digital he was ecstatic about the cast for the movie.
“That’s going to be absolutely phenomenal,” Pacifico said. “The cast is insane. We got Paige VanZant. We got Mickey Gall, Zack Ward, Chelsea Brea and Tommy Dwyer – he’s the director and he’s going to be in it as well. … That film has the craziest cast you could imagine and it’s really exciting. That’s going to be a really fun movie.
“It’s one of those things where it’s like you can sit back and you’re like, wow, what a phenomenal group of people from all different industries – wrestling, MMA, film and so many different places. We have so many people in this film. So many different fan bases. It’s a really beautiful thing.”
Pacifico said “The Hours that Keep Us” will be an anthology-type film with three different stories intertwining with each other.
“They’re all dark stories and they each have a connection,” he explained. “Bottom line, it’s going to be special, it’s going to be different.”
Meanwhile, Pacifico is still wrestling in between filming.

Paige VanZant stands ringside before the catchweight bout between Nikolay Veretennikov and Austin Vanderford during UFC Fight Night at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Wash., on Feb. 22, 2025. (Steven Bisig/Imagn Images)
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He talked to Fox News Digital about balancing doing everything while keeping his mental health in check.
“It hasn’t been easy to be honest. I really have not had any time for myself or just to sit still because even in between, on the days that I’m not wrestling or doing a movie, it’s answering emails, booking more stuff and doing media. … Mental health, I’ll be honest, I haven’t had time to think much,” he said. “Of course, being in entertainment, we always go through moments where we have anxiety where we get mad at ourselves. We want more, we want this. We’re always critiquing ourselves in wrestling and films, as an actor. We’re always looking at ourselves like ‘What could we do better?’ But I haven’t had much time to really sit and think about stuff. I kinda have just been go, go, go, which I’m grateful for.
“But, it’s not easy because you do have to really, mindfully, take the time to step back and be like, all right, I need a few minutes to just be with my family, be with my friends or just focus on something that’s not work related for just a little. If it consumes you, it’s not always a good thing. For me, it’s like, OK, I did what I needed to do today. When ‘Mr. Reset’ came out, I had nine interviews in a row and then I went to the gym and then I had another interview and I said you know what? OK, I’m gonna do these interviews, I’m gonna go to the gym, I’m gonna everything, and then by 3 p.m., when I’m done with everything, I’m gonna put my phone down and just be with my family and be with my wife and just live. I feel you have to mindfully do those things.”

Pro wrestler Vinny Pacifico steps inside of the ring. (Vinny Pacifico)
Still, Pacifico said he was “grateful” for every opportunity he receives in and out of the ring.
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“The Hours that Keep Us” is set to start filming next month.
Sports
Tigers’ Drew Sommers has gone from ‘freaking out’ to logging big outs
Detroit — When lefty Brant Hurter went down on May 23 (lumbar spine inflammation), it opened a gaping hole in the Tigers’ bullpen.
At the time, it felt irreparable. It left the Tigers with two lefties, Tyler Holton and long-reliever Enmanuel De Jesus. Missing was Hurter’s ability to be both a multi-inning bridge and, whenever Holton was unavailable, a leverage situational lefty.
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And yet here we are, a full month later, and we aren’t talking about any kind of gaping hole in the bullpen.
Jun 10, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Drew Sommers (51) throws a pitch against the Minnesota Twins in the seventh inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images
Credit that to the next man up, who in this case has been 6-3, 250-pound lefty Drew Sommers.
In the Tigers’ 5-4, 10-inning, series-sweeping win against the White Sox Sunday, manager AJ Hinch, having used Holton for two innings on Saturday, would certainly have brought in Hurter for the top of the eighth inning.
The Tigers were down 3-1 and the top of the White Sox order was due up, featuring three left-handed hitters. Without hesitation, he summoned Sommers and the lefty struck out Sam Antonacci, right-handed pinch-hitter Randal Grichuk and Colston Montgomery.
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“I think he’s nasty, really tough on lefties,” Hinch said recently. “If he can navigate the counter, the righties, the pinch-hitters, that’s the difference between him being a viable option or just somebody who is filling in.”
He’s become viable. Hitters are 2-for-20 against him since his arrival, with 10 strikeouts. Lefties are 1-for-12. Righties are 1-for-8. He hasn’t allowed an extra-base hit.
Not at all the same guy who showed up last season and seemed utterly overwhelmed by the level.
“If we can learn patience in this world, it would probably help view people and players differently,” Hinch said. “He learned a lot and I think the game slows down a little bit. It’s not as new. The strike-throwing, has been excellent.”
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Sommers, 25, was acquired from the Rays before last season for right-hander Mason Englert. And his first taste of the big leagues was bitter. In three innings, he was tagged for six runs on seven hits and three walks.
He’s not the same guy, on or off the field.
“Just having the experience from last year,” he said. “Getting all the butterflies out and knowing the teammates more. I was very timid when I first walked in the door last year.
“Lots of big names. I didn’t know how to act or conduct myself. But after having spring training in big-league camp and getting to know these guys better, it’s like, OK, they’re just like any other players.
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“It’s the same. So I’m not freaking out.”
He’s pounding the strike zone, that is the primary difference. His strike percentage has increased from 57% to 67%.
“The overall conviction comes with the experience,” Hinch said. “There have been some subtle adjustments. Player development has done a good job of centralizing the adjustment when he starts spraying the ball a little bit. But mostly, he’s a calmer version of himself now.”
He showed some advanced pitch-ability on Sunday. He won a seven-pitch at-bat against Antonacci, showing him sinkers and sliders for six pitches and then busting a 2-2 four-seamer above the zone and getting the chase.
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Against the right-hander Grichuk, who is still in the league because of his ability to mash lefties, Sommers fell behind 2-1. Dangerous count, but Sommers surprised him with a well-disguised, well-located changeup. That’s Sommers’ third pitch, the one he’s developing to neutralize righties and he had Grichuk well out in front.
He put him away with a four-seamer.
Sommers didn’t mess around with Montgomery, beating him with three straight, 95-mph four-seamers.
“Everybody, when they first come up, whether it be butterflies or just the adjustment to the league, it always happens,” catcher Dillon Dingler said of Sommers’ rough debut. “He’s been up here already so he’s made the adjustment. The biggest thing is just being in the zone.
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“Drew is awesome. He’s got great stuff. Talking to some of the (opposing hitters), they say he’s a tough at-bat.”
The White Sox would concur.
“Simple as that,” Sommers shrugged. “I got comfortable and I am able to just do what I do best.”
Yankees at Tigers
First pitch: 6:40, Wednesday, Comerica Park, Detroit
TV/radio: Detroit Sports Net/97.1, 107.9
LHP Carlos Rodon (3-2, 3.50), Yankees: Coming off elbow surgery, this will be just his eighth start. But he allowed three runs or less in the first seven. In the short sample, he’s having trouble finding his slider lane against left-handed hitters. They are 5-for-12 with two doubles and a homer off it. The Tigers have a history of making Rodon work (5.44 ERA in 15 starts) and his 13% walk rate this year should play into that narrative.
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RHP Casey Mize (2-4, 2.58), Tigers: This will be his second start back off the IL (groin). His stuff was good in Houston last Wednesday but his command, especially with his slider, was a tick off. The bulk of the damage (three runs in 4.2 innings) came off mis-located sliders (doubles by Christian Walker and Yordan Alvarez, solo homer by Jeremy Pena). He will face more left-handed hitters against the Yankees, which will bring his splitter more into play.
@cmccosky
This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Drew Sommers, Tigers’ lefty reliever, fills gaping hole in bullpen
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TaylorMade and TAG Heuer partner up for limited edition launch
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Lionel Messi breaks all-time FIFA World Cup goals record with 17th goal
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Lionel Messi further separated himself from the rest of soccer history on Monday as he set a record for the most goals all time in the FIFA World Cup.
Messi was charging down the field behind Argentina’s attack. The Austrian defense seemed to be too focused on the ball and lost track of Messi as he filtered in behind them. Messi got the pass and fired the shot past the goalkeeper in the 38th minute and scored.
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Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates scoring his team’s first goal against Austria during the World Cup Group J match in Arlington, Texas, on June 22, 2026. (Tony Gutierrez/AP)
He has 17 World Cup goals in his career, passing Germany’s Miroslav Klose for the most all time. He may have had the record sooner. Messi received a penalty kick attempt around the 8th minute of the match. However, shot was wide to the right.
Messi’s goal against Austria put Argentina up 1-0.
The goal comes amid a tough week for Messi and his family. Jorge Messi was set to undergo medical treatment for an undisclosed illness last week. Messi’s family asked for “humanity” from the media.

Argentina’s Lionel Messi watches the ball during the World Cup Group J soccer match against Austria in Arlington, Texas, near Dallas, on June 22, 2026. (Tony Gutierrez/AP Photo)
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“Jorge is going through a health situation,” the Messi family said in a statement. “He is currently under medical observation, recovering and progressing favorably within his current condition.”
Messi scored a hat trick against Algeria last week in his first group-stage match of this year’s World Cup. He was seen in tears after his first goal.

Argentina’s Lionel Messi reacts after missing a penalty shot during the World Cup Group J match against Austria in Arlington, Texas, on June 22, 2026. (Julio Cortez/AP)
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“My tears after the first goal? I’ve had some tough days. It wasn’t related to soccer. And those feelings were because of that,” Messi said. “I thank my teammates, the coaching staff and the delegation for helping me.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Lionel Messi breaks World Cup scoring record in Argentina v Austria
Lionel Messi has broken the World Cup top scorer record after scoring his 17th goal in the tournament’s history for Argentina in their Group J match against Austria.
The Argentina captain added to his tally this year, having already scored three with his first-ever World Cup hat-trick in the 3-0 victory over Algeria, and the Inter Miami forward continued his fine form against Austria in Dallas.
Messi stroked a tidy finish into the bottom corner in the 39th minute, after teammate Thiago Almada cleverly left a cutback from Facundo Medina.
The goal, for a 1-0 lead, actually came after Messi missed a penalty inside the first 10 minutes to spurn an early opportunity to break the record, before two other misses from decent chances.
Entering the contest in a tie with Germany’s Miroslav Klose (16), Messi moved one clear in just the latest historic mark left on the game.
The record has stood for 12 years since Klose’s last goal at World Cup 2014 in Brazil. Messi has taken 28 games, the most appearances in World Cup history, to reach 17 goals, and also took three more appearances to draw level with Klose’s final tally.
The record is unlikely to last as long, though, with France captain Kylian Mbappe, still just 27 years of age, only three behind Messi on 14 goals, having broken the French all-time top scorer record with a brace against Senegal in this tournament.
While England’s Harry Kane already has 12 World Cup goals, after a double in the 4-2 win over Croatia, which matched Gary Lineker’s England World Cup record and positioned himself to rise yet further up the rankings with Thomas Tuchel’s side starting to produce free-flowing attacking football that could help him replicate his Bayern Munich exploits.
Messi, 38, is attempting to guide Argentina to a fourth crown and back-to-back titles after their triumph in Qatar. Argentina face Jordan in their final group stage match on Saturday 27 June.
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Watch Live: New Maple Leafs defenceman Darren Raddysh talks trade to Toronto
Watch Live: New Maple Leafs defenceman Darren Raddysh talks trade to Toronto
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Srixon launches new ZXi RKT Drivers on Tour
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Linda Noskova overpowers Jessica Pegula to win Berlin Open
Czech Republic’s Linda Noskova poses with the trophy after winning the women’s singles final match against Jessica Pegula of the US at the WTA500 Berlin Tennis Open tournament in Berlin on June 21, 2026. (Photo by John MACDOUGALL / AFP)
Czech world number 13 Linda Noskova overcame American world number four Jessica Pegula to claim the Wimbledon warm-up WTA tournament in Berlin 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 on Sunday.
The players took the court almost six hours late after a day of wild weather in the German capital, which forced the tournament to be evacuated for several hours.
The 21-year-old claimed the opening set and maintained control in the match despite losing the second set against the 2024 champion to claim a second career title and a first at WTA 500 level.
READ: Alex Eala stopped by Linda Noskova in Berlin Open semifinals
It’s Linda’s time in Berlin 👏
She comes through a three-set classic against Pegula to claim the title!#BTO26 pic.twitter.com/W475ubqb27
— wta (@WTA) June 21, 2026
Czech Noskova is set to climb into the WTA top 10 for the first time in her career when the new rankings are released next week.
“(This is) very incredible and unforgettable for me,” Noskova said.
“It’s my second title, so like I said, you never forget the first ones, but you always never forget the second ones as well.”
The result was a setback for 32-year-old Pegula, who has never won a Grand Slam, just a week out from the start of Wimbledon.
Pegula eliminated world number one Aryna Sabalenka in the semifinals on Saturday to reach the final in Berlin for a second time.
Noskova breezed past Filipina qualifer Alex Eala in the semis and continued her strong form to break Pegula twice and claim the opening set.
Pegula found her feet in the second, breaking her opponent once to take it 6-4, the first time Noskova had dropped a set so far this tournament.
The American looked to have a footing in the match but Noskova broke early in the deciding set to drag the match back into her favour.
Noskova is set to remain in Germany in the coming week to take part in the Bad Homburg tournament, another key Wimbledon preparation event, before travelling to England.
Sports
White Sox reinstate C Kyle Teel from 60-day injured list
Feb 26, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago White Sox catcher Kyle Teel against the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images The Chicago White Sox reinstated catcher Kyle Teel from the 60-day injured list ahead of Monday’s series opener against the visiting Cleveland Guardians.
Teel, 24, opened the season on the IL. After straining his right hamstring during Team Italy’s World Baseball Classic game against the United States on March 10, he sprained the lateral collateral ligament in his right knee during a rehab stint at Triple-A Charlotte on May 16.
Teel just completed a four-game rehab stint at Charlotte, where he batted .500 (8-for-16) with one home run, four RBIs and five runs. He posted a five-hit game at Buffalo on Friday.
A first-round draft pick (14th overall) by Boston in 2023, Teel came to Chicago in the December 2024 deal that sent left-hander Garrett Crochet to the Red Sox. Teel made his major league debut last season and batted .273 with eight homers and 35 RBIs in 78 games for the White Sox.
Chicago optioned catcher Edgar Quero, 23, to Charlotte in a corresponding move Monday. Quero is batting .187 with two homers and 15 RBIs in 55 games this season.
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