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Jannik Sinner criticises Madrid night schedule after win over Cameron Norrie

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Jannik Sinner ended Cameron Norrie’s run in the fourth round of the Madrid Open and then hit out at the tournament’s scheduling.

World number one Sinner made it 20 consecutive wins with a 6-2 7-5 victory to set up an exciting clash with new Spanish wonderkid Rafael Jodar.

The 19-year-old has been the talk of his home city and is through to the quarter-finals on his debut but Sinner believes he has not been well served by the schedule having only completed his third-round win over Joao Fonseca just before 1am on Monday morning.

The two-match night session in the Spanish capital does not begin until 8pm, and Sinner said: “For our body and mind, going on court at 11pm and you play at midnight, past midnight, it’s not easy.

“Then also, even if you have a day off, the fans they see only us on court, and then we finish at 1.15am. But then you have press conference, recovery, eating, treatment, you don’t go to bed until 4 or 5am. It messes up the whole day. So I think we can do better, definitely.”

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Jodar continued his dream run, beating Vit Kopriva 7-5 6-0 on Tuesday. Real Madrid star Jude Bellingham was again in attendance along with a number of the Chelsea squad.

Norrie had never played a competitive match against Sinner before but admitted ahead of the contest that the Italian “rips me up and smokes me” in practice.

Sinner is looking to make history by winning a fifth consecutive Masters 1000 title but he has admitted he does not find the conditions in Madrid easy and he is yet to hit top form in the Spanish capital.

It was the same against Norrie but he still had too much for the British number one, who ultimately could not handle the relentlessness of Sinner’s hitting.

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After a one-sided first set, Sinner briefly wobbled when he dropped serve in the middle of the second to allow Norrie back on terms but it was a brief reprieve.

The consolation for Norrie, who was close to dropping out of the top 100 a year ago, is that he is set to return to the top 20 next week.

Sinner, who has never been beyond the quarter-finals in Madrid, said: “We know each other quite well, we practised a lot in the last tournaments, so we both kind of knew what to expect.

“I felt like I was serving quite well today in the important moments. This surface is very, very different than all the other surfaces so it’s very tough to get the right feedback and sometimes you feel like you’re not playing your best.

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“But I’m very happy to be here in the quarters again. It’s a tournament I haven’t played a lot so it means a lot to me.”

Defending champion Casper Ruud looked to be heading for the exit door against a resurgent Stefanos Tsitsipas, but he saved two match points in the deciding set before claiming a 6-7 (4) 7-6 (2) 7-6 (3) victory.

Also through to the last eight is in-form young Frenchman Arthur Fils, who next faces Czech Jiri Lehecka.

Second seed Alexander Zverev wrapped up the evening’s action with a hard-fought 6-4 6-7 (4) 6-3 win over Czech Jakub Mensik.

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The German will meet Italian 10th seed Flavio Cobolli in the quarter-finals.

In the women’s event, world number one Aryna Sabalenka suffered a shock quarter-final defeat to American 30th seed Hailey Baptiste.

Sabalenka looked on course for a routine win when she breezed through the first set, but Baptiste hit back in the second before holding her nerve in a final-set tie-break to triumph 2-6 6-2 7-6 (6) in two-and-a-half hours.

Mirra Andreeva battled through to the semi-finals with a 7-6 (1) 6-3 victory over Leylah Fernandez.

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Waterford targets 2026 Hawkesbury Gold Cup after freshen-up

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Bay racehorse with white bridle and jockey in red‑and‑white silks racing at a track, saddle cloth number 8 visible in background.

The battle-hardened Waterford tends to claim successes across his seasons, and Chris Waller has targeted the Hawkesbury Gold Cup as a destination for quite some period.

His most recent win was in the Group 2 Shannon Stakes (1500m) at Rosehill in September, and the seven-year-old remained sidelined after a lacklustre showing upon return in the Doncaster Prelude (1500m) on March 28.

Waller’s deputy trainer Charlie Duckworth revealed that resting Waterford for a month was a strategic choice to bypass major Sydney autumn carnival fixtures and concentrate on the upcoming Hawkesbury Gold Cup (1600m) this Saturday.

“Literally, it was just to wait for Hawkesbury,” Duckworth said.

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“He’s had four weeks between runs. He’s had a barrier trial, and he trialled at Hawkesbury.

“He’s more than capable of winning a race like that on his day.”

Waller sends a robust challenge to the Cup with Waterford accompanied by in-form Captain Furai after two straight wins, Osipenko from last year’s placings, Imperialist and Yet He Moves.

Waller controls much of the Clarendon Stakes (1400m) field with five from eight, starring The Autumn Sun’s progeny The Roaring Sun, who ended second to later stakes finisher Seraphox at Warwick Farm on debut this month.

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Duckworth rates the colt as having top stakes quality and expects the race to propel him towards Brisbane’s winter carnival.

“Our best two-year-old going there is The Roaring Sun. He was narrowly beaten at Warwick Farm, caught wide the trip,” Duckworth said.

“He is a genuine Group horse, and this is a race Chris has used in the past as a stepping stone (to Queensland).”

The Clarendon Stakes roll of honour features quality gallopers like Zardozi, 2023 winner who proceeded to the VRC Oaks (2500m) victory in the ensuing spring.

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Waller has repeatedly leveraged this event successfully for Brisbane campaigns with slower-maturing juveniles, exemplified by Zoustar’s 2013 success followed by the Sires’ Produce Stakes (1400m) at Doomben win and runner-up effort in the Group 1 J J Atkins (1600m).

Head to leading racing betting markets to find value in the Hawkesbury Gold Cup.

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McLaren boss Zak Brown gives his opinion on the resource drain suffered by Red Bull

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McLaren boss Zak Brown thinks Red Bull is just going through a phase of rebuilding and, with Laurent Mekies at the top, the team would eventually bounce back to the top. The Austrian squad has had a rough run lately, where the team continues to leak resources to rivals.

Since early 2024, some of the stalwarts of the team have left, and if one analyses the team, it does appear to be a pale shadow of itself, with next to no recognition of what it used to be in the past. Since early 2024, names like Adrian Newey, Jonathan Wheatley, Christian Horner, and Helmut Marko have all left the squad.

The most recent one of the high-profile exits was none other than Max Verstappen‘s race engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase. The new Red Bull team principal, Laurent Mekies, on his part, is up against it right now as the team will be building its own power unit that is currently a step behind the grid benchmark in Mercedes.

At the same time, the car is also a step behind. The plight of the Austrian team was put in front of Zak Brown, who admitted that the situation might not be great for Red Bull at this moment, but they were going through a phase similar to what he went through when he joined McLaren. Backing Mekies to bring the team back to the top, the American told Motorsport,

“They have to kind of do a little bit of a reset. They lost a lot of people: Christian, Wheatley, GP [Lambiase] eventually, Newey. So much what I came into, which was a different situation because they were very competitive, but the majority of the pitwall’s changed. I rate Laurent, I think he does a very good job. He’s technical, he’s young and he’s got to rebuild the people that he lost and rebuild the team.”

He added,

“I have no doubt he will, and much like McLaren had an immense amount of talent that just needed to be unlocked, I think that’s probably the same as Red Bull. They’ve been very dominant up to not very long ago, so there’s a lot of talent in there and I think he’ll just need to get it redirected.”

Foolish to write off Red Bull: McLaren boss

After the first three races of the season, a performance pattern did emerge. We had Mercedes as the benchmark, followed by both Ferrari and McLaren. Red Bull, on the other hand, appeared to be dialled in at Melbourne, but the next two tracks in China and Japan saw Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar fight in the midfield.

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Zak Brown felt that counting out a team like Red Bull, and even a brand like Audi, would be foolish at this point. It was still just the start of the regulations, and it’ll take time for the grid to reach a stable pecking order. He said,

“It would be very foolish to write Red Bull off, I also think Audi’s done a very good job. So I think it would be foolish to not think the other teams are going to move up the grid quickly. Things are only going to consolidate over time, not widen. We see how quickly the sport can change and how people quickly can get competitive and then sometimes not.”

Heading into the F1 Miami GP race weekend, both McLaren and Red Bull are keeping an eye on the major upgrade packages that both outfits are bringing. If they work, the teams can make a significant jump, but at the same time, if they don’t, it could mean there’s a steep climb ahead for either of them.